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AU) 1113 442 AUTHOR TITLE INSTITUTION SPONS AGENCY PUB DATE NOTE AVAILABLE FPOM , BOPS PRICE DESCRIPTORS- DOtOlIENT PESONE SO 012.368 Ntlliamson, Jdne 'New reiinist Scholarship: A Gvide to *Biblibgraphies. State Univ. of New York, Old Westbury. Coll. at Old' Yestbury. Feminist Press. EXXON Corp., New York, N.Y. 79 . 141p. The Feminist Piess, Box 334,,Old Westbury, NY 11568 ($15.00 cloth bound) MF01 Plus.postage. PC Not Available from EDR5. Anthrppolooyl Bibliographies: Child Car-e: Developing' Nations: Pthnid Groups: Family Life: *Females: *Feminism: Fine Arts: Higher Education: '11 Homoseivality: Legislation: Literature: Literapire Reviews: Minority Groups: Rafe: Religion: Resource Guides: Set'Differences: Sex Pole; Sociology: WOmens % Athletics: Womens Fducation: *Wcmens Stxidies: Working Women ABSTRACT This partially annotated bibliography lists 391 bibliograp resource listS,.and literature reviews on wool". The entries, pu shed in the late 1960s "and throughout 'the 1970s, are classified alphabetically by author into 30 qategories including a . general category, ant hropclocry 'and sociology, art and music,- child care, criminal 'justice, economics, education, _history, law, lesbians, _marriage and the 'family, minority and ethnic women, philosophy, politics4:$ professOrs, rape, religion, e x roles a1d sex differences, women and development, and the .women's movement. The ,majority of entries were develcpped by inonccmmercial.sources: fewer than 50 items are the products of commercial publishers. An author index, title index, and addresses of publishers are included.- (KC) Sgb 40' 4 *****1********* ********** ****** ********* '0** *******ft* 41************* ****** Reprocluctions supplied' by EDPS are the best that can be qade from the original docuient. : * W***********************sys*********** ************4****k************** 0 4 V
Transcript

AU) 1113 442

AUTHORTITLE

INSTITUTION

SPONS AGENCYPUB DATENOTEAVAILABLE FPOM

,

BOPS PRICEDESCRIPTORS-

DOtOlIENT PESONE

SO 012.368

Ntlliamson, Jdne'New reiinist Scholarship: A Gvide to*Biblibgraphies.State Univ. of New York, Old Westbury. Coll. at Old'Yestbury. Feminist Press.EXXON Corp., New York, N.Y.79

. 141p.The Feminist Piess, Box 334,,Old Westbury, NY 11568($15.00 cloth bound)

MF01 Plus.postage. PC Not Available from EDR5.Anthrppolooyl Bibliographies: Child Car-e: Developing'Nations: Pthnid Groups: Family Life: *Females:*Feminism: Fine Arts: Higher Education: '11

Homoseivality: Legislation: Literature: LiterapireReviews: Minority Groups: Rafe: Religion: ResourceGuides: Set'Differences: Sex Pole; Sociology: WOmens %

Athletics: Womens Fducation: *Wcmens Stxidies: WorkingWomen

ABSTRACTThis partially annotated bibliography lists 391

bibliograp resource listS,.and literature reviews on wool". Theentries, pu shed in the late 1960s "and throughout 'the 1970s, areclassified alphabetically by author into 30 qategories including a .

general category, ant hropclocry 'and sociology, art and music,- childcare, criminal 'justice, economics, education, _history, law, lesbians,_marriage and the 'family, minority and ethnic women, philosophy,politics4:$ professOrs, rape, religion, e x roles a1d sex differences,women and development, and the .women's movement. The ,majority ofentries were develcpped by inonccmmercial.sources: fewer than 50 itemsare the products of commercial publishers. An author index, titleindex, and addresses of publishers are included.- (KC)

Sgb

40'

4*****1********* ********** ****** ********* '0** *******ft* 41************* ******

Reprocluctions supplied' by EDPS are the best that can be qadefrom the original docuient.: *

W***********************sys*********** ************4****k**************

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U DITFA4AIINT OP HEALTH.EDUCATION WELFARENATIONAL INSTITUTE OF

ISOUCATION

THIS DOCUMVNIT HAS BEEN REPRO-'CIOCED EXAC TLY AS RECEIVED F ROMTHE PEFISON OR ORGANIZATION OR MIN-AT ING IT .POIN TS OF VIEW OR OPINION$rSTATED 1/4) NOT:NECESSARILY REPRE- -

SENT OF,f ICIAL. NATIONAL MST TU Tt.OFEDUCATION POSITION OR POI ICY

FEMINISTSCHOLARSHIP

'A Guide tO Bibliographies

tai 6 Se4

PERMISSION TO REPRODUCE THISMATERIAL IN MICROFICHE ONV .

PIAS BEEN GRANTED BY I

e_ ; rt4 ScIn

By Jane Williainson

xl" FEMINIST_PRESS

L.

TO THE EDUCATIONAL RESOURCESINFORMATION CENTER (ERIC) "

THE CLEARINGHOUSE ON WOI'4:1STUDIES.

OLD WESTRURY, NEW YORK

A

\4yrAt 0\1979 by Jane Williamscin

All riglitrsescrvcd under International and Pan-American .

Copyright Conventions. published in the United SUM byThe Fennnist Press, Box 334, Old Westbury, New York 11568.

Library' of Congress Cataloging in PublicAtion Data:

Willitunson, Jane 1950-

- New kthinist scholarship.

Indudes index.

I. Women's studiesUnited StatesBibliography.2. FeminismUnited State3Bibliography. 3. Reference

booksWomen. 4. Women's studiesCanadaBibliography.5.- Feminism---CanadaiBibliography. I. Title.Z7161.A14/54 IHQ11801 016.30141'2'0973 79-1188(1

ISBN 0-912670-54-141.

This book 'was typeset in Garampnd by Talbot Typogrilphicsand printed by Braun.Bnimfield on Warren's )0/1 text stock.

.Design by 'Susan Trowbridge

Min

With special acknowledgment to the'Exxon Corporation fora gram that helped support the publication of this ',wok.

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Table of Content,

6 Acknowledgments7 How to Use This Book8 Introduction

15 Other ibliographies of Bibliographies16 General29 Anthropology .and Sociology30 Art and Musk32 Child Care.34 Collection Guides.3,0 Criminal justice39 Drugs and Alcbhol41 Economics .

Education47 Health and Physical.Education50 History56 Law

58 Lesbians60 Life Cycles,62, Uiterature68 Marriage`and the Family71 Minority afia Ethnic Women

_75 Philosophy76 Politics'80 Professions86 Psychology

'89 Rape

.,91 Reference' Soutees. .

95 Religion98 Sex Roles and Sex Differences

102 Third-World Countries104 Women and Development

,107 Women's Movement110 Work .119 Author Index

' 124 Title Index134 Publishers

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4

AcKnowieugments

\ These acknowledgmeMs mtqt begin wit-h Susan Thomson, my, :teacher at ColuMbia Universify) who sponsored the, original

indepthdent study with.which this bibliography began. I would also' like to acknowledge the support of Fforence Howe and CatharineStimpson during, one phase .of this project. I am indebted to Merle

AFroscht, a wonderful cclitor and an. even better iriend;..I think sheknokvs how much I appriviate hcr and her help. A thank you is due toDavid Porter for his help with the tedious job of proofreading. Finally,my greatest debt is to all tny sister bibliographers whose work I havecollected 4pd read and enjoyed. Long may they continue. J. W.

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How to Use This.Book:

There should be littleproblem in finding thq desired Cntries.Author and title indexes have been provided for.ugers looking up aknowb source; others will be guided by subject arrangement and cross:references: The &Bowing points should clear up any confusions.

Citations follow standard form in most ases. For brevity, if awork has a corporate author/publisher, the organization,name is listedonly once.-ras authorand the publisher stAterincbt is omitted. Thus,in these i:ases, the date follows directly after. the Place. For exampre:,

Business and Professional Women's Fs ation x goleConcefits. Washington, 197#.

Place statements have also been ke t brief;.only the cit is /listed (not the state), siiice Publishers' full aadresso arc given at htend of the bdok. .1 a

Earlier el.thions. of a biblivraphy or works oil which the, . . -

compilation is based arc given at the end of the . annotation in.,parentheses. ..

(i

N -- Prices were not included because they change too frequently,\so readers are advised to check the krice before ordering. A stamp7d,

rlf-addressed envelope will speed the reply. i

For ERIC publications, order numbers -arc , included inparentheses at the end of each entry, and should be used for promptservice.

The order addresses for publishers arc listed in a separatesection .at the end of this publication. If there is no publisherincluded in the citatidn, the address will be listed under the name ofthe author.

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Introhtion

New Feminist Scholarship began in 1974 as an independentstudy project was a library school, student. Although none of.the standard works" and sources I was learning abcrut were able to tprovide much information about women, I knew from my experiencein the Women's movement and froth women's studies courses thatthere \vete such miterials available. Yet I found notsven a suggestionthat a. large "underground" of bibliography in worben's studies

* existed. 1 felt it was-important, to compile all these valuable butobscure sources in order to give suppor. to the grbwing array ofrescatth and researchers in women's studies, as well .as to alert' theestablished libratrworld to the existence of this work.

NE GROWTH OF WOMEN'S STUDIES /

During the past five years, women's studies has developed tre-mendoudy in size and sophisticatioh. Many statistics can, be cited to -

gauge growth in size. Women's studies programs have ingeased from112 in 1974 to 301 in 1979) While there were two academic journalsdevoted to women -in 1974, now there are at least . five Majorquarterlies.= Research and publications are, impossible. to .count, butthe 'Size of this biblio-bibliography provides at least a representativetheasumthe morc bibliographies there are, the more publications

- there must be. In 1974, New Feminist Scholarship included 73bibliographies, it now includes 391. If One assumes that eachbibliography represents an average number of one hundred books, theextent of the growth begins to emerge.

Sophisticatioji is more difficult to document, but hereto°, weiove 'some signposts with which to measure the gains. We have seed'Increased autonomy and legitimacy of women's .studies programs,partly throfegh the granting of degrees. There are now 106 ifititutkms/where one daay pursue a degree in women's studies (80 offer the B.A.;21 the M.A.; and ) the Ph.D. or equivalent).' The formation oflformal asgociations is another measure of maturity. In acklition torpany local and state affiliations, there are now two .nationalorgahizations of prime importance! the National WoMen's Studies

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INTRODUCVION 9

Asso-ciation founded in 1977 and the Women's 'Information ServicesNetwork founded in105.4 Finally, for what it's worth, women'seducational concerns also have received the stamp of approval from thefederal government. The Women's Educational Equity.Act appropated $30 million over three years for grants to projects and activitiesnationwide, .a large portion of which was earmarked for the establish-ment of a national communications network.'

As women's studies in all its facets has grown and matured, it hasreceived more attention and acceptance from tbe "establishment":colleges and universities, publishers: scholars, 'reviewers. Butc.tkis iswhere the real work remains to be done. Integration-into the main-stream is not easy on any front, because it is at this point that thedomi-flint group must change. Curriculums, reviewing principles, researchpriorities, editorial direction must all be overhauled to incorporatefeminist ideas.

Bibliographies in women's studies parallel the general trends inthe field. There arc more bibliographies'now than there were in 1974and, on the whole, they arc better. But the mafority of bibliographiescompiled herestill come from informal and nonconimercial sources.,Less than 50 of thc,391 total are the products of cbmmercial publishers.Albcrt Krichthar's The Women's Rights Movement. in the U.S.(#346): was one of the first commercially produced bibliographies; itwas puDlished by Scarecrow Press in 1972'. Recently, both G.K. Halland Garland have begun to procrucC a number of fine bibliographieson women. But changing the library and-publishing establishment is aslow' procesS. The current sources of resource ioolsindividualresearchers; women's studies programs, womep's organizations andassociations, and noncommercial pr6seswill continue to. be themajor sources for some time.

SUeRVEY: BIBLIOGRAPHIES OF BIBLIOGRAPHIES

The first attcmpt to list available bibliographies on women wasmade by KNOW press in June of ,1°971. The List of Bibliographies onWomen and Feminism (#00)) was a free: fouf-page annotated listing

'The Amber in parentheses following the title refers to the publication's entry in thi;bibliography; the complete citation will be found there.

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10 NEW FEMINISY SCHOLARSHIP

of forty-three bibliographies in the .followin5 areas: General, Legaland Economic Problems, Employment, Educatioh, Miscellaneous,and Feminist Movement, Ten of the bibliographies from that list havesurvived and are included in this publication. Most of the remainingentriek were mimeographed, stapled sheets available from theircomPilersteachers, for the most part, who have long since left theaddress provided, not to mention run out of copies.

The next efforts were made in 1973-a busy year forbibliographers. The Women's History Research Center published itsBibliographies on Women Indexed by Topic (#006) in May of thatyea . It ran to eight pages and had 188 entries 'arranged into eighterntop' al areas. Approximately thirty .of the -entries from, ihatcom ilation. Will be found here in their -original or updated form.Though there were more of them, the, biblidgraphies in -this listingwere similar in sco(re and size to the ones in the KNOW list.

The second bibliography -of bibliographies produced ih 1973came from Canada.' Compikd by Margrit Eichler, An AnnotatedSelected Bibliography of Bibliographiis on Women (#002) waspublished by the Association of Universities and Colleges in Ottawa. Itwas seventeen pages long and,listed more than forty bibliographies. In1976, Eichler produced a second,'reviscid edition of this compilation(#003), published by KNOW. It was expanded to ninety entrieg andincluded all Major recent\bibliographies. She included only chasebibliographies which' ;mere readily accessible (i.e., not,unpublished,mimeographed lists) and of an acCeptable size (fifteen pages or mote).Where there were two or more bibliograpfiies on one subject, the morecomprehensive one was chosen. .

