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complexity.
FEMINIST VOICES
Notably, some of those who did identify as feminists also held the racist and eugenicist views that were promoted by psychology in many parts of the world in the first half of the 20th century. We include as many women from psychology's past as possible because the presence of women in history has for too long been obscured.FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Esther Menaker (née Astin) was born in Bern, Switzerland on September 6, 1907. Her father, Waldemar Astin, was a chemist and her mother, Cecelia Astin, completed some medical training and was reportedly an early suffragette. The family emigrated to the United States when Menaker was three years old; they settled originally nearFEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Leta Stetter Hollingworth was born on May 25, 1886 in Chadron, Nebraska. the oldest of three girls. Her mother died shortly after giving birth to her third daughter. Leta and her sisters were raised by their grandparents until the age of twelve, and then livedFEMINIST VOICES
Biography. The middle of three daughters, Else Frenkel was born on August 18, 1908 in Lemberg, Poland to Abraham and Helene Frenkel. Lacking the beauty of her older sister and the attention given to the younger, she was later to credit her intellectual achievements to being the plainest of the daughters. Her father, a prominent Jewishbanker
FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Aaronette White, born in 1961 in St. Louis, Missouri, was a dynamic, activist, feminist psychologist. She acquired a wealth of knowledge and experience through years spent traveling and working around the world. Looking back, White mentioned thatFEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Theodora Mead Abel was born September 9, 1899 in Newport, Rhode Island to Robert Mead, Jr. and Elsie Cleveland Mead. An only child, Abel travelled frequently with her affluent parents. While most of her early education took place at the Chapin School in New York City, she also attended school overseas during some of the family'stravels.
FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Keturah Elisabeth Whitehurst was born on March 12, 1912 in Jackson County, Florida. Her father, an African Methodist Episcopal preacher, had escaped slavery and was intent on making sure his daughter received the best education he could arrange for her. She attended a church boarding school in Jacksonville, graduating at theage of
FEMINIST VOICES
Helen Thompson, now Helen Woolley, struggled to stay current in psychological research while in the Philippines. Woolley returned to the states for the birth of her first child, eventually joined by Paul who had resigned his job abroad, and accepted a position in Cincinnati. Woolley worked at the University of Cincinnati, and becameinvolved in
FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Inez Beverly Prosser was born on December 30th around 1895 in Texas; the exact year of her birth being unknown. Prosser was the first daughter of 11 children. Her father, Samuel Andrew Beverly, worked as a waiter and her mother, Veola Hamilton, worked as a homemaker. The family moved several times when the children wereyoung, first
FEMINIST VOICESWOMEN PASTCREDITSFEEDBACKGENDER BASED ANALYSIS (GBA)BLOGACCESSIBILITY We have interviewed over 100 feminist psychologists about the relationship between their feminist and womanist values and their careers in psychology. These first-hand narratives are a valuable resource for today's researchers and for future historians. They help us document, preserve, and analyze this relationship in all of itscomplexity.
FEMINIST VOICES
Notably, some of those who did identify as feminists also held the racist and eugenicist views that were promoted by psychology in many parts of the world in the first half of the 20th century. We include as many women from psychology's past as possible because the presence of women in history has for too long been obscured.FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Esther Menaker (née Astin) was born in Bern, Switzerland on September 6, 1907. Her father, Waldemar Astin, was a chemist and her mother, Cecelia Astin, completed some medical training and was reportedly an early suffragette. The family emigrated to the United States when Menaker was three years old; they settled originally nearFEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Leta Stetter Hollingworth was born on May 25, 1886 in Chadron, Nebraska. the oldest of three girls. Her mother died shortly after giving birth to her third daughter. Leta and her sisters were raised by their grandparents until the age of twelve, and then livedFEMINIST VOICES
Biography. The middle of three daughters, Else Frenkel was born on August 18, 1908 in Lemberg, Poland to Abraham and Helene Frenkel. Lacking the beauty of her older sister and the attention given to the younger, she was later to credit her intellectual achievements to being the plainest of the daughters. Her father, a prominent Jewishbanker
FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Aaronette White, born in 1961 in St. Louis, Missouri, was a dynamic, activist, feminist psychologist. She acquired a wealth of knowledge and experience through years spent traveling and working around the world. Looking back, White mentioned thatFEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Theodora Mead Abel was born September 9, 1899 in Newport, Rhode Island to Robert Mead, Jr. and Elsie Cleveland Mead. An only child, Abel travelled frequently with her affluent parents. While most of her early education took place at the Chapin School in New York City, she also attended school overseas during some of the family'stravels.
FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Keturah Elisabeth Whitehurst was born on March 12, 1912 in Jackson County, Florida. Her father, an African Methodist Episcopal preacher, had escaped slavery and was intent on making sure his daughter received the best education he could arrange for her. She attended a church boarding school in Jacksonville, graduating at theage of
FEMINIST VOICES
Helen Thompson, now Helen Woolley, struggled to stay current in psychological research while in the Philippines. Woolley returned to the states for the birth of her first child, eventually joined by Paul who had resigned his job abroad, and accepted a position in Cincinnati. Woolley worked at the University of Cincinnati, and becameinvolved in
FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Inez Beverly Prosser was born on December 30th around 1895 in Texas; the exact year of her birth being unknown. Prosser was the first daughter of 11 children. Her father, Samuel Andrew Beverly, worked as a waiter and her mother, Veola Hamilton, worked as a homemaker. The family moved several times when the children wereyoung, first
FEMINIST VOICES
Psychology’s Feminist Voices (PFV) is a research team and project directed by Alexandra Rutherford. Our home base is York University in Toronto, Canada, but team members and collaborators can be found across three continents. We use critical historical, feminist, constructionist, and intersectional approaches to analyzepsychology’s
FEMINIST VOICES
Notably, some of those who did identify as feminists also held the racist and eugenicist views that were promoted by psychology in many parts of the world in the first half of the 20th century. We include as many women from psychology's past as possible because the presence of women in history has for too long been obscured.FEMINIST VOICES
Browse Feminist Presence Profiles. All of these psychologists enact feminist or womanist values in their lives and work in different ways. What they have in common is an explicit commitment to using psychology to improve the lives of women and girls of all ages, ethnicities, gender identities, sexual orientations, abilities, and socioeconomiclevels.
FEMINIST VOICES
The historic Seneca Falls Convention on Women's Rights in New York State marks the beginning of the women's suffrage movement and first-wave feminism in the United States. The Declaration of Sentiments is signed by 68 women and 32 men; the principal author was Elizabeth Cady Stanton. 1851.FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Growing up in Winnipeg during the 1950s, Bonnie (Grower) Burstow was “in a war with what society expected of .”. As she describes it, her anarchism preceded her feminism. The events that led to her politics started early in her childhood: “I quit school at twelve years old because IFEMINIST VOICES
A model of resiliency and courage, Dr. Hooker helped to found the "Tulsa Race Riot Commission". She has worked tirelessly to ensure that victims of racism and violence are not forgotten. Throughout her life Dr. Olivia Hooker has served the cause of social justice and done so with grace and humility.FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Carol Gilligan was born in New York on November 28 th, 1936. She attended Swarthmore College for her undergraduate degree in English Literature, graduating summa cum laude in 1958. She quickly moved onto a Master's degree in Clinical Psychology at Radcliffe College. In 1961 she earned her MA, and also married Jim Gilligan, amedical
FEMINIST VOICES
Mamie Phipps Clark was born on April 18, 1917 in Hot Spring, Arkansas. Her father, Harold H. Phipps, was a physician and her mother, Katy Florence Phipps, was a homemaker who was actively involved in her husband's medical practice. Clark described her childhood as generally happy and comfortable, despite growing up during the Depression andFEMINIST VOICES
Biography. At the turn of the last century, when American women had not yet won the right to vote, Tsuruko Haraguchi was not only accepted to Columbia University, but also became the very first Japanese woman to receive a PhD in any subject. The middle daughter of a well off farmer, Haraguchi excelled in her studies as a child.FEMINIST VOICES
A multimedia internet archive devoted to the women of psychology's past and the diverse voices of contemporary feminist psychologists. FEMINIST VOICESWOMEN PASTCREDITSFEEDBACKGENDER BASED ANALYSIS (GBA)BLOGACCESSIBILITY We have interviewed over 100 feminist psychologists about the relationship between their feminist and womanist values and their careers in psychology. These first-hand narratives are a valuable resource for today's researchers and for future historians. They help us document, preserve, and analyze this relationship in all of itscomplexity.
