Description
Book SynopsisConsiders the difference women's and gender history has made to and within national fields of study
Trade Review"This outstanding collection contributes to the usable past" and should help readers understand the present and shape the future. Summing Up: Highly recommended." * Choice *
"Making Womens Histories is an innovative collection that brings together state-of-the-art essays on developments in national, continental, transnational, and thematic areas. In its attention to the politics of womens historypersonal and structural connections to womens movements, the impact of nationalism and imperialism, the impact of globalizationthe volume reminds us how important the history we write and teach is for making the world a better place." -- Leila J. Rupp,University of California, Santa Barbara
"[T]his collection is well worth reading by serious scholars of women's and gender history." -- Simone M. Caron * American Historical Review *
"A smart, insightful, and thought-provoking book. The juxtaposition of nationally/regionally based historiographical essays by leading scholars offers striking new insights into the origins and diverse trajectories of womens and gender history, and into the ways in which feminist scholarship is informing comparative, transnational, and international histories. A must-read for anyone interested in world-historical scholarship." -- Birgitte Soland,The Ohio State University
"Making Womens Historiesis an invaluable guide for undergraduate and graduate students with varying levels of experience in history, gender and feminist studies, and historiography." * Feminist Collections *
"Fusing the personal, political, and professional, Making Women's Histories situates women's, gender, and sexuality history as an unfinished global project of activist scholarship." * Register of the Kentucky Historical Society *
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Writing Women's History across Time and SpacePamela S. Nadell and Kate HaulmanImagining New Histories 1. Women's Past and the Currents of U.S. History Kathy Peiss 2. New Directions in Russian and Soviet Women's History Barbara Alpern Engel 3. Putting the Political in EconomyClaire Robertson 4. Sexual Crises, Women's History, and the History of Sexuality in Europe Anna ClarkEngendering National and Nationalist Projects 5. Gender and the Politics of Exceptionalism in the Writing of British Women's History Arianne Chernock 6. Amateur Historians, the "Woman Question," and the Production of Modern History in Turn-of-the-Twentieth-Century Egypt Lisa Pollard 7. Women's and Gender History in Modern India: Researching the Past, Reflecting on the Present Mytheli SreenivasExploring Transnational Approaches 8. World History Meets History of Masculinity in Latin American StudiesUlrike Strasser and Heidi Tinsman 9. Connecting Histories of Gender, Health, and U.S.-China Relations Cristina Zaccarini 10. A Happier Marriage? Feminist History Takes the Transnational TurnJocelyn Olcott About the Contributors Index