Eating disorders among women: An historical review of the literature from a women's history perspective

1990 ◽  
Vol 7 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 47-55
Author(s):  
Sara Alpern
2021 ◽  
Vol 102 (s3) ◽  
pp. s519-s544
Author(s):  
Joan Sangster

This chr Presents is a consideration of the historiographical evolution of Canadian women’s history, with a focus upon articles from the back catalogue of the Canadian Historical Review.


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 214-231
Author(s):  
Adele Lindenmeyr

Abstract While scholarship on Russian women’s history has flourished in recent decades, the participation of women in the 1917 Revolution continues to be under-researched and poorly understood. This article explores various reasons for the marginalization of women in studies of the revolution. It reviews promising recent research that recovers women’s experiences and voices, including work on women in the wartime labor force and soldiers’ wives, and argues for the usefulness of a feminist and gendered approach to studying 1917.


Author(s):  
Ross S. Kraemer

This chapter analyzes the practical and theoretical challenges to writing women’s history, particularly for the period in which Christianity begins. It explores problems of definition and the conjunction of the terms “history,” “women,” and “Christian.” It surveys the surviving data, including literary sources composed by women (or not), literary sources composed by men, documentary evidence, inscriptions, and legal materials, with an eye to both ancient women’s history in general and early Christian women specifically. The chapter concludes that, in spite of the enormous challenges, to abandon the effort to do this work is ethically problematic, in that it reproduces, reauthorizes, and reinscribes the exclusion of women from historical memory.


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