FEMINIST VOICES
Notably, some of those who did identify as feminists also held the racist and eugenicist views that were promoted by psychology in many parts of the world in the first half of the 20th century. We include as many women from psychology's past as possible because the presence of women in history has for too long been obscured.FEMINIST VOICES
The historic Seneca Falls Convention on Women's Rights in New York State marks the beginning of the women's suffrage movement and first-wave feminism in the United States. The Declaration of Sentiments is signed by 68 women and 32 men; the principal author was Elizabeth Cady Stanton. 1851.FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Esther Menaker (née Astin) was born in Bern, Switzerland on September 6, 1907. Her father, Waldemar Astin, was a chemist and her mother, Cecelia Astin, completed some medical training and was reportedly an early suffragette. The family emigrated to the United States when Menaker was three years old; they settled originally nearFEMINIST VOICES
Biography. The middle of three daughters, Else Frenkel was born on August 18, 1908 in Lemberg, Poland to Abraham and Helene Frenkel. Lacking the beauty of her older sister and the attention given to the younger, she was later to credit her intellectual achievements to being the plainest of the daughters.FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Leta Stetter Hollingworth was born on May 25, 1886 in Chadron, Nebraska. the oldest of three girls. Her mother died shortly after giving birth to her third daughter. Leta and her sisters were raised by their grandparents until the age of twelve, and then livedFEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Inez Beverly Prosser was born on December 30th around 1895 in Texas; the exact year of her birth being unknown. Prosser was the first daughter of 11 children. Her father, Samuel Andrew Beverly, worked as a waiter and her mother, Veola Hamilton, worked as a homemaker. The family moved several times when the children wereyoung, first
FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Theodora Mead Abel was born September 9, 1899 in Newport, Rhode Island to Robert Mead, Jr. and Elsie Cleveland Mead. An only child, Abel travelled frequently with her affluent parents. While most of her early education took place at the Chapin School in New York City, she also attended school overseas during some of the family'stravels.
FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Keturah Elisabeth Whitehurst was born on March 12, 1912 in Jackson County, Florida. Her father, an African Methodist Episcopal preacher, had escaped slavery and was intent on making sure his daughter received the best education he could arrange for her. She attended a church boarding school in Jacksonville, graduating at theage of
FEMINIST VOICES
Helen Thompson, now Helen Woolley, struggled to stay current in psychological research while in the Philippines. Woolley returned to the states for the birth of her first child, eventually joined by Paul who had resigned his job abroad, and accepted a position in Cincinnati. Woolley worked at the University of Cincinnati, and becameinvolved in
FEMINIST VOICESWOMEN PASTCREDITSFEEDBACKGENDER BASED ANALYSIS (GBA)BLOGACCESSIBILITY We have interviewed over 100 feminist psychologists about the relationship between their feminist and womanist values and their careers in psychology. These first-hand narratives are a valuable resource for today's researchers and for future historians. They help us document, preserve, and analyze this relationship in all of itscomplexity.