The last bibliography of bibliogra' phies that appeared in 1973was a masters thesisidone by MarTha Koelliker at the School of LibraryScience, Kent State University (#004). Koelliker gathered together 272cititions to "bibliographies on women published sinc7 January 1967and before December 1972, either separately tor withiii other publica-

.- tions." Of the total, only" thirty-three were published separately, theother 259 werepublished as parts of monographs, anthologies, or jour-nal articles, with articles 'counting for fifty-five percetit.

Finally, the Winter 1977 issue ofSigns included a review essay onthe bibliography of women's studies by Pat Ballou (#001). Balloudiscusses approlmately sixty bibliographies in the essay section andlists an additional sixty-two. Th?is compilation is the most.comprehen-

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INTRODUCTKM I I

sive of the bibliographies in this survey and the most interesting to usebecause of -the essay format. Indeed, her article- makes fascinatingreading for bibliographers of women's studies, as well as feministscholars, students, editors, and pUblishers. It-is highly reCommended.

. Pat Ballbu makes4he following observation ip her openingparagraphs: "These bibliographic tools have reflected the materialsthey listed. .As the writings theniselyes have changed frompredominantly action- riented movemtnt literature to mosedisciplined aCademic re. arch, the bibliographies have developedcorrespondingly from th.d valiant but often hastilY executed-productsof enthusiastic vqlunteers to more skillfully edited works." Clearly,the same reflection is true Of the bibliography of bibliographies. Itwould be extremely difficult to produce *solid, scholarly guide tobibliographic sources if there were no solid, scholarly bil21kgraphies tolist. The one always refleks the other. Arid so the biblio-bibliograWhis grown from the mimeographed, stapled give;Avay of 1973 to rhemajor review essay in a scholarly journai of 1977 to the publiytion ofNew Feminist Scholarship in 1979.

(SCOPE

New Feminist Scholarship includes 391' bibliographies, resourcelists, and literature reviews on women that were published stparatelyor that appeared as periodical articles. It does not pretend to becomprehensive. Indeed, bibliographers of women's studies wrote asearly as,917t3 that "there is no possibility of compiling *complete listof bibliographies written about women. "6 On the other hand, this isnot a selective list; that is, I did not attempt to chobse the best or.biggest in,each field. Rather, ?listed as many bibliographies aS I couldfind, within certain limits.

4,V Only materials published in English are includedthough thatdoes not Mean only those of U.S. ojigin. Out of print sources are listed

nd are -so indicated. They are included for two reasons: one is thatey are available ip many libraries and remain useful; second is that Inted this compilation to show the sEopc and quantity of biblio-

g phic work done in women's studies, to provide an historicalpe pective.

V have not included gencial, brief reading lists of basic feminist

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12 NEW TIN !NISI S(:1101.ARSI 11P4

wOris, u-sually .giye-aways, which have been prodnised in .greatsnumbers bY publie libraries, .women's organizations., local NOWchapters, etc. ThCirsCoRe..il too narrow=they list the sathe books ag- ainand againand their nihnber is kgion. Neith9

,have I included the2 ,many excellent lists of nonsexist books for 011dren and young adults:For one thing. -,I consider them-to be outside th e. scope a tki, mot.eresearch-oriented compilation; and-4ain, they arc too numerotis andfreqvently too ephemeCal 6 make the compiling worth the effort?.

Another category excluded from this compilation is the literarybibliography of, individual women writers. While this type of com-pilation, would have fit the general scope requirements, includipg

. .them would4tveswelled the la ature section .beyond proportion.The fact is, there are enough s 1 publications that .they deserve asource guide of their own. Finally'Uay e not included bibliograPhiesthat appeared as part of monographs or anthologies.

ARRANGEMENT AND ANNOTATIONS

" The citations have been arranged by subject into tH-ty ections. Ihave made the headings as straightforward as possible, so that'thtsiti

fithere should be little difficulty in nding the needed items. ,worked, I let the material guide me, creating new sections as they wag, \sneeded, using five entries as the cut-off point. Each section beginswith an explanatory headnote defining the subject and its scope. -

There were, of course, a number of problems in categorizing bysubject. An overall "concern was howt. to classify the many bibliog-.raphics published in Canada. Margrit Eichler's fascinating article onthe interplay between feminist research in Canada and feministresearch in the United States (#069) convinced me to disperse themthroughout according to their s,ubjects, making this a bibliography ofU.S. and Canadian bibliographies.

Then there were some individual problems. The only volume onprostitution, for example, seemed to fit nowhere. Ultimately, I put it.in with the other professions, rather than in the more usual criminaljustice section, as an expression of feminist sentiment on the"criminal" nature of the endeavor. The one bibliography on sportsdid not seem to warrant its own category; however, since it's animportant issue for women, I included it in the health section.

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INrritoinicTIOr+

Of the total bl eniries, 215 are annotated, or fifty-two percent.My original intention was to annotate every entfy. As I worked, I hadto modify. my plans. This was due partly to time and partly toavailability:- In ordei to speed -things, I matle yet -another decision inthat seemingly endleSs chain-of arbitrary choices the bibliographer isfaced with: I .decided to stop annotating periodical articles.- This alsowas -necessary because I Continually had problems lOcating theparticular titles or issues. I preferred to conCentrate my energies inlocating the more substantial, separately-published compilations.

METHODOLOGY

tdid not use a conventional methodology for this project becauseI felt it would not do the field proper justice. The subject underinspection is large and diverse; it dots not readily lend itself toMethodical searching of indexes, reference guides, abstracts, and soforth. Because most of the bibliographies in women's studies are notproduced by mainstriam publishers, they are 41 o t picked', up by .

standard reference sources and not catalaked-by'lartariq, 'Xbey havesomething of a "fugitive" quvality abdut them. TheY.have to be

'searched forand hardbut not in the traditional ways...Nevertheless, there are several sources I have searche

thoroughly: Women Studies Abstracts, The Bibliographic Index, and:Besterman's World Bibliography of Bibliographies. The undeniably -best source of bibliographies in women's studies, however, is other.bibliographies; therefore, I have relied chiefly-oh my sister, bibliogra-phers. Once started on Os project, I could havr continued forever justfollowint up on the leads from each new source as I found it. This iswhat makes a project such as this one so interestjng. Insteattof spend-ing houit tediously copying citations from indexes (though there issome of that), one's{ime is.spent searching library catalogs and specialcollections, writingt endless letters' for review copies and citationchecks,- making khone callS, tracking down details, and always poring.nver new bibliographies.

Finally, there wasthe problenof when to.quit. A deadline fromthe publisher obviously gives one a bottom line, but the compiling hasto stop early enough to allow for writing the introduttion, preparingthe index, typing the manuscript, etc. The matter of the missed or..

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14 NEW FEMINKF SCHOLARSHIP

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-unannotated citation must ultimate)), be-accepted as part of the bib-Jiographe, trauma, As TUN. BackscVder noied in hcr introduc#on

tp 'a bibliography of literary criticistA (#10): knsinv; however;that foe cyCry, item4ve found in The 'lath Weekly Chronkle or theWales Western Mail;-we may have overlooked another in .CMLA . Suchis the bibliographer's nightmare." Nightmare indeed. I accept the:spectre of incoippekte-ness arid would appreciate hearing of those omis-ioilts detecced. by Others. as well as of- new bibliographies as they

appear. .

NOTES ,

I. "Editorial, Women's Studies Newsletter 543): 2, Summer 1977;"Editorial,:5 WoMen 's SludierNewsletter 6(4):2, Fall 1978; and "Women's StuxIi'Progrims," Women's Studiel Newsletter 6(4):23-29, Fall 1 (pg..

2. The journals and their dates.of first pu blicaoare! Feminirt Staies (1972),Frontiers (1975), Signs (1975), University of MrChrgan Paperr in Women's Studies(1974), 'and Women's Studies (1972). .11

3. "Editorial," Women's Studies Newsletter 6(4):2, Fall 1978.` 4.. The addfesses arc: National Women's Studies Association, c/o Women's

Studies Program, University of Maryland, College Park; MD 20742 and Women'5Information Services Network,-P,OBox 31625,-San Francisco, CA 94131,

5. Women's Educational Equity Communications Network, 1855 Folsom St.,San Francisco, CA 94103.

6. Women's History Research Center. Bibliographies 4-Women Indexed bynpic. Berkeley, 1973,

7. A good s(Turce fpr nonsexist reading lists and teaching material is FeministResources fry Schools apatolleges available from The Feminist Press, P.O. Box 334,Old Westbury, NY 11568.

Qthei Bibliographiesof Bibliographies

This section is not annotated; for a discussion of these bibliographiessee the Survey seCtion.of the introduction.

001 Ballou, Patricia K. "Review Essay: Bibliographies for Research onWomen,." Sighs 3(2):4A6-450, Winter 1977.

00$ Eichler, 'Margrie: An An;sotated Selected 13ibliography ofBibliographies on-Women. Ottawa Association of Universitiesand Colleges, 1973. 17pp: Out of 'print.

- .003 . An Annotated Selected Bibliography of Bibliographies

on Women. 2d ed. Pitisburgh: KNOW, 1976. 33pp.

- l004- Koelliker, Marsha. Bibliographies on Woknen, 1967-1973. Kent:

... Kent State University, School of Library Science, 1973. 62pp.

yr

005. List of Bibliographies on Women awl Feminism. Pittsburgh:KNOW, 1971. 4pp. Out of print.

006 ,Women's History Research Center. Bibliographies .on WomenIndexed by Topic. BerkeleY, 1973. 8pp. Out of print. ,

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General'F.

With sixty-tWo entries, the General section is.the largest and mostdiverse one. Bibliograprnes listed here include sources on a wide rangotopics. Some (If .theni are research oriented, Others are intended for theactivist. Th *nc e out-of-print conipilations from the early part of thecentury, in I 'orts on'inicrdlilm, and selected lists of as few 2S four oitges.There are bibliographie3 of periodicals, periodical 'articles, and, gpy,ernmentdocuments as well as of books. There 'were enoughtgeneral bibliographiesbased on the colleVtioos of college or uni:ersity libraries to warrant 2 separatelisting. Compiled by a librarian, faculty membet, or student, this iype ofbibliography is intended first to* a research aid for the local pop7lation.Ultimately, hoWever, it is also of ikerest td those outside the home campus.

can'serve 'as a modeller ot)ler bibliographers interested in preparing suchaidslor their Own students; it may also be of use to the researcher as well as toacquisitions and interlibrary loantlibrarians at other campuses.

007 Angast, Shirley S. "Review Essay: An Overview." Signs 1(1):175-184, Autumn 1975.

008 Armstrong, Douglas -and Marian Dworaczek. Women: A Bib-liography of Materials Held in the Itesearch Library.. Toronto:Ontario Ministry of Labour, Reseakh Library, 1974. 81pp.. Thenearly nine hundred citations in this bibliography are divi.cledinto two categories: books and periodical articles.

009 Bruemmer, Linda. "The Condition of Women in Society Today:A Review." Journal of the National Association for WomenDeans, Adminutrators and Counselors 31,(1):18-22, Fall 1969and 33(2): 89-95, Winter 1970. A review of the literature from1966; on the yarious patterns of life and options in life-style forwomen today.

010 Canadian Newsletter of\Researrh on Women. Vol. I-; May1072, The Newsletter began with four objectiVes: to establishand/of improve communicatiori among researchers; to listongoidg research on the Canasdian woman; to list selectedrelevant research on the international scene; to provide forexchange of ideas. An examination of some recent .ssues proves

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1 GENERAL 17

\that it has succeede) admirably; it, is an:unequaled resource forresearch in progress, bibliography, and,book reviews.

- 011. Cardinale, Susan. Special Issues of Serials 4bout Women,1965-1975. Monticello: Cou,ncil of Planning Libranans, 1976.41 pp. This bibliography provides, a much imeded referencs tothe tnyriad,special issnes of periodicals that have been publishedabout women. Issues containihg a special secnon of two qr moreankles are included, as are those .devoted to topics "'intimatelylinked with-wpmen's roles," such as:rape or abortiOh. However,issues devoted to topic's which were consicIttd,to be of equal.t.pncern te men and women, such as child carior divorcel ak hOtincluded' There will undoubtedly be some disagreement withthe editor's judgment on whether a topic concerns women,exclusively or not, but in any case, the coverage is broad withmore than three hundred issues included. The citations arearranged alphabetically by journal title, and mpst of them arcannotated.

012, Cisler, Lucinda. Women: 4 Bibliography. 6th ed. New York,1970. 36pp. This partially-annotated bibliography is one of the

' first women's bibliographies to appear and has been the personalproject of Lucinda Cisler through six editions. It is classified into

fourteen subject sections, including: Historical Studies; tile Law.and Politics; Economics, Work and Child Care; Reproductionand Its Control; Women and Socialism.. A periodical list is 2Isoincluded. Notations indicate editions in paperback and thOse--

worthy of special attention. Much historical material is listed and

tn. tich that is new.

013 Daniels, Arlene Kaplan. A Survey of Research Concerns onWomen's Issues. Washington: Association of American Col-leges: Project on' the Statns and Education of Women, 1975.43pp. Out of piint.. A comprehensive review of central areas ofresearch relating to women.

