Fotografía de autor
10+ Obras 327 Miembros 2 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Judith M. Bennett is Professor of History at the University of Southern California

Obras de Judith M. Bennett

Obras relacionadas

Medieval Europe: A Short History (1964)algunas ediciones1,039 copias
Feminists Revision History (1994) — Contribuidor — 4 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
female
Nacionalidad
UK

Miembros

Reseñas

A historian argues that feminism needs to develop the history of feminism. She makes a good argument that the current presentism is a bad move, and that feminist historians who don't go back any further than 1800 are missing a rich trove of material. A medieval historian herself, she focuses on Medieval Europe to make her case that the role of women in history has been much less one of transformation than one of continuity, with women's situation changing only little throughout history. She argues that our current situation, though it seems much better to some and worse to others than the pre-modern period, is actually very much a continuity with the past, and that many of the moves forward that women have made have been into fields that are in decline when women are finally allowed to enter. She also notes that this view of continuity does not require that one accept a narrative of biological inferiority. A worthwhile read, well written without a lot of jargon, and without major editing errors, a rarity in today's publishing market.… (más)
½
 
Denunciada
Devil_llama | otra reseña | Mar 9, 2018 |
This short book, by a very distinguished medieval historian, argues that the study of the past—particularly the pre-modern past—is vital to the feminist movement. Judith Bennett believes that in the decades since the 1970s, historians who study women have become increasingly disconnected from those involved in the contemporary women's movement, to the detriment of both groups. There has been much more work done on women's history outside of North America and Western Europe, and indeed on the lived experiences of women of colour within those regions, but the post-1800 West still dominates academic departments and popular history books. This means that many scholars are too presentist, and work without the kind of deep historical knowledge needed to perceive continuities within women's experiences.

Though this is, as I said, a short work, it provides much food for thought and is well worth the read by historians in all fields. I wholeheartedly agree with Bennett on the necessity of studying medieval women (well, that's my day job; I would, wouldn't I), and the next time I teach on women's work I will assign the chapter here on the gender wage gap. That said I have quibbles—some minor, some less so—with her arguments in other places, particularly her advocacy for the use of the term "lesbian-like" to describe the experiences of many pre-modern women.

Is failing to recognise that there were women in the Middle Ages who engaged in same-sex intercourse, whose sexual desires were directed in part or in whole towards other women, heteronormative and homophobic? Sure. Are there enormous difficulties in finding documentary smoking guns that prove romantic, sexual, and/or erotic relationships between women in pre-modern Europe? Yup. But is everything that is non-heteronormative automatically "lesbian-like"? She would classify here chaste communities of nuns, or even two biological sisters who rejected marriage and lived together, as "lesbian-like." A cross-dressing female student in fifteenth-century Poland is described as "lesbian-like." Here's where I start looking askance at Bennett. This is an oddly binary formula, and entirely rejects and/or absorbs other forms of non-heteronormativity such as asexuality or transgender identities. All she seems to be doing here is to invert heteronormativity to create a new form of categorisation to force on something that's inherently fluid and changing.
… (más)
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Denunciada
siriaeve | otra reseña | May 28, 2016 |

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Obras
10
También por
2
Miembros
327
Popularidad
#72,482
Valoración
½ 3.7
Reseñas
2
ISBNs
28

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