FEMINIST VOICES
Notably, some of those who did identify as feminists also held the racist and eugenicist views that were promoted by psychology in many parts of the world in the first half of the 20th century. We include as many women from psychology's past as possible because the presence of women in history has for too long been obscured.FEMINIST VOICES
The historic Seneca Falls Convention on Women's Rights in New York State marks the beginning of the women's suffrage movement and first-wave feminism in the United States. The Declaration of Sentiments is signed by 68 women and 32 men; the principal author was Elizabeth Cady Stanton. 1851.FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Esther Menaker (née Astin) was born in Bern, Switzerland on September 6, 1907. Her father, Waldemar Astin, was a chemist and her mother, Cecelia Astin, completed some medical training and was reportedly an early suffragette. The family emigrated to the United States when Menaker was three years old; they settled originally nearFEMINIST VOICES
Biography. The middle of three daughters, Else Frenkel was born on August 18, 1908 in Lemberg, Poland to Abraham and Helene Frenkel. Lacking the beauty of her older sister and the attention given to the younger, she was later to credit her intellectual achievements to being the plainest of the daughters.FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Leta Stetter Hollingworth was born on May 25, 1886 in Chadron, Nebraska. the oldest of three girls. Her mother died shortly after giving birth to her third daughter. Leta and her sisters were raised by their grandparents until the age of twelve, and then livedFEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Inez Beverly Prosser was born on December 30th around 1895 in Texas; the exact year of her birth being unknown. Prosser was the first daughter of 11 children. Her father, Samuel Andrew Beverly, worked as a waiter and her mother, Veola Hamilton, worked as a homemaker. The family moved several times when the children wereyoung, first
FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Theodora Mead Abel was born September 9, 1899 in Newport, Rhode Island to Robert Mead, Jr. and Elsie Cleveland Mead. An only child, Abel travelled frequently with her affluent parents. While most of her early education took place at the Chapin School in New York City, she also attended school overseas during some of the family'stravels.
FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Keturah Elisabeth Whitehurst was born on March 12, 1912 in Jackson County, Florida. Her father, an African Methodist Episcopal preacher, had escaped slavery and was intent on making sure his daughter received the best education he could arrange for her. She attended a church boarding school in Jacksonville, graduating at theage of
FEMINIST VOICES
Helen Thompson, now Helen Woolley, struggled to stay current in psychological research while in the Philippines. Woolley returned to the states for the birth of her first child, eventually joined by Paul who had resigned his job abroad, and accepted a position in Cincinnati. Woolley worked at the University of Cincinnati, and becameinvolved in
FEMINIST VOICES
Psychology’s Feminist Voices (PFV) is a research team and project directed by Alexandra Rutherford. Our home base is York University in Toronto, Canada, but team members and collaborators can be found across three continents. We use critical historical, feminist, constructionist, and intersectional approaches to analyzepsychology’s
FEMINIST VOICES
Notably, some of those who did identify as feminists also held the racist and eugenicist views that were promoted by psychology in many parts of the world in the first half of the 20th century. We include as many women from psychology's past as possible because the presence of women in history has for too long been obscured.FEMINIST PRESENCE
Browse Feminist Presence Profiles. All of these psychologists enact feminist or womanist values in their lives and work in different ways. What they have in common is an explicit commitment to using psychology to improve the lives of women and girls of all ages, ethnicities, gender identities, sexual orientations, abilities, and socioeconomiclevels.