014 Davis, Lenwood G. The .Woman in Ametican Society: A SelectedBibliography. 2d ed. 'Monticello: Council of Planning Librarians,1975. 99pp. The second edition of Davls's bibliography ap-

, peared only one year aftcr the first. The introduction has

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18. HiMINISTScliOLAHSHIP

remained virtually unchanged though thc compilation hastripled in size. The sections whicli.carry over; General ReferenceWorks, Biography and Autobiography', Books:and periodicals,each .are kmger by ft=om aboul filtgen (Generil Reference) to sixty(Biograp,hy .ana Autobibgraphy) percent,. There arc four newsections: Selected Women's Organizations, Women CollegePresidents, Wometi's Bureau Peublications from 1918 to 1971.,and Government Documents... None of these additions 4

etexplained in thg introduction, in fact, the only change men-t ioned..thezte is the subdivi;ion of the Biography and -Aulobiog-ratihy sectiota by race -to make locating books on black womeneasier. The lack of a subject index wrIl cause some problems- in-

, using certain-sections. (Original. edition: Davis, Lenwood GI TheWoman it! , American Society:' A. Selected Bibliography.MOnticello: Council of Planning librarian', 1974. 33pp.)

015 Ehrlich, Carol. The Conditions of Feminist Research. Baltimore:Research Group One, 1976. 20pp. This pamphlet reviews andattempts todefine what "feminist" reserch is and should be. Itdoes not include a comprehensive review of1 the literature, butdiscusses twenty articles the author feels are important orrepresentative.

016 . "Woman Book Industry. American journal of Soda-.ogy 78:1'630-1044, January. ,1973.. Carol Ehrlich reviews'seventeen books in the women's studies area published in.1971and 1972.

017 Gitiloway, Sue. "Women." Wilson Library Bulletin 47:150-152.. October 1975. A highly selective and annotated list of thepublications of the Women's movement. The selection representsa good cross-section of the hest of the diffetent kinds ofpublicatiOns available. Several sOurces for comprehensive lists ofthe periodials are indicatpd. The annotations are evaluative.

018 Habei, Barbara. Women in America: A Grade to Books, 1963-197.5. Boston: G.K. Hall, 1978. Haber's Guide is an importantnew addition to the literature. Taking 1963, the publication dateof The Feminist Mystique, as her starting point, she annotatesnearly five hundred volumes of current feministting up to

1975. In each of thr eighteen subject sections, the, first several

books are annotated at length, followed by a longer list of brieflyannotated sekctions. Each section also has a short-introduction.The compilation can- stand alone as a Jore.collection for awomen's studies library, and it should prove useful to a widerange of users.

019 1-15Iliganjohn T. Women: A Bibli?g,raphy of Periodical Articles.Sacramento, 197. 17pp. Oilkt of print. 114Iligan's bibliographyls a list Of, more than three hundred articles -on women fromapproximately seventy periodicals published between janivaryand Decepther 31, 1972.aht. periodiols indexed -cover a wik-rspectkum,.blare primarily general liteasure. The bibliography.

is in nine subject Se0011S.. ,

020 .Hatiison, Cyifthia Ellen. Women's Moveq;ent Media: A SourceGuide. New York: R.R. Bowker, 1975. 269pp. This is not just abibliograiShy, but a guide to sources of information of variotis

-sorts. It includes approximatrly 550 destriptions of organizationsarranged by.funct ion, type, or main interesfof group, and whatmateri4ls they supply. There are five categories: material Pro-ducers, mat-erial collectors, service organizations, governmentagencies, special interest groups. There atv geographj,c, title,

group name, and subject indexos.

021 Hughes,' Marija Mãtich, Tie Sexual Barrier: Legal, Medical,J

Economic and Social Aspects-of Sex Discrimination. Washing-ton: Hughes Press, 1977. 843ppv Marija Hughts has stoppedpublishing supplements to her ofiginal (1970).bibliography andhas given us instead this mammoth one-volume,compilat ion ofmore than eight thousand citations: It covers the literature inEnglish from 1960 to 1975.An seventeen broad ,subiect.sections,from aging to economic status to legal st:itus to spt roles. Eventhough each of these chapters is sub- and .sub-subdividedtopically, the sheer size of the. compilAtion.makes the lack of asubject index problematic. Neverthekss, The Sexual Barrer is

certain to become a standard source ill many libraries. (Originaledition: Hughes, Marija Matich. The Sexual Barrier: Legal andEconomic Aspects of Employment. San Francisco, 1970. 35pp,Supplements, 1971 and 1972.) .

"V

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.76 NEW HiMiNIFI)SCHOLARSHIP

,

022 'Joyce, Lynda. Arotated BibliOgraphy of Women In iuraAmerica; with .a figview of the L:Jature about .Womeft in RuralAmerica, Bibliography of Woven in Rural Areas Worldwide,and Resource; Material. University .Park\ Pennsylvania StaleUniversity, tAgrkultbral Experiment Station, DepartMent bfAgricultoral EconomicS and .Rural Sociology,- 1976. 62pp. Thisvolume has several compOnentS. It begins viith a revkw essaywhich djscusses the iiterature in the anhotatcd bibliomphy andpresents the pertinent staristica information on thc status of the

' wral Woman: Thc annotated ibliography is a compichensive-ctimpilation.of works puhlished on thc Americatyrural woman in

. ,the twentieth century; it is a itraight alphabetical list by author'.

citationS are rearranged (minuS annotations) bychronolo i anothp sectiOn to show trends over time. Thenfollow )ibliography on rural women outside thc United Stafes;it is not comprehensive. Thc "Bibliographic Addendum" listsworks whkh Joyce was unable to locate and therefore could notannotate, as well as those w

'life in general or nonrural w cn. There arc two final sections:Ith are on related issucs suchas farm

9ne of bibliographies, the other of relevant periodicals, historicaland-current. Poi ole purposes of this project, rural was defined asall open country andOces with popubtions of less than 2,500.Thus, it indudes.both 'farm and small town residents. Joyce'sbibliography provides ivaluablc reference for those researchingwhat is esseicritilfika idling species: the rural woman.

023 King, Judith D. Women's Studies Sourregook: A Comprehen-,sive, Classified Bibliography.of Books. Allendale: Grand ValleyState Colleges Library, 1976. 68pp. This.largc format pamphletincludes nCirly thirty-one thousand citations. It is divided intofifty-one subject sections. There is an author/title indcx.

024- Kusnerz, Peggy Ann and Ann Martin Pollack. Women: A SelectBibliography. ERIC, 1975. ,Opp. (ED 4112 230). s

025, Lcwis, Edwin C: Developing Woman's Potent* Ames: IowaState UniTrsity ;Press, 1968. 58pp. Out of pript I

92.6 Marlow, Carleton H. Bibliography of American Women, Part I.Woodbridge: ResearchPublications, 1975. Because this bibliog-

GENPKAI. 21

.

sraphy is on microfilm, 1 have not examined it.iflowevert descrip-tjons from trie prodticer indicate that it covers the period up to.1904 kind lists forty thOusand titles. Part 11 is forthcoming.

021 Mazur; Carol and Sheila Pepper. Women in Canadd 1965 .to1975: A,Bibliography. 2d cd. Hamilton: .McMaster UniVersityLibrary Press, 1976. 174pp. The second edition of thisbibliography is appiC4imatdy t4ree times the size Ofthe first and .

covers an additionat three years. lt is' devoted exclusively tomaterials on Canadian women, such that general works whichmight relate to Canadian women as much aS any others arenot

, included, nor are international studies .which'include Canadiinwomen amohg others. The 1,97 citation's are krrAnged under-nearly three hundred subject headings, resulting in sowthingcloser to an index than to a chapter arrangement. This is probablythe major bibliographic source on the 'Canadian woman,certainly for the period covered. (Original edition: Harrison,Cynthia. Women in Canada, J.965-1972: A Bibliography.Hamilton: McMaster University Library Press, 1973. 51pp.)

024 Moore,.sanne. First Sampler: A Bibliography of Works onWomeridA-the ,George Peabody Department of the.Enoch PrattFree Lihtlary.. Baltimore: Enoch Pratt Free Library, 1974. 119pp.Out of 'print. The Peabody Department existed as a separatelilgary from 1,858 until it merged with Enoch Pratt in 1966.Moore's bibliography is an attempt to list all of the collection'sworks on women, most of them from the nineteenth and earlyeiventieth centuries. The approximately six hundred entries are6Rranged into ,ten subject section§: art, economics, education,history, law and political science, literature, medicine, philos-ophy -and religion, psychology, sociology and anthropology.

029. NeYork Public Library. List of Worki in the.New York 'PublicLibrary 'Relating to Voman. New York, 1905. 57pp. Out ofprint.

030 O'Connor, Patricia, Linda Headrick, and Peter Coveney.Women: A Selected Bibliography. Springfield: WittenbergUniversity; 1973..111pp. The principles. of selection for thiscompilation were to include a sampling of ZlAssic works, some

4, I

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'2 2 NEW FEMINIST SCII0LARSI.IIP

period pieces, and current 4.search, ith entries arbitrarilylimited to three per atit4. Acranged into hapters by subject,the citations include librkry of Congress ch4sification notationsand loc2timiy# Ohio libahries. Also iiicluded are lists of specialissues of perim icals, bibliograp.hies, and special collections.;Ade is an :mth tr index.

A

031 Rothstein, Vauline KIarcds. 'Women: .A Sekcted BibliOgraphyof Books.' 'Bulletin of Bibliography 32:45-54, April /June 1975.

03.2 .Samalonis, Bernice and Earl R Shaffer. Some Sourres of Bib/log-rap hies Perta ining to Women 'S Studies. ERIC, 197S. 22p.p.:(FID106 707).A listing of periodicals, documents, and books relatingto women's studies an&feminism in general. Some Sources wascompiled from a computer printout of ERIC materials coveringthe past four years. It is not annotated.

. ,

033 San Diego State UniversIty, Women's Studies Faculty. Women'sStudies Bibliogniphy: Seventy li'slenthil Readings. San Diego,1975. 4pp. Out of print. This tiny but attractive pamphlet listsseventy titles whkh the wOmen's studies facultyefelt were"essem.)al for an overview of the scope and promise of women'sstudies and it ithe bibliography] endeavors-to delineate the wayin which a lemlnist perspective transforms theapprroach to tradi-

,..tional

4

034, .Schuman, Pat and Gay Detkfson. "Sisterhood Is Serious,- AnAnnotated Bibliography." Library Journal 96:2587-2594,September 1, 1971. This bibliography, which is an-attempt toselect from the mass of material currently available, was compiledfor womenlibrarians and readersto offer."a brief picture of-the sptctrum of thought, history, experience and acti9n in thewomen's movemene." The selective list is meant as only a begin-ning, a jumping-off point. The introduction discusses some ofthemajor issues of the women's movement, gives statistics, andstresses the responsibility of librarians to provide materials for.women.

035 Mos, Journal of Women in Culture and Society. Vol. I-;Autumn 1975-. Sigmr regularly carries major review essays of the

9

GENERAL 23

new scholarshiti on women. Nearly fifty such bibliographic ar-ticles have appeared as of the_Summei 1978 issut This is a finesource.whjkwill he of cominuing importance. Citations to Signsessays will be found throughout in the appropriate subjoctcategories.

036 Status of Women Bibliography, A Selec'tive Bibliography ofGovernment Publications. Bowling Green: Bowfing-Green StateUttiiversity Library, Government Documents Sevice, 197'3.

,l4pp. Out of print,-This is a bibliography of sekcted governmentdocuments which report in some way on the stalus of women andwhkh were published between 1967 and 1973. That arc threesections: Present Status, Changing Status, and Spc-cial Concerns.'The citations are very brief, giving only titk, date, and numberof pages.

03.7 'Tobias, Sheila. "Thc Stud.), of Women." Choice 8(10): 129S-1304, December 1971.

038 U.S. Library of Congress! Brief List of References on Wome'sPart in the rode; Today. Washington, 1921. Out of print.

039 . List of References on Citizensh0 and Nationality. ofWomen. Washington, 1931. Out of print.

040 . Select List of References on the Woman of Today.Washington, 1908. Out of print.

041 Wheeler, liclen. Womanhood Aredie Supplement: Additional' Current Resources about Womek Metuchen: Scarecrow Press,

1975. 482pp. The Supplement to Helen Wheeler's original 1972compilation reprints the bulk of the material in that volume and,therefore, supersedes it. yhe Bask Book Collection listsliction byauthor and nonfiction by subject; Non-Book Resources are listedby type of resource. It is a fairly comprehensive listing of current

publications. (Original edition: Wheeler, Hekn R. WomanhoodMedia: Current Resourres about Women. Metuchen: ScarecrowPress, 1972. 335pP.)

042 Women: A Bibliography of Special Periodical Issues (1960-1975). Margrit Eichler, John Marecki, and Jennifer Newton, eds.

9 0

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24 NEW FEMINIST SCHOLARSHIP

Toronto:. Canadian Newsletter of Researcii on Women, 1976..! .75pp. See 043 far annotation.

043 Voltime II. Jennifer L. Newton and Carol Zavitz,' eds.Toronto: Canadian Newsletter of Research on Women, 1978.280pp. The first volume of this bibliography lists more than onehundred special issues oe.periodicals on women, the secondnearly five hundrek BoNvolumes arrange the entries by broadsubject areasixteen in Volume 1, eighteen in Volume IIandprovide, in .addition to title and date, the complete table ofcontents of each issue. Volume II also includes additional sulliectguitles to special issues on men, rural women, womengrants, Jewish wcmen, cross-cultural studies, union women,marriage and family. Another special section in Volume II listsseventeen special issues.published before 1960.