FEMINIST VOICES
The historic Seneca Falls Convention on Women's Rights in New York State marks the beginning of the women's suffrage movement and first-wave feminism in the United States. The Declaration of Sentiments is signed by 68 women and 32 men; the principal author was Elizabeth Cady Stanton. 1851.FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Growing up in Winnipeg during the 1950s, Bonnie (Grower) Burstow was “in a war with what society expected of .”. As she describes it, her anarchism preceded her feminism. The events that led to her politics started early in her childhood: “I quit school at twelve years old because IFEMINIST VOICES
Terms . Hegemonic: Oh, like widespread intense dominance. Like, hegemonic psychology would be the psychology you’d usually see in Psyc101 textbooks — it’s presented as though it’s unbiased, value-free, and generic, the way it's always been and always will be.FEMINIST VOICES
A model of resiliency and courage, Dr. Hooker helped to found the "Tulsa Race Riot Commission". She has worked tirelessly to ensure that victims of racism and violence are not forgotten. Throughout her life Dr. Olivia Hooker has served the cause of social justice and done so with grace and humility.FEMINIST VOICES
Born in Washington D.C. in July 1951 and raised in Newport, Rhode Island, Martha Banks describes her childhood and teenage years as somewhat confusing and filled with mixed messages. Unlike many African Americans at the time, whose educational development had been deliberately hampered by U.S. politics of hate and discrimination,Banks came
FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. Carol Gilligan was born in New York on November 28 th, 1936. She attended Swarthmore College for her undergraduate degree in English Literature, graduating summa cum laude in 1958. She quickly moved onto a Master's degree in Clinical Psychology at Radcliffe College. In 1961 she earned her MA, and also married Jim Gilligan, amedical
FEMINIST VOICES
Biography. At the turn of the last century, when American women had not yet won the right to vote, Tsuruko Haraguchi was not only accepted to Columbia University, but also became the very first Japanese woman to receive a PhD in any subject. The middle daughter of a well off farmer, Haraguchi excelled in her studies as a child.* Women Past
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PSYCHOLOGY'S FEMINIST VOICES A MULTIMEDIA DIGITAL ARCHIVE OF THE PAST AND PRESENCE OF WOMEN AND FEMINISM IN PSYCHOLOGY.WOMEN PAST
"The central question raised by women’s history is: What would history be like if it were seen through the eyes of women and ordered by values they define?"_-Gerda Lerner_
FEMINIST PRESENCE
"I had a healthy respect for equity in my family because of my mother.... My mom would try to talk to us and to give us a voice, and boy did I get a voice"_- Aaronette White
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"Being angry is not the end of the relation, nor of the conflict, we must agree to hear and listen to hard, difficult to hear, words and ideas. By so doing we may amplify and augment sisterly cooperation, understanding, and in the meantime enhance our self empowerment."- _E. Kitch Childs
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A MULTIMEDIA DIGITAL ARCHIVE OF THE PAST AND PRESENCE OF WOMEN AND FEMINISM IN PSYCHOLOGY. READ THEIR STORIES, HEAR THEIR VOICES PSYCHOLOGY HAS UNDERGONE A PROFOUND SHIFT OVER THE LAST 60 YEARS. IN 1960, WOMEN RECEIVED A SMALL MINORITY OF DOCTORATES IN THE FIELD. TODAY, IN MANY PARTS OF THE WORLD, WOMEN RECEIVE THE MAJORITY. TO UNDERSTAND THIS SHIFT AND THE ROLE FEMINISM HAS PLAYED IN IT, WE NEED TO COLLECT THE FIRST-HAND ACCOUNTS OF FEMINIST PSYCHOLOGISTS WHO WERE INSTRUMENTAL IN BRINGING ABOUT THESE CHANGES AND WHO CONTINUE TO ENRICH PSYCHOLOGY WITH FEMINISM. WE ALSO NEED TO BE AWARE OF OUR HISTORY. WHO WERE THE WOMEN WHO PRECEDED THEM? HOW DID THEIR WORK LAY THE FOUNDATION FOR FEMINIST PSYCHOLOGY? THIS SITE HIGHLIGHTS IMPORTANT WOMEN IN PSYCHOLOGY'S PAST AND AMPLIFIES THE DIVERSE VOICES OF CONTEMPORARY FEMINIST PSYCHOLOGISTS. IT IS AN ARCHIVE OF THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN FEMINISM AND PSYCHOLOGY.WOMEN PAST
WOMEN’S CONTRIBUTIONS AND EXPERIENCES HAVE SHAPED PSYCHOLOGY THROUGHOUT ITS HISTORY.EXPLORE WOMEN PAST
FEMINIST PRESENCE
FEMINISM NOW HAS A POWERFUL, IF UNEVEN, PRESENCE IN THE FIELD OFPSYCHOLOGY.