044 Women and Society: A Critical Review of the Literature with aSelected Annotated Bibliography. Len V. Bergstrom and MarieB. Rosenberg, eds. Beverly Hills: Sage Publications, 1975.360pp. See #045 for annotation.

045 . Jo Ann Ecn and Marie B. Rosenberg-Dishman, eds.Beverly Hills: Sage Publications, 1978. 288pp. The first volumeof Women anY Society includes 3,600 entries primarily in thesocial sciences and humanities. Criteria for selection were that thework be generally authoritative and available and" that, itconstitute "scholarly and applied rescarch efforts." Tlie 1978edition is an uPdate of the compilation by Rosenberg andBergstrom which follows the same format, style, purpose andscope. k continues where the first' volume left off, beginningwith citation number 3,601 and going throdgh number 6,000.

06 Women Studies Abstracts. Vol. I; Winter 1972. Thisquarterly journal *ludes a book review essay, book reiiews, andabstracts Which ar arranged by Subject. Additional articles arclisted without abstracts.

047 Women's Work and Women's Studies, 1971. Kirsten Drake,Dorothy Marks, and Mary Wexford, eds. New York: BarnardCollege, Women's Center, 1972. 138pp. (Order fromKNOW). See #049 for annotation.

23

GENERAL 25

(

048 , 1972. Dic¼i Lou Ellis et al, eds. New York:. BarnardCo llegs, Women's Center, 1973. 226pp..(00cr froin KNOW).See #049 for annotation.

049 1973-74. Barbara. Friedrnan tar .eds. Ncw York:Barnard College, Wqmen's Center,1075. 370pp. (Order fromThe Feminist Press). This annual, interdisciplinary bibliography.covers the year's scholarship in women's'studies, inclu ng re-search in progress. It is partially annotated and classified y sub-ject. The 1973-74 volurhe will be the last one publishe

050 Young, Louise M. "The American Woman at Mid-Century:Bibliographic EsSay." American Review 11:121-138, December1961.

051 Zangrando, Joanna Schneider. "Women's Studies in the UnitedStates: Approaching Reality."/American Studies International14(1):15-36, August 1975. This interdisciplinary literaturereview and essay, though now somewhat out of date, provides an,excellent introduction andecomprehensive overview, touching onwomen's studies "courses, programs, research, resources andresource repositories, publications, and communicationsnetworks,"

COLLEGE A JUN1VERSITY LIBRARY GUIDES

052 Amato, Kat erine J. Womenstudy: Guides, for Research. LakeForest: Lake Forest College, Donnelly Library, 1978. 6Opp.Wornenstudy is a compilation of brief research guides o'n a varietyof topics originally prepared individually,Jvh orte folkms the

4same format which includes "Topic Scope:' alittif paragraphoutliningthe major points and themes of die subject; a selectedlisting of boolii including th E. appropriate classification numbersand subject headings to check; listings of articles, bibliographies,indexes, and abstracts. There are author, title, 'and subjectindexes., A nice format for undergraduate and beginpingresearchers.

053 College of St. Catherine Library. Women: A Bibliography. St.Paul, 1967. Out of print.

26 NEW FEMINIST SCI &WARSHIP

054 Kp,-,eman, Leah. The Changi.vg Role of Women:- A SelectedBibliography. Sa ed. Sacramemo: California State UniversityLibrary, 1977. 190pp. Freeman compiled the first edition of thisbibliography in 1971. It was revised very Shortly after, and thesecond edition appeared irs01972. The third edition is substan-tially different; for example, it is more than three times as long.It does not represent, the compkteellection of the Sacramentolibrary, but is rather a selected list through which Freeman hastried to "provide a bihtiographic tool enabling students to tracethe-history and ideas of the women'i movement, to bring intofocus a vast collage of facts." The citations are organized intotwelve subject categories, such as education, 'employment,

14i women's movement, and history, and 'one section of.referencematerials. The final twelve pages list selected subject headings in

the California State University Library card catalog.

055 -Hoffman, Ruth H. Women's Bibliography. Bowling Groen:Bowling Green State University, Library, 1972. 64pp. Out ofprint.

056 Krichmar, Albert. Women's Studies: A Guide to Publicationsand Services Available in the Library of the University ofCalifornia at Santa Barbara and in the Santa Barbara Area. SantaBarbara: University of Califorhia, Library, 1975. 74pp. Out ofprint. Krichmar's bibliography of the University of California,Santa Barbara collection is a thorough one. In addition to theusual section on reference sources and the subject classifiedlisting of monographs, there .are listings of government docu-

ments, periodicals, pertilkent subject headings, local women's or-ganizations, and women's studies courses. Krichmar also hasincluded an especially detailed chapter on minority women tohelp the researcher in a difficult arca. There are approximately

four hu4red citations in this pamphlet.

057 fasky, Jane. "Selected Biltgraphy of Printed Materials onWomen and the Womeifs Movement in Booth Library:"[Eastern Illinois University] Illinois' Libraries 58(2):145-152,February '1976.

(Y58 Lo, Henrietta Wai-Hing. Women's Studies: A B*ography.Chico: California State University, Library, 1973. Out of print.

47,

'GENERAL 27

059 .Mac.busetti `Itistiture of TechnOlogy, Human Studies Collec-,

Wofnens Soidies Bibliography.CanThridgc,. 1977,

kl

.060 M,OCitn, Joanne. -The Feminist Collection,lqeally.Library. SantaAna: Santa Ma Colkge, Neally Library,- 197_6. 113pp. Out ofprint. McKititi's bibliogriphy:is fairly substantial one Thcmonograph section is brOken4oWn into.More than forty.difterentsubject-categories from hislork to aging to literature to women's

s work. BookHisted include thok -already in. thil;leaitY Library(call numbers -given)- and thok uncoteredAn reseafcti and on

. order.iThe periodkali list is Veii.brkf And P. rovidcs tks only.,. 1,

061 McMillan, Pat and Prn Porter. Woman's World: A Selecteds 'Bibliography on Women. DeKalh: Northern Illinois University

Library; 1574, 15pp. This bibliography vacielfroth thewhers inthis, sectian in 0,vcr ways: first, it ineludes periodical articles.andsecond, it does not, reflect thc library's holdings on women over-

°. atl. Rather, it concentrves ii three arcas: education., .employ-ment, And the status or women. These three areas constituteabout erghtuercent of the whole; the rest isdevotedto referenceSOU IT.es

062 Pastin , Maureen ,et al. Women's SI esoutees. Omaha:Unive Ity of Nebraska Library, 1975. 43pp. Out of Print. Thisbibliography ,can be duplicated from thc pfle available copy inthe reference collection at the University of Igebraska Omaha.

's

063 Pettingill, Ann H. and Jean D. Barnett. Women:A Bibliographyof BOoks and Other Materials. 3d cd. Los Angeles; CaliforniaStatc University, J .F.K. Memorial Library, 1976. 41pp. Pettingilland Barnett have organized thcir bibliography into thirty-ninesubject categories with setotions on periodicals and sound reeord-ings as well. The more' than cight hundred citations representonly a selection of materials from.the J.F.K.: Library and not acoinprehensive listing. There is an author index.

064 Portis, Juanita W. Women,: An Annotated Bibliography Baseilon the Holdings of California State College, Dominguez Hills.Dominguez Hills: California Statc College., Library, 1974. 75pp.This bibliography is arranged by subject into twelve categories

s1

.

-

Di MAX/ FEMINIST S( !MAIN IIP

,f from art to suffrage, the largest of which (thirty pages) is

..

"History.and Condition." The citations arc annotated, thoughnot by the' editOr; the descriptions come frOm book/reviews orfrom the book's introduction. At the end of each subject sectionis an annotated listing of microforms.

Selected Bibliography of0Boo . New York: Herbert Lehman College Library, 1973. 29pp.

lit6 5 Rot stein, Pauline Marcus. Women: A'

Out of print. Unlike most of the bibliographies in, this section,this one is annotated. It lists .mogographs only and has noreference/research guide. The majorsections arc: Genca4, Fel-inism Today, History, Sociology/Anthropology,- Ps chology,Economic and Legal Status, and Biography.

066 .Salzer, Elizabeth M. A Selected Bibliography, of Books onWoMert* the Libraries of the State University of New York atAlhany.,Albany: Syte University of New York Libraries, 1972.222pp. Out of 'print. This. is It simple listing in subjectarangement of the books about women in the SUNY Albanylibrary. Omitted are books about women in sports,- medicalbooks on gynecology and obstetrics, literary works by women

'A unless related to women, and biographies of individual women.Library of Congress:classification notations are given. There is a.corporat author/title index and a personal author/editor index.

067 Sussman, Barbara and Phyllis Kriegd. Women and the AmericanF.Verience; An Annotated Bibliography of Selected Holdings onWomen and Their Work: 1890-1920 Located in, the SarahLawrence College Library'. Bronxvilk: Sarah Lawrence College,

.- Library, 197.,. iOpp. This compilation is in four sections:bibliographies, monbgraphs-, periodkals,/and govewmentdocpments. It differs from the other bibliographies listed in thissection in that it concentrates on a specific topic as well as within a,time frame. However, it also reflects the colkctiorr of the SarahLawrence College Library. The periodicals list4fairly extehsive

.

one; not every title was for or by, women,' but .a brief annotation,explains the reason for its incrision.4 . . ,

06 Waibel, Grace T. Women: A Selected B. ibliography and Guideto Library Resources. Fre9no: California_State University Library,-

1972. 18pp. Out of print.

e,

.o

Anthropology and Sociology -

Anthropology and sociology have been combined bicause each ha,s toofew entries to warrant its own section. The number of entries, however, doesnot always correspond directly to level of activity. There is a major biblio-

'graphic source itianthtopologyjacobs's Women in Perspective. As for soci-ology, much of the research dopes not appear in this section, but in the topicalarea to which the research is tied; sociological methofis can be.used to studyanything and everythingiape, crime,family.Pattert,s, etc. This is especiallytrue of the Sex Roles/Sex Differences section.

SEE ALSO: Sei Itoks and Sex Differences.

069 Eichler, Margrit,' "Review ,Essay: Sociology of Feminit Researchin Canada:" Signs 3(2):409-422, Winter 1977.

070 Jacobs, Sue-Ellen. Women it, PerspeCtive: A Giide. to Cross-Cultural Studies. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1974.299pp. Before its publication in this edition, Women. inPerspective was circulated informally in-A two-inch thick mimeo-graphed version-4n "underground" bibliographic classic, as ithas been called. It is in two parts: the first is arranged by geo-graplzical area (each one is further divided into texts, generalreferences, and specific places), the ,second is divided intotwenty-seven subject areas. :This is a major refetence work.

071 Lamphere, Louise. "Review. Essay: Anthropology." Signs2(3):612- 627, Spring 1977. P-

e072 Lopata, 'Helena Znaniecki. "Review Essay: Sociology." Signs

2(1):165-476, Autumn 1976.

073 Huberjoan. "Review Essay: Sociology." Signs. 1(3):685-698,Spring 1976. / ,

fi#074 Stack, Carol B. et al.'"Review Essay: Anthropology. " Signs 1(1):

147-160, Autumn 1975.

29,

f

4

Art and Music

Three of the six bibliographies in this section concern art, womenartists, and art history; two encompass women musicians; one deals withwomen and film. Both of the music bibliographies include biographicalinformati9Os well.

075 Crowe, Edith L. Women Artists: A Selected Bibliography ofPeriodical Material, 1929-1974. San Jose: San Jose. StateUniversity, Library, 1974. 22pp. Crowe has searched Art IndexWomen Studies Abstracts, and Social Science and HumanitiesIndex from 1929 (the first year of Art Index) to 1974 for articleson women artists. She has arranged the citations into two parts:one for general articles or articles on particular artists, the otherfor *views of group exhibitions by women artists. The bibliog-raphy includes more than four hundred citations. Available in

jimited supply to educational institutions only.

076 Hixon, Don L. and .Don Hennessee. Women in' Music: ABiobibliography. Metuchen: Scarecrow Press) 1975. 347Pp.Women in Music can be used in two ways. First, it is an index tobiographical information on women found in. nearly fifty majormusk reference works. Second, because each entry includes placeand date of birth and fields of musical activity or specializition, itserves as a quick reference biographical dktionary in itself. Only"classical" musicians haVe been included. The volume ends witha classified index by field or activity. There arc seventy differentclassifications from accompanists to 'Musicologists to voiceteachers.

077 Kowalski, Rosemary Ribich. Women dnd Film: A Bibliography.Metuchen ,Scarecrow Press, 1976. 278pp. Women and Filmcontains more than two thousand citations to works in four areas:actors, filmmakers, images of women in 111m, and film writers/critics. The volume is dilided into sections on each of these topicswhich are in turn subdivided, where -appropriate, into historicaland reference works, catalogs, and specific works. Many of thecititions are to general film materials which contain informationon, but are not exclusively atiout, women. In some cases, the an-

30

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0.

ity

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ART AND MUSIC

notations point out what pert Ment material a general work doesw have, and/or how to locate it. The usefulness of this approach

can be debated either way: on the one hand, it's a bit miskadingfor the researcher who's already been through the standardsources and is looking for books specifically on women. On dist'other hand, it's helpful to know which of the more general orstandard works would be most useful. Each user must dedde forhim or hersdf. There k a fairly extensive subject/name index.

078 Krasilovsky, Alexis Rafad. "Feminism in the Arts: An InterimBibliography. Art Forum 10(1472-75, June 1972.

079 Orenstein, Gloria Feman. "Review. Essay: Art History." Signs1(2):505-526, Winter 1975.

080 Pool, JeanMe G. Women in Music History: A Research Guide,New York, 1977. 42pti. Pool's pamphlet tiegins with "An Essayon the History of Women in Music" and, like the Nixon book(#076), it includes biographical as well as bibliographicalinformation. The bikiliography is in eight subject sections: Gen-erlal Books, Books on Individual Women, General Articks, Ar-ticles on Individual Women, Approaches to Women in History,BibliograiAies, Lists of Women Composers, and Examples ofDenial of Women's Creative Abihties. Other resources forwomen's music arc also lived, including 'periodicals, organiza-tions, and record companies. The biography section Inclucksonlythose worricti composers born before 1900. -A discographysection lists recordings of women's musk available as ofSeptember 1977, A final scct ion suggests possible research topks.

k.)

Child Care

Child care has long beenand will continue to bean important issuefor women. It is good to know that several excellent guides to the research are

available,SEE ALSO: Marriage and the Family.

081 Frost, Judith ind Miriam Meyers. Day Care Reference Sourres:An- Annotated Bibliography. ERIC,.1970. 35pp. (ED 039 700).

082' Howard, Norma K. Day Care: An Annotated Bibliography.Urbana: ERIC Clearinghouse on Early Childhood EducatiOn,1971. 19pp. (ED 052 823). Supplement 1, 1972. 59pp. (ED 069402). Supplement .?, 1974. 60pp.4(ED 089 884). '

083 Hu Teh-wei. Selected Bibliography on Child Care.EvaluationStudies. MonticeltO: Council of Planning Librarians, 1973. 9pp.

,

This brief bibliography 'is arranged into three main divisions:Conceptual Issues, Cost, and Benefits (effectiveness). There is nointroduction, so the heading "Conceptual Issues" is not de-fined. The section contains, however, works on child develop-ment, on legislation and government policy, on workingmothers. All three sections include substantial numbers of

(

government documents.

084 Lloyd, Diane. Child Care in the'. 1970's: A Bibliography.Monticello: Cotincil of Planning Librarians, 1977. 97pp. Thisbibliography is the result of a comprehensive review of the lit-.erature published since 1970; it is part of an ongoing research'project. More than 1,100 citations are arranged by form orsubjeci into' fourteen major sections: General; Bibliographies;Guidelines, Handl:iooks and Manuals; Surveys and Profiles; TheChild Care Consumer; Costs, Finances and Economics; Licensureand Standards; Legislation; Child Care Workers; ParentParticipation; Program Models and Descriptive Studies;Empirical ,Research and Evaluation. Studies; 143leasurement,

Observatrion and Evaluation; and Foreigrf Experience. An..

. e tensive and valuable resource.S.,

( .32 3j

1,4

CHILD CARE 33

085 Reif, Nadine. An Annotated Bibliography of bay Care Ref-erence Malendr, ERIC, 1972. 42pp. (ED 088 609).

086 Wells, Alberta..Day care: An Annotated Bibliography. ERIC,1971. 367pp. (ED 068 199). Supplement, 1971. I21pp. Supple-mint, 1971, 49pp. (ED 068 201)..

-41),

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p.

Collectidn Guides

This section includes guides to resource callections on women,including major archives, collections of ephemeral nuiterial, and 'specialsections of general libraries. The guidss range from the three-volume bookcatakig of a major historical repository to the small bibliography of apamphlet collection. An important new source for researchers is Hinding'sforthcoming national guide to manuscript collections on women.

087 Catalogue i)f.the Galatea Collection of Books Relating to theHistory. of Woman in the Public Library of the City of Boston.Boston: Trustees of the Boston Public Library, 1898. 340p. Thisis the catalog of Thomas Wentworth Higginson's library onwomen, which he donated to the Boston Public Library. Thenearly one thousand citations arc organized according toHigginson's, own classification system into nine major subjedgroupings: Biography, .History and Condition of Women,Education, Health and Hygiene, Relations and Comparisons ofthe Sexes, Rights of Women, Work and Influence of Wkomen,Literature, and Periodicals.

088 Donovan, Lyon fohfield. "Library Resources: CHS ollectionson the History of Women in California." Califorts HistoricalQuarterly 52:81-84, Spring 1973.

089 Hinding, Andrsa. Women's History Sources: A G ide toArchives and Manuscript Collections in the Urtikd States. NewYork: Bowker, forthcoming,

090 Nilan, Roxanne-Louise. The Woman Question: An AnnotatGuide to the Women's Pamphlet Collection. Irvine: University\of California Libraty, 1976. 41pp. The PoliticaPPamphlets Col-lection of the University of California at Irvine has recently beenbroadened to include pamphlets from the women's movement.This annotated guide cites and describes approximately 150pamphlets in seventeen subject seCtions. It\will be of use to thecollector, both individual and institutional.

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091 No len, Apita L. "The Feminine Presence: Women's Papers in-the Manuscript Division." QuarterlY Journal of the Library ofCongress 32:348-365,e' Octobrr 1975: ,

092 Radcliffe College. Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library onthe History of Women in Anitrica: The Manu.tcnPt Inventoriesand the Catalogs of Manuscripts, Books, andPicturws. Boston:G.K. Hall, 1973. Threr vols.

Scott, Marda and Elizabe(th Power. The Woman's Collection atthe University of North Carolina at Greensbom: A Checklist ofHoldings. Greensboro: University of Nonh Carolina, WalterClinton Jackson Library, 1975. -150pp. The Woman's Collectionwas started in 1936 when the University at Greensboro was theWoman's College., In 1947, relevant works already held by thelibrary were added to 'the collection, and in the 1950s ninehundred volumes were addect when the valuable privatecollection of Anthony Ludovici was ptirchased. The Check-Listsupersedes all previous editions. (Origipal editions: Hussey,Minnie Middleton. The Woman's Collection: A Bibliography ofMaterial, 1937-1943. Greensboro: University of North Carolina,The Woman's College Library, 1944, 121pp. and Hussey,Minnie Middleton. The Woman's Collection: A Bibliography ofMaterial, 1944-49. Greensboro: University of Nortti Carolina,Library of the Woman's College,_ 19)0. 110pp).

094 Sophia Sritith llection. Catalogs of the Sophia SmithCollection, Wo en's History Archive, Smith College. Boston:.G.K; Hall, 1975. Seven vols.

095 Thoreen, Bonnie'. "Women's ReferenCe Collections." Book-legger 1(2):18-21. January/February 1974. Thoreen lists andbriefly describes twenty-seven collections of primary sources orspecial sutijects relating to women.

096 Wilson, Joan Hoff IAA Lynn Bonfield Donovan. 4NVomen's4

History: A Listing of West Coast Archival and ManuscriptSources." California Historical Quarterly 55:74-83, September1976.

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44

Criminal Justice-

Awareness of the special needs, situations, and experiences of womenhas grown to include the woman offender, indicated by the developing bodyof literature on women in the criminal justice system. The bibliographieslisted here all recognize the need for this separate literature and provideaccess to it. The most comprehensive source is Rosenzweig and Brodsky's ThePsychology of the Female Offender.

097 Anderson, Etta k "Thc 'Chivalrous' Treatment of the Fella leOffender in the Arms of the Criminal Justice Systeit: A Reviewof the. Literature." SO'cial Problems 23(3):350-357, February1976.

098 Doleschal, E. "Thc Female Offender: A Guidc to PublishedMaterials:" Crime and Delinquency Literature 2:639-670,1970.

099 Goyer-Michaud, Francyne. "The Adult Female Offender: ASelected Bibliography" Criminal Justice eltd Behavior1(4):340-356, December 1974. This is a comprehensivebibliography of journal articles published in English,and Frenchbetween 1959 and 1974. It lists more than two hundtrd citations.According to Rosenzweig and Brodsky (#101),-'this articlerepresents only part of a forthcoming bibliOaphy compiled byGoyer-Michaud and Use Brunet-Aubrey.

100 Livesey, Sharon. Survey ,of L al Literature on WomenOffenders. Pittsburgh: Entropy *mited, 1975. 16pp. Fourbroad areas are examined in this survey: women's legal status,the criminal law, what happens to the female offender, and thelaw on prostitution and rape. The introduction is substantial anddescribes the literature in some detail. Most of the sixteen pagesarc devoted to an annotated bibliography of twenty-six citations.

101 Rosenzweig: Marianne and Annette. M. Brodsky. The Psychologyof Me Female Offender: A Research Bibliography. University:University of Alabama, Center for Correctional Psychology,1976. 45pp. This bibliography was compiled in responie to twoproblems: thc general lack of literature on the female offender

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CRIMINAL JUSTICE 37

and the,typical, but incorrect, issumption that what is writtenabout the Male offender is also 1)e of his female counterpart.Rosenzweig and Brodsky have brought together works from thecorrectional, psychologkal, and sociological literature in order togive as full a picture of the research as possible. No attempt wasmade to be comprehensive, rather, the editors selecked materialsfor quality and uniqueness. Only works published between 1950a.nd 1975 were considered. The major portion of the bibliog-raphy is divided into sectioni on the juvenile and the adult of-fender; each of these is divided into two subcategories; theories,research and treatment. Each subsection is introduced with aninformative, brief overview of the major issues and works. Ashorter 'on lists one title each for the crimes women thost fre-quently co mit: murder, prostitution, shOplifting, and infan-ticide; this section also cites articles on women alcoholics anddrug addicts. Listings of bibliographies and, dissertationsconclude the compilation. This interdisciplinary bibliography isan invaluable resource for any researcher concerned with thefemale offender.

102 Sturgeon, Susan. .Wonien in Prison: An Annotated Bibliog-raphy. Honolulu: University of Hawaii, Graduate School' ofLibrary Studies, 1973. 20pp. Sturgeon originally became in-terested in this topic is the result of publicity about the case of alocal woman. Thus, her perspective is more feminist and "pro-

essive" than a disinterested bibliographer's might be. In the''. oduction, she summarizes some of the key issues surrounding

- men criminals: the kinds of crimes they commit and why, thediscrimination they face, the Jack of services. Many ,of the workscited art from the "akernative press.". Organization of- thebibliography is by format; it includes sections on dissertations,government d6cuments, and nonprint media as well as the usualbooks and journal articles. Some of the annotations are not )original; sources have been cited in these cases. No materiilsdated before 1965 are included.

103 and Laurel Rans. The Woman Offender: A Bibliograph:cSou:rebook. Pittsburgh: Entropy Limited, 1975. "63pp. The firstsection of The Woman Offender is an annotated listing of 98citations; an additional 250 citations are listed but not annotated

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18 MX/. ITMINIS1 S(11101 ARM IIP

in the second section. Each of tIgse chapters is subdivided biform of material: books, articles, dissertations. Only' literaturepublished in the Unifed States from 1965 to 075 is included. Anappendix lists programs funded by the Department of Labor andthe Law Enforcement Assistance Administration.

104 Velirnesis, Margaret L. "The Female Offender." Crime andDelinquency Literature 7:94-112, Mardl 1974. A bibt)graphicessay covering the major research on the female offender.

105 Women Offenders: A Bibliography. Olympia: 'Washington StateLibrary, Institutional Library Services, 1970. 14pp. Supplement,1972. 5pp. Women Offenders and its Supplement are dividedinto sections by format: books, journal articles, research projects,and special reports.- Several works on lesbians ate cited,presumably because they touch on prison life and not becausehomosexuality is regarded as an "offense." Annotations wouldhave been helpful in making this clear. More than half of theworks cited are journal articles.

4

1 t

Drugs and Alcohol

The woman alcoholic or drug abuser has long been invisible isolatedin the home, shielded by 6Inily and-friends. Now that is-beginning to,change, and a new literature is developing which focuses on her uniqueproblems. The citations listed here were pulled out of the Health sectionbecause they were numerotis enough to form their own category.

SEE ALSO! Criminal justice.

106 Beckman, Linda). "Women Alcoholics: A Review of Social andPsychological Studies." Journal of Studies of Alcohol 36:819-,824, July 1972.

,

107 Bowker, Lee H. "An Introducilion and Bibliographical Guide tothe therature on Female Drui Use." Women Studies Abstracts5(4):1-18, Winter 1976.

108 Christenson, Sus4n J. and Alice Q. Swanson. "Women and DrugUse: An Annotat&I Bibliography. " Journal ofPsychedelic Drugs6(4): 371-414; October/December 1974. Christenson andSwanson address the fact that women have been the world'smajor drug users, now and historically. The bibliography in-cludes sections on alcohol, psychotherapeutic drugs, narcotics,smoking, and treatment. Itis well annotated, and the introduc-,tion reviews the major trends and works.

109 Hargraves, Ruth and Muriel Nellis. Women and Drug ConcernsBibliography. Washington: United Methodist Church, Board ofChurch and Society, Department of Drug and Alcohol Concerns,1974. 9pp.

110 National Institute on Drug -Abitse, Clearinghouse for DrugAbuse Information. Women and Drugs: An Annotated Bibliog-raphy. Rockville, 1975. 62pp. Women and Drugs was originallycompikd in 1974 by the Student Association for the Study ofHallucinogens. In updating and expanding the bibliography,the C4earinghbuse searched a dozen data bases and indexes forliteratbre published between 1937 and 1965. The literature citedis almost exclusively reports of 'research studies of various

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4Q NEW FEMINM SCHOLARSIiIP

,sortspsychologicaL physiological, sociological. Each entry isannotated, describing the research in some detkil: The 181 cita-tions are-categorized imp fout major chapters: General, Wome0and Narcotics, Women and Psychotherapeutic Drug Use,Women and Alcohol; each of these is subdivided. There is an

--author index.

v. 3 9

4

Economics

The Economics section has developed largely during the five years.since

New Feminist Scholarship was originally compiled: The bibliog6phies listedhere arc foased Primarily:on the statui of women in the American economyand, to i lesser extent., the rest of the Western world. Those bibliographiesconcerned with women's status and role a the economy of developingcountries were numernus enough to form a separate section.