EXPLORE FEMINIST PRESENCEABOUT US
Psychology’s Feminist Voices is a project and research team based in Toronto, but with partners all over the world.EXPLORE ABOUT US
ORAL HISTORY
We have interviewed over 100 feminist psychologists about the relationship between their feminist and womanist values and their careers in psychology. These first-hand narratives are a valuable resource for today's researchers and for future historians. They help us document, preserve, and analyze this relationship in all of itscomplexity.
DENISE SEKAQUAPTEWA
“Initially, I was really into how stereotypers use stereotypes.... Later on, I began being interested in the target of various stereotypes, prejudices, and biases...trying to understand the experience of being different from everyone else in terms of a salient social identity in a particular context. And that really connected with me because, as a Native American student and researcher, I was generally in that position all the time.” EXPLORE THIS ORAL HISTORYMICHELLE LAFRANCE
“I think through all of my research I’ve always been really interested in resistance. That’s the thread of my research…. I think we’ve had this really rich legacy of scholarship that has clearly documented the ways in which we’re oppressed by hegemony, but where there’s power there’s resistance.” EXPLORE THIS ORAL HISTORYNEELAM KUMAR
"Women have to work harder to prove themselves. This is not just in India but all over the world...If you take any divide of the globe, north or south, east or west, developed country and developing country, traditional society or modern society, any divide you take you will see that there is gender discrimination in science." EXPLORE THIS ORAL HISTORY*
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“Initially, I was really into how stereotypers use stereotypes.... Later on, I began being interested in the target of various stereotypes, prejudices, and biases...trying to understand the experience of being different from everyone else in terms of a salient social identity in a particular context. And that really connected with me because, as a Native American student and researcher, I was generally in that position all the time.” EXPLORE THIS ORAL HISTORY EXPLORE ORAL HISTORIES -------------------------PROJECTS
We are committed to infusing psychology with feminism. We undertake projects that mobilize women's history of psychology, considerations of feminism and gender issues, and gender justice in numerous ways.GENDER MATTERS
A video series and teaching resource on gender-based analysis to help psychology students think critically about how gender assumptions, biases, and ideologies affect psychological research. THE CHANGING FACE OF FEMINIST PSYCHOLOGY A 40-minute documentary that uses archival material and interviews with feminist psychologists to chart the historical emergence of feminist psychology in the United States. INSPIRING HISTORIES, INSPIRING LIVES: WOMEN OF COLOR IN PSYCHOLOGY A timeline documenting how women of color have used their unique perspectives and expertise to understand and improve the world. EXPLORE THE PROJECTSEXHIBITS
We curate themed exhibits that highlight the topics, issues, events, people, and histories that animate the relationship between feminismand psychology.
TAKIN' IT TO THE STREETS Explore how feminist psychologists have engaged in collective action to fight for social justice in their communities and beyond.View this exhibit
KNICK-KNACK TO RESEARCH TOOL: COLLECTING ASYLUM POSTCARDS Introduces visitors to the history of the asylum* postcard. The image, text, and features of the postcards are presented alongside the larger context of the asylum era and the Golden Age of postcards.View this exhibit
PSYCHOLOGY'S HIDDEN FIGURES Coming soon: The women featured here, some of whom have been rediscovered and successfully reinstated into psychology’s history, were once hidden from history. Some remain hidden. Explore why.View this exhibit
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Explore how feminist psychologists have engaged in collective action to fight for social justice in their communities and beyond.View this exhibit
EXPLORE THE EXHIBITSSOCIAL MEDIA NEWS
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