SEE A LSO : Women. and Development.;' Work.

111 Chapman, 'Jane 'Roberts. "Review Essay: Economics." Signs1(1): 139-146 , Autumh 1075.

112 Dupont, Julie A. WomenTheir Social and Economic Status. _-Selected References. Washington: U.S. Department of' LaborLibrary, 1970. Cpp. Thi. selective list inclu'des an interestingarray of publications dating from the late nineteenth centurythrough current (as of 1970) titles. It contains many standardsand a number of more unusual items from earlier peridds. Ar-'ranged by subject into eleven categories, 4it has as well, sectionson the origin and function ofthc Women's Bureau and a listingof special collections on women:

. .

113 Jusenius, Carol L. "Review Essay:- Economics." Signs 2(1):177-1-: 189, Autumn 1976.

114 Kahne, Hilda and Andtew I. Kohen. "Economic Perspective onthe Roles of Women in the American Economy." journal ofEconomic .Literature, 13:1240-1292, Deceinber 1975. Thisliterature review 'discusses and lists 267 citations to thc researchon women's economic roles.

115 Kohen, Andrew I., Susan C. Breinich,''and PatriciaWomen and the EcoWomy; A Bibliography and Review erheLiterature on Sex. Differentiation in the ,Labor Market andSupplement. Columbus; Ohio State University, Center forHuman, ,Resource Research, 1977. 109pp. romen and theEconomy was first issued in 1971. Because of the substantialvolume of the literature, itluickly became necessary to-update;

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1,2 NEW HAVNIS SC.1101.ARSI tIP

thc bibli74phy sectiOn of the original compilation. Ingtead ofproducing a new second edition, however, the first edition wasreprinted with a twenty-page supplement. Both the. originalbibliography atAl tlke supplemens arc classifie4 by subject divi-sions: Histotical Perspective, Female Labor Suppin Earnings,Occupations, Unemployment, Attitudes of andetoward WorkingWomen, The. Law, Home Production and Child .Care, andStudies on the Role of Women,. Two final sections coMplete ihebibliography: Bibliograffities and Revkw Articles, Late Arrivals.The Occupations section is further subdivided into more thanadozen categories. The bibliography is cbmprehensive for researchon women's economic roles, but some related areas have beenomitted entirely. These include discrimination in educatiOn,statistics, and sex differenees in occupational choice. Together,the bibliography and its supplement total approximately sixhundred citations. The Jiterature review, which 4i0 thirty-twopages in length, has not lieen revised.

116 Lloyd, Cynthia B. "The Role of Women in Modern Econ. micLife: A Working Bibliography." Review of Radical PokicalEconomics 4:121-129, July 1972.

117 Rupen, Alice, Candace Waid, and Leslie Brown. Women andCredit: An Annotated Bibliography, -Washington: Center forWomen Policy Studies, 1974. 27pp..Out o'f print.

118 Sutton, Ottie K. Women and the American Economy. ColoradoSprings: U.S. Air Force Academy Library, 1976. 31pp. (Order.number: ADA 020334). Sutton's bibliography, representingonly a part of thc library's holdings on the subject, was preparedin 1976 for an Air Force Academy Assembly on Women and theAmerican Economy. It has seven subject chapters: Reference andBibliography, History, Discrimination and Equal .Rights, hm-ployment and the- Family, Labor Force Participation, Occupa-tions, Present Status knd F ture Role.' Each section -includes asubstantial listing of gove ment documents.

4

Education

The field of wolben's educaiion 'has seen a great deal of activity since1970: two pieces of major legislation were passedTitle IX and the Women'sEducational E'quity Act (WEEA); wpmet's-studies has blossomed into afledged disciplinary, area; women atibeginning ti) enter the male bastions oflaw and medical school; for the first time, theta are more womenundevraduates than men. One-third of the bibliographies listed hereconcern women and higher education. Another third encompass the generalarra of pareerso vorional educa*, and the relationsIiip of schooling towork as thal affects women. Continuing education and equal educational'opportunity are ea' cb iepresenter) by several cdmPilations.

'1 19 Association 'of Collegiate Alumnae. Contributions toward a..

Bibliography of the Higher Education of Women. Bostep:Trustees of the Public Library, 4897. 42pp. Out of print.

120 Astin, Helen S.\ Nancy Suniewick,#nd *tan Dweck. Women:A Bibliography'on their Education and Careers, New York:Behavioral Publiaktions, 1974. 243pp. For the most part, thisbibliography (liners research materials from 'the last deCade,though some items from tht 1950s arc included. The citations arcarranged by subject into seven i7hapters; plus one for miscel-laneous listings, and two introductory chapters"Overview of

1. the Findings" and "Beyond the Findings." Entries are anno-tated.or abstracted, and there arc author and subject indexes.

1.21 Barabasi Jean. Women: Their Education anti Career Goals: AnAnnotated Bibliografihy of Selected ERIC References. ERIC,1972. 71.pp. -(ED 067 423).

444.

122 Business and ProfessiOnal Women's Foundation. Career Coun-seling: New Perspectives for Women and Gfrls. Washington,1972. 440. Out of print. This selected, annotated bibliographyis divided into two sections: the first covers materials on researchinto counseling and occupational choice; the second, specificcareers; where to find them, and how to get a job. The

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44 NEW FEMINIST SCHOLARSHIP

annotations are notievaluative.arncluded are books, ilamphlets,reports, theses, articles, and microfilm; all arcin the collection ofthe Foundation Libritry.

123 Cismaresco, Francoise. "Education and Training of Women."Educational Documentation and Information 196:14-43, 1975.

124 Froschl, Merle and Jane Williamson. Femirsist Resourres forSchools and Colleges: A Guide to Curricular Materials. d rev.ed. Old Westbury: The Feminist Press, 1977. 67pp. The secondedition of Feminist Resourres completely' updates the first andalso introduces many changes of orpniiation. It lists nonsexistcurricular materials for all levels of education as well as manyreadings on a wide range of relevet issiK. (Original edition:A hlum , Carol and J acquel i tie M. Franey. Feminut Resourres forSchools and Collegesi A Guide to. Curricular Materials.. OklWestbury: The Kminist Press, 1973. 20pp.)

125 Harmon, Linda A. Status of Women\ in Higher Educationy1963-1972, A Selective Bibliography. Ames: Iowa State Univer-sity Library, 1972. 124pp. Covering U.S. materials only, thecitgions arc arrapged alphabetically by author and divided intochaptcrs according to type of material coveredbooks, articles,government publicatiOns, dissertations, ERIC, and ephemera.There is no index. An appendix lists civil rights,legislatiOn oneducatioh and other pertinent laws.

126 Kitson, Marion. "Review Essay: The Status of Wonien in HigherEducation." Signs 1(4):935-942, Summer 1976.

127 Lee, Sylvia et al. Implications of Women's. Work Patterns forVocational and Technical Education; Ars Annotated Bibliog-raphy. Columbus:. Ohio State University, Center for Vocationaland Technical Education, 1967. 25pp. This bibliography is onepart of a larger project siRdying the effects of girls' vocationaleducation on their future work lives. While it is now somewhatout of date, it includes material that remains useful. One isencouraged by the early concern of the specialists in homeeconomics education who designed the project.

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liDUCATIpN 41

128 Mills, Gladys H. Bibliography: Equal Educational Opportunity:Myth or Reality? ERIC, 1974. 41pp. (ED 110 538). This paperwas prepared for the annual meeting of the Education Com-mission of the States.

.1.29 Equal Rights for Women in Education. Denver: Educa-tion Commission of the States, 1973. 14pp.

130 Oltman, Ruth M. Status of Graduate imd Professional Educationof Women-1974; A Review of the Literature and Bibliography.ERIC, 1974. 15pp. (ED 092 022). This papee.was prepared forthe Ainerican Association of University Women Conference onGraduate and Professional Education of Women in 1974.

131 Rader, Hannelore B. Women in Higher Education Administra-tion: Annotated Bibliography. Washington: National Associa-tion for Women Deans, Administrators and Coudelors, 1976.8pp. Primarily, Rader's bibliography covers the period from 1969to 1975, though a few older items of particular interest have beenincluded. Many of the works cited are studies of the wtnanadministrator, describing her status, the special problern shefaces, etc.

132 Robinson, Lora H. Institutional Analyst's of Sex Discrimination:A Review atcsd Annotated Bibliography. Washington: ERIC

, Clearinghouse on Higher Education, 1973. 1Ctpp. (ED 076 176).

133 Roby, Pamela. "Women and American Higher Education."Annals of the Amen'can Academy of Political and Social Science

/4- 404:118-119, November 1972.

134 Spiegel, Jeanne. Continuing Education for Womete A SelectedAnnotated Bibliography. Washington: Business and Profession-al Women's Foundation, 1967. 17pp. Out of print.

135 Watermulder, Georgia P. Careers for College Women: ABibliography of Vocational Materials. Ann Arbor: University ofMichigan, Center for Continuing Education for Women, 1968.61pp. Out of print.

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136 Westervelt, Esther Manning. Barriers to Women's participationin Postsecondary Education. A Review of Research andCommentaty ai of 1973-74, Wohington; Nacional Centcr forEducational Statistics, 1976. 76pp.

137 and Deborah Fixter. Women's Nigher anj 'ContinuingEducation, An Annotated Bibliography. New York: CollegeEntrance Examination Board, 1971. 67pp. The primary focus ofthis list is women's higher and continuing education, withsecondary emphasis on women's employment. The bibliographyisk highly selective, yet it covers a broad spectrum of materials.The items were chosen for quality, representativeness, and time-liness; an effort was made to include items that arc not easilyavailable. There is no index, and no foreign language materialsarc included.

138 Women's Educational Equity Communications Network,.Operated for the U.S. Office of Education by Far WestLaboratory,. the Women's Educational Equity CommunicationsNetwork (WEECN) is "an information service that collects,screens, classifies, stores, and provides information on projects,

. activities, and research related to women's educational equity."WEECN, funded under the auspices of the Women'sEducational Equity Act, was established in 1977. Its mission is toprovide a commehensive infrruation service for a wide diversityof users includiN teachers, a ministrators, counselors, students,librarians, and parents. In ad ition to responding to individualrequests, WEECN has developed a publications programincluding a number of bibliographies. Titles currently in printinclude:

Cirksena, Kathy et al. Women's Educational Equity AnnotatedSelected References and Resturces. 1977. 16pp.

. Continuing Education: Reentry and the matkreWoman, Annotated Selected References and Resources. 1977.2Opp.

Costick, Rita M. et al. Nonsetht Career Counseling.* Women:Annotated Selected References and Vsources. Part land 11.1978.23 and 33pp.

15

Health and Physical Education

lin' addition to those on wOMen's health concerns in general, thissection includes bibliographies on abortion, industrial health and safety, /physical education and sports. For general or introductory research, Cowan'sWomen's Health Care ahd Ruzek's Women and Health Care are twoexcellent sources.

SEE ALSO: Drugs arid Alcohol; Women and Development.

139 Adams, David. Therapeutic Abortion: AN Annotatki Bibliog-raphy. Hamilton,: McMaster Univemity Medical Centre, 1973.981313.

140 Cowan, Belita. 'IVometo's Health Care: Resourres, Writings,Bibliographies. Ann Arbor: Anshen Publishing, 1977. 52pp.Women's Health Cans is a model of what a subject bibliographyfrom ,the women's movement should be: helpful, concise, /-thoroughly researched, frankly feminist, attractively produced,and modestly priced. It covers the full range of issUes in women'shealth care: Gynecological Self-Help; Sterilization Abuse; Ques-tions and Answers on Menopause; Synthetic Estrogens, DES, andCancer; Women and Psychotherapy; and includes a briefintroductory essay on each. A final section lists recommendedfeminist periodicals and films. There is a directory of women'shealth organizations. This bibliography is a must.

141 Dollen, Charles. Abortion in Context: A Select Bibliography.Metuchen: Scarecrow Press, 1970. 150pp. This Compilation lists'!hooks and articles in the English language that are reasonably.available to American scholars and libraries," with emphasis onrecent material. "In context" means that articles on relatedissues such as marriage, family, ard contraception have beenincluded. Dollen concentrates on the moral and philosophicalside of the abortion issue and leaves the medical literature out.There is a subject and source index.

A 142 Floyd, Mary K. Abortion Bibliography. Tray: Whitson, Vol.I-VI, 1970-1975. The Abortion Bibliography .annually lists.

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)8 NEW l'EMINISTsSCHOLAKSHIP

books and articles as a "contribution toward documenting in oneplace as comprehensively as possible one of our cential socialissues." The bibliography includes an unannotated list of books,alphabetically listed by author; and periodical literature iniwosections, one by titk and one by subject. Foreign material seemsto be well covered. There is an author index.

143 Geijerstóm Günnar K. An Annotated Bibliography O./InducedAbortion. Ann Arbor; University of Michigan, Center forPopulation Planning, 1969. 35*.

144 Glab, Kathi. "Sporting Women." Booklegger 6:9-12, Septem-ber/October 1974. Lamenting the lack of resources on and forsportswomen, Glab gives a selected list of the books andperiodicals that do exist. She also includes a comprehensive list ofassociations for women in various sports. As this bibliography isnow somewhat out-of-date, there arc many ner, works available.

3

145 Henriques, Cynthia. Women in Health: Afi AnnotatedBibliography. Chicago, n.d. 17pp. (Order fronf Pauline Bart).The works citcd in this bibliography arc primar y on the femalehealth-care worker; there arc sections on w men physicians,dentists, andYnurses as well as the nurse-doctor relationship.There art two brief sections on the woman as health-careconsumer, one focusing on thasex stereotyping found in mentalhealth scare. Unfortunately, 'half the bibliography is a listing ofthe reference sources consulted, and selected annotations of thesesources. The annotations tend to point out the oierall dearth ofmaterial published on women health-care yorkers. The bibliog-raphy covers the period from 1970 to 1973.

146 Hunt, Vilma R. The Health of Women at Work. Evanston:Northwestern University, The Program on Women, 1977.173pp. Hunt's compilation is a hefty and impressive one. She hasorganized her material into seventeen categories-, thirteen ofwhich relate to the type of health problem under studyacci-dents, noise, radiation, toxic substances, etc. The other foursections arc: History of Working Women, Occupational HealthScrivces, U.S. GovernMtnt (documents),' International LaborOffice (documents). "t- of the medical literature cited is

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fDEA1111 AND PI !YMCA!. LDUCATION 49.

recentsince 1970while the history aild government &di-ments sections include sonrces froin the turn of the century for-ward. Each section is divided into English and foreign languagesegments, with the foreign language haliconiderably the- largerin many instances. Each of the major diVisions has a briefintroduction describing the scope and content of the literdrure.An evellent source.

147 'Kennard, June A. "RevieW, Essay: The History of PhysicalEducation." Signs 2(4):835-842, Summer .1977.

148 National Association for Women and Girls in Sport, ResearchComm ittec. Bibliography of Research Involving FemaleSubjects: A ,Compilation of Theses and Dissertations in PhysicalEducation, Health and Recreation. Washington: American Alli-ance for Health, Physical Education and Recreation, 1974.

205pp.

149 Ruzek, Sheryl K. Women andHealth Care: A Bibliography withSelected Annotatio4. Joint publication of the Institute forScientific Analysis and Northwestern University, The,Program onWomen, 1975. 76pp. (Ord& from Northwestern University).This bibliography covers a wide range of health concerns relatingto women. The first section, Women's Health CareFeministPecspective, is annotated and gives a good introduction to afeminist idea of women's health. Rape and industrial health/safety arc not covered and the professional inedical literature wasnot reviewed for inclusion.

150 U.S. Department of Labor, Women's Bureau. Selected Refer-ences on the Health of Women in Industry. Washington, 1929.spp. Out of print. This bibliography consists largely of. gov-eminent documents; it is divided into one general category andthen various categories according to the industry or healthproblem considered.

21*

History

Nearly half the bibliog phies in this section.concentrate on Americanwomen's history; remaining entries have a focus on European history fromAntiquity through the tWentieth century. Three bibliographies are con-cerned wah women's role in the two world wars, and there are two entries onwomen in revolutionCuban and Russian.

SEE ALSO: General; Third-World countries; Women's Movement.

151 Arthur; Marilyn B. "Review Essay: Classic's. " Signs 2(2):382403, Winter 1976.

152 Business and Professional Women's Foundation. Women andWork in U.S. History. Washington, 1976. 28pp. This pamphletis an excellent basic bibliography. The brief "Overview of Re-sources" summarizes nicely the major aspects of women's workHistory: The bibliography itself is in four parts: Methods andTheory in Women's History; Earlier Scholarship; ContemporaryScholarship (document collections, books, and journals); andGuides to Further Resources. Each entry is carefully annotated.There, is an author index.

I 53 The Common Women Collective. Women in U.S. History: An4nnotated Bibliography. Cambridge, 1976. 114p. Women inU.S. History is a useful, though uneven, bibliography. Some ofthe subject categorizing seems a bit quirky, but that will alwaysbe the case and those oddities that do exist are covered by cross-references. There is also some unevenness in the depth ofcoverage. For example, the temperance section has only sikentries', all of which are biographies of only, two women: FrancesWillard and Carry Nation. This, despite the -quantity ofscholarship in the field. Contrast that with the section onnineteenth and, twentieth century sexuality, a relatively newfield. Its thirty-eight entries comprise a very high proportion ofthe total work available. The bibliography is divided into twenty-four short sections by form of work, topic, or period and is cross-referenced such that thc lack of an index is not problematical.The annotations are informative and evaluative. Criteria used inevaluating the works include feminist perspective, social and

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, IIMORY 51

economic class consciousness, inclusion Of traditionally omittedgroups, writing Style, documentation, and availability.. Each ofthese criteria is discussed and explained in thc introduction: .

Entries which arc particularly suited to high school readers aremarked with an asterisk.

154 Davis, Natalie Zemonand Jill K. Conway. Society and the Sexes:A Bibliography of Women's History in Early ModelsColonial America, and the United States. Nilo York: Garland,forthcoming.

155 Erickson, Carolly and Kathleen Casey. "Women in the MiddleAges,: AWOrking Bibliography." Medieval Studies 37:340-359,1975.

156 Fox, Vicki G. "The Role of Women in the American Revolution:An Annotated Bibliography." Indthna Socthl Studies Quarterly28:14-29, Spring 1975.

157 Goodwater, Leanna. Inmen in Antiquity: An AnnotatedBibliography. Metuchen: Scarecrow Press, 1975. 171pp. Thisbibliography, intended for use in an acadeinic library,' coverswomen in Greece and Rome from the earliest records until 476A.D. Biographies make up the bulk of the book, with Sapphoand Cleopatra excluded because of Ihe amount of material onboth, Literary and textual criticism isalso excluded. Thc list is intwO parts: .Ancient Sources and Modern Works. The tnOdernsection includes materials published since 1872; it attempts to be-comprehensive for English language materials and selective inforeign languages. The introduction is / general discussion ofwomen in antiquity.

158 GrahamePatricia Alberg. "So Much to Do: Guides for Hisiorical .Research on Women in. Higher Education." Teachers CollegeRecord 76(3):412-429, February 1975.

159 Greco, Norma and Ronaele Novotny. "Bibliography of Womtenin the English Renaissance." University of Michigan Papers inWomen's Studies 1:30-57, June 1974.

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N2 MAX/ HAMM. ti( YIOLARSIIIP

/.160 Horne, Grenda. "The Liberation of British and Americ-an

Women's History." Bulletin of the Society for the Study ofLaborHistory .26:28-39i 1973.

161 Kanner, S. Barbara. Women in English Society, 1066-1945:Interpretive and Bibliographical Essays. London: Archon Books,fort hcoming .

162, Kdly, Joan. Bibliography in the History of European Women.4th rev. ed. Bronxvillc: Sarah. Lawrence College, Women'sStudies Program, 1976. I 32pp. Kelly's "working- bibliog-raphy," first compile& for her students at Sarah LawrenceCollege, has grown beyond that over the years. Arranged ac-cording to standard historical periods, it covers the history ofEuropean women from Antiquity to World Warll. In addition tothe c.lironological sections, there is a general section on thehistory of women, one on .historiography, and one on referencematerials. Thi coverage is %road, including, for example, literarystudies, autobiography and biography. Primary 'sources arcmarked with an asterisk. (Original edition: Kelly-Gadol, Joan.Women 'S History; A Critically Selected Bibliography. -:Bronx-

, vale: S-trah Lawrence College, Women's Stiidies Program, n.d.54pp.) /

163 Leonard, Eugenie A.', Sophie H. .Drinker, a1 -Miriam Y.Holden. The American Woman in Colonial and RevolutioriaryTimes, 1565-1800. Philaddphia: University of PennsylvaniaPress, 1962. Reprint. Westport: Greenwood Press, 1974. 169pp.Originally published in 1962 by the University of 'Pennsylvania'Press, The American Woman in _Colonial and, RevolutionaryTimes Ihas been 'reprinted by Greenwood in a facsimile edition.The first section of the book is a detailed syllabus in outline formfor .a complete study of the woman in the earliest period ofAmerican history, from 1565 to. 1800. In relation to the'bibliography, the syllabuS acts ag a subjec4 organizer. It has tenmajor divisions, with titles such as Women in Earliest Settle-ments, The Status and Rights of Colonial Women, Woman'sDomainThe Home, and Colonial Women in the ProductiveLife of the Communities. Each of these is subdivided byaopic or

51

HISMRY 5 3

geography through several levels. For example, Woman'sDomainthe Home is subdivided as follows; 2. Women asWives in the Colonial Home; A. Marriages; a. Csiurtship and'Early Marriage. Abbreviated citations are listed under each of thesyllabus divisions; full bibliographic information for the morethan one thousand works is found in the bibliography section, astraight 411phabetical listing. A third section is designed to aid theresearcher of individual women. Each entry in this section liststhe name, home, birth/death dates, husband's name, andsignificant contribution of "104 Outstanding ColonialWomen." This compilation- does not suffer from the usual classand nationalist bias that defines "colonial" as Englisliand free.A clear effort has been made to include information on the'Spanish settlements of the Southwest, women of eveiynationality and religious group, and those who came in bondageas well as in freedpm. The only serious flaw of this volume is thit.it has not bec pdated since 1962.

164 Lerner, Gerda. Bibliography in the History ofelmerican Women.3d ed. Bronxville: Sarah Lawrence College, Women's StudiesProgram, 1978. 79pp. Gerda Lerner tells us in her introductionthat this third edition of her bibliography will be the last, sincethe volume of new material would make any future compilationbook-length. She takes an interdisciplinary approach, arranging^the bibliography into fourteen subject chapters fromHistoriography to Sexuality, Family History to Women and Art.The single largest section, ftigtory of American Women, istwenty-one pages long (about one-fourth.of the whole) and isdivided into eleven subcategories. 19all, there are more than onethousand citations making this one of the most comprehensivesources for the history of American women. (Original edition:Limner, Gerda. Women's Studies: History .ofroinen in America.Bronxville: Sarah Lawrence College, Women's Studies Program,1972. 41pp.)

',1,05 Loader, Joyce. "Women in the Left, 1906-1941: Bibliography ofPrimary Sources." University of Michigan Papers in Women'sStudies 2(0:9-82, September 1975. This bibliography has as itsprimary focus works on women written by women of the left. It is

ts,

51 NEW FEMINIST SCHOLARS! Ilp

in three major sections: AnarchiSm; The Literary Left; The Com-munist Party'(1920-1941), which is by far theiargest. There is anindex to names.

166 Lougee, Carolyn C. "Review Essay: Modern European History."Signs 2(3):628-650, Spring 1977.

..

167 Palmegiano, E.M. Women and Brifish Periodicals. New York:Garland, 1976. 118pp. This interesting bibliography coversmaterial,about women in the periodical press in England from1832 to.1867. The dates were chosen because they mark, roughly,a time/ often ignored in Victorian women's historythe- erabetwe t n Wolstonecraft and Mill when women were most

(Ircgar d as nonpersons. The bibliograpily section is in twro parts:the filst, a checklist of British woMen's periodicals; the second, achec list.of articles on women in British periodicals. Librarieswitl most coinplete holdings arc included in the first list. In ad-dition to this bibliographic work, there is .a series of essays on thedifferent images of womcn found in thc periodicals liSted: ThcLadics, Milkhands and Maids, Domestic Economists, Thc Rc-dundant, The Magdalens, The Emancipated, and The ',bids OfCreation...An invaluable reference for anyone doing work in theperiod.

.168 Pere Louis A. "Women in thc Cuban Revolutionary War,1953 8: A Bibliography." Science and Society 39:104-108,Spring 1975.

4

169 Poincrdy, Sarah B. "Selected.Bibliography on Wodin, in Anti-'Arethusa 6(1):1257157, Spring 1973. This is a

bibliographic essay with a suggested syllabus for an- under-graduite class on women in Classical Antiquity.

170 Sicherman, Barbara: "Review E;say: American Histiny." Signs1(2):461-486, Winter 1975.

171 U.S. Council of National Defense, Woman Committee. 1V6tnanin theil7a,r, A Bibliography. Washington, 1918. Out of print.

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5

;-

,172 U.S. Library of Congress. Brief List of References,on W

the Russian Revidution. Washington, 19181 Out of print:

173,, . List ofRefemUcer, on Women. 's Work in the EuropeanWar. Washington, 1918. Oa of print.

174 . Select List of References on Wottsett in Colonial Dais. .Washington, 1913. Out of print.

175 . Woman's Part of World Warlts A Lirt of 14fervnces. .

Washington, 1942. Out of print.

,

176 yerbrugge, Martha H. "Review Essay: Women and Medicine inNineteenth-Century America." 'Signs 1(4)'.957-:972, Summer1976.

,

Law

The Equal Rights Amendment is a major legal issue which connects thetwo waves of the women's movement: it was born out bf the first wave and isbeing pursued by the second. There arc bibliographies on the ERA from bothperiods.in this section, though the latter compilation is comprehensiveenough to supersede the former. Other, general bibliographies on woman'slegal status complete the section.-

SEE ALM: Work.

177 Babcock, Barbn et al. Women and the Law: A Collection ofReading Lists. Pittsburgh: KNOW, 1971. 31pp. Included in thecollection is a course outline for a basic women and the law cotirseand the reading lists for hch section as compiled by teachers.

178 Equal Rights Amendment Project. The Equal Rights Amend-ment: A Bibliographic Study. Westport: Greenwood Press;1976: 367pp. This is a comprehensive work (almost six thousandentries) citing nearly every word written about the ERA since itsinception in 1921. The volume is organized into chapters by formof media since the "overlapping of subjects make a topicalarrangement haphazard at best." The major sections 'areCongressional Publications; Other Government Documents;Books and Dissertations; Pamphlets; Brochures and Papers;Periodical Material (legal, and academic journals, newsletters,and newspapers). There is a separate section under "PeriodicalMaterial" for Equal Rights (1923-1954), the organ of theNational Woman's Party, which gives the most detailed historyof the ERA for that period. It is arranged chronologically as arethe newspaper sections. Overall, the, volume includes three typesof material: "reportage, which serves an historical function; ar-gumentation, which defines the controversy; and analysis of thespecifically legal effects of the amendment. " The introductionprovides a good brief history of the ERA as well as an overview ofthe major issues.

179 Hughes, Marija Matich. "Women's Rights: A Sekctea Bibliog-raphy." International Journal of Law Literature 4(3):216-241,November 1976.

56

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LAW 57

180 U.S. Library OfCongress. Brief LisofReferwisces on the Rights ofWcomen. Washington, 1922. Out of print.

181 . List of sReferences on the Equal Rights AmendmAt. Proposed by 'National Woman's Party. Washington, 1923. Out

of print..

182 . List of References on the Legal Status of Women.Washington, 1914. Out 'of print.

5

Lesbians

Three of the four bibliographies listed here primarily arc guides tolesbian themes in literat.ure; they do not include research or other, generalnonfiction/raken together, they provide comprehensive access to the genre.A Gay Bibliography from the American Library Association's Gay Task Force

is the one bibliography restricted to nontictinn.

183 American Library Association, SRRT, Task Force on GayLiberation. A Gay Bibliography. 5th ed. Philadelphia, 1975.8pp. Supplement, 1976. 2pp. The SRRT (Sodal ResponsibilitiesRound Table) Gay Task ilorce, formed in 1970, was the first such

caucus of a professional association to form. The Task Force hasbeen involved in many activities since then, only one of which isthe compilation and distribution of this bibliography. The 250

\ entries are organized according to format and are not annotated:The bibliography s exclusively nonfiction, _listing only thoseworks which present *positive view of homosexuality, have somehistorical value, or help ill; rel'ael to understand the gay ex-perience. A sixth edition will be available in the summer of 1979.

184 Damon, Gene, Jan Watson, and Robin Jordan. The Lesbian inLiterature: A Bibliography. 2d ed. Reno: The Ladder, 1975.96pp. The, sizeNpf this bibliiigraphy /pamphlet is deceptive; itlooks small,sbut packs an incredible amount 'of information intoits ninety-six pages. The bibliography consists almost totally ofEnglish language fiction (including novels, short stories, poetry,drama and fictionalized biography), though recent (post 1967)unprejudiced nonfiction is also included. The cut-off date iscopyright 1974. Each entry is rattd on two scales: primacy oflesbian character/plot and quality of lesbian material. A thiidsymbol, "T," denotes literature that is essentially trash. How-ever, in keeping with .the changing Consciousness of and aboutlesbians, most T-rated books (three thousand!) have beendeleted from this`second edition. Title changes: literary form,and binding are also indicated. Invaluable., for any and allreaders/researchers of lesbian literature. (Original edition:Damon, Gene and Lee Stuart. Lesbiaps.in Literature: A Bibliog-raphy. San Francisco: Daughters of Bilitis, 1967.)

58

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1.1itillIANS 9.,

185 A Gay Bibliography: Eight Bibliographies on Lesbian and MaleHomosexuality. New York: Arno Press, 1975. This compilation is

one volume of a .reprint series on homosexuality. Eight pio-?leering bibliographies of lesbian and. male homosexual literaturepublished between 1958 and 1966 have been rescued ft-6'11mb-scurity and bound together in a form libraries can easily procure.The eight are: Astra's Tower: Special Leaflet #2 and #3 byMarion Bradley Zimmer; Checklist 1960, Checklist Supplement1961.and 1962 by Marion Bradley Zimmer and Gene Damon;The Lesbian in Literature: A Bibliography by Gene Damon andLee-Stuart; The Homosexual in Literature: A Chronological Bib-liography Cirra 700 B.C.-1958 by Noel I. Garde; and Homosex-uality: Selected Abstracts and Bibliography by Wiliam Parker.

186 Kuda, Marie J . Women Loving Women: A Select and AnhotatedBibliography of Women Loving Women in Literature. Chicago:Womanpress, 1975. 28pp. This bibliography was first publishedby Lavender Press in 1974; for its second printing, the identicaltext was published by Womanpress in 1975. The works cited arelimited to English language fiction, poetry, biogiaphy and auto-biography. An effort was made to include works which "showlesbianism as a valid, positive and alternative lifestyle," as well asprototypical worksthe first ,of any genre that was eventuallywidely copied (student/teacher, governesses, prison or armymilieu, etc.). The annotations are informative and well-written.

Life Cycles

One hears a great deal today abOut "women in transition." While thissection focuses on transition issues, "Life Cycles" seemed to be a moredescriptive title. Older women have been active for several years noW workingagainst the double discrimination of age and sex, ancLa substantial body ofliterature has been produced in the process. There are separate bibliographieson two kerissucs ofconcern to older women: widowhood and ineifopausT. At

thc other end of the age spectrum, the resources arc scarce. Efforts to applythe thinking and lessons of fenunisM to the special problems of adolescentgirls and young women is still relatively new, but this is a fast developingprogram area. While there is only one bibliography listed here, a moresubstantial literature will undoubtedly follow.

187 Annotated Bibliography, 1964-1974, of the Needs, Concernsand Aspirations of Adolescent Girls, 12-18 Years. St. Paul:University of Minnesota, Center for Youth Development andResearch, 1975. 204pp. Out of print. This bibliography is theresult of a thorough literature search of writings since 1964 onseventeen aspects of thc adolescent girl's life, including Fduca-tionily, friends, and sexuality. Thc compilation alsoinaudes the bibliography from Gisda Konopka'S book YoungGirls: A Portraitpf Adolescence, which is a scction unto itself andis organized differently from thc rest of thc bibliography. Thcother chapters arc arranged naccordthg to the sourcc indexed:American Book Publishing Record, Crime and DelinquencyAbstracts, ERIC, Medline, Psychoiogical Abstracts and HelenAstin's Women's Higher and Continuing Education. There arctwo final sections, one on dissertations and thc othermiscellaneous.

188 Barrett, Carol J. "Review Essay: Women in Widowhood." SO%2(4):856-868; Summer 1977.

189 Interface Bibliographers. Age Is Becoming? An Annotated Bib-liography on Women and Aging. Oakland: National Organiza-tion of Women, Task Force on Older Women, 1976. 35pp.(Order from Glide Publications)."The NOW Task Force on OlderWomen commiisioned this bibliography to help them dcal with

60

EWE CYCLES, 61

an ever-increasing volume of. information requests. It is a klec-tive compilation of works on women in the "post-parental"period, pnblished between.1970 and 1975. Both scholarly andgeneral works arc included. 14here arc subject sections on womenre-enterink ths.job /education market,,role changes, financialdifficulties, sexualify, medical/ hysical developments, .andwidowhood, and one of biographi s. Age Is Becoming providesaccess ti the literature cif an emeriug field andshould proveuseful to a wide variety of collections.

190 Seidlitz, Sarah. The Menopause: A Selective Bibliography, Oak-land: National Organization- of Women, Task Force on OlderWomen, 1976. 7pp. Out,of print. EC'

191 Strugnell, Cecile. Adjustment to Widowhood and Some RelatedProblems: A Selected and Annotated Bibliography..New York:Health Sciences Publishing, 1974. 21ipp. This bibliography islimited to books and articles publishel.since 1972.

.s

L.

Literature

Despite, the fact that literature was one of the first fields to beinfluenced by women's studies, the bibliographies haie been slow toappearmost 'of them since 1974. An early atiempt (1971) was made' bywomen in the Modern Language Association, but it was not ntftintiiined. Thebibliography of women writers first produced in 1973 by the Sense andSensibility Collective,.(nów the Women and Literature Collective) has re-ceived fairly wide distribluito; it has been the major source on,literature bywomen. Several compilationV on literary criticismfeminist and other-wisehave appeared in recent Yeiirs. Women and Literature, the quarterlyjournal, is now providing an ongoing bibliography in a special edition of thefall issue each year. There is one bibliography of drama by women.

. SEE ALSO: Lesbians.:

192 Backscheider, Paula. R., Felicity Nyssbaum, and Philip B.Anderson. An Annotaled Bibliograp of Twentieth-CenturylCritical Studies of Wo e n and Liter ure, 1660-1800. NewYork: Garland ;1977. 2 pp. This biblio phy actually covers asomewhat broacler field than the titk'sugg s.-It. includes "crit-

,'cal and scholarly books and articles publishe :between 1900 and1975" on wnmennot just literati' women, /plough they ateundoubtedly featured. The compilers had resiArchers of theRestoration and the eighteenth century in mind is well as thewomen's studies researcher. The first major section of<the volumeis devoted to general studies of the period, includidge literarycriticism, social history, biography, and .art history. The,secondsection is restricted to works on literature and is divided by isnre.It also includes information on six mgjor male novelists (Cleland,Defoe, Fieldingz Richardson, Smollett, Sterne), listing "crittealstudies of their female 'Characters and works describing theirinfluence on and relationships to women and women writers.The final and largest section (approxiMitely two-thirds of themore than 1,500 entries) lists various wofts of sixty-five womenwriters of the period, from Mary Astell to Ann Yearsley. There isan index to Restoration and eighteenth-century women, and anindex to authors.

62

efl

(.11FKAIIIRE

193 Batchdder, Ekanor. Plays by Women: A BibliOiraphy. NewYork: Womanbooks, 1977. 41pp. This was the only drama bib-liography .1 could locate, And it fills in important.gap. A roughcount indicates the inclusion of approximately 150 playwrightswho arc listed alphabetically, followed by a chronological rosterof plays. Plays appearing in anthologies receive an abbreviatedentry, with full information in the anthologies section at theback. Etch anthology entry gives the complete contents. For themost part, authors are twentieth-century American playwrights.This small pamphlet. contains a gold-mine of information andshould be a very welcome addition.

194 Boos, Florence. "1974 Bibliography of Women in British andAmerican Literature: 1660-1900." Women 'and Literature3(433-64, Fall 1975. This is the first of an annual bibliographyindexing nearly two hundred scholarly journals. It lists all articlesabout British and American women writers from 1660 to,1900.The bibliography is arrangeai,by a unique decimal system inwhich the period and country of origin arc denoted by the num-ber to the left of the decimal and the form of the writing by thenumber to the right.

195 . "1975 Bibliography of Literature in English by andabout Women, 600-1960." Women and Literature issued as asupplement to vol.. 4, no. 2, Fall 1976. 148pp. The secondannual issue of this bibliography is considerably different fromthe first. The number of journals indexed doubled, from abouttwo hundred to approximately four hundred. Both the chrono-,

logical and geographical coverage were increased; the chrono-;logical in two directions (backward.to 600 and forward to 1960)and* geographical from just British and American writers toth4eof an English-speaking countries. These changes produceda dramatic increasC in size, and the bibliography had to be issued.as a separate supplement. The basic organization of the bibliog-raphy remains unchanged.

196 . "1976 Bibliographi of Literature in English by and8,

about Women, 600-1960." Women and Literature issued as a-supplement to vol. 5, no. 2., Fall 1977.168pp. The third annual.

6 0

NIAXI FININIS I ti( .1101 ARM lIIi

volume follows the same fornbtkandiNcopc of thc second. Becauseof the enormity of the task and the dependence on volunteerefforts, the 1976 index was not mailed to subscribers untilFebruary of 1978. The National Endowment for the Humanitieshas provided a grant for the bibliography in order to ease some ofthese problems and assure its continuation.

197 Fries, Maureen and Anne M. Daunis. A Bibliography of Writingshy and about Women Authors, British and American,19574969. Charleston: Womcn's Caucus for the ModernLanguages, 1971. 73pp. Out of print.

198 Kolodny, Annette. "Review Essay: Literary Criticism." Signs2(2):404-421, Winter 1976.

199 Loventhal, Milton. Autobiographies of Women, 1946-1970, ABibliography. San Jose: California State University Library, 1972.Out of print. A revised, expanded version is in progrcss as of thiswriting.

200 Marks, Elaine. "Review Essay: Women and Literature 'inFrance." Signs 3(4):832-842, Summer 1978.

201 Myers, Carol Fairbanks. Women in Literature: Criticism of theSeventies. Metuchen: Scarecrow Prcss, 1976. 256pp. Fairbanks'sbibliography is arranged dictionary-style, -with headings for eachauthor from A to Z. Listed under thc authors' names arc citationsto criticism of various sorts, interviews, book reviews, and discus-sions of feinale characters. A final, general section lists works thatare not confined to onc author or character. The bibhographycovers the period from January 1970 through spring 1975. Thereis an index of critics and editors.

202 Nower, Joyce. Selected Bibliography of Women Wsiters. SanDiego, 1970. 17pp. (Order from Center for Wqmen's Studiesand Services). Nower lists the works of sdected women writers ofmenty-five countries from Argentina to Uruguay. There is aheading for each country, with the authors listed alphabeticallyunder each except in the case of the United States where there isfurther subdivision by racial or ethnic group. Thc citations arc

63

1.4

1.1tERATURE 65

not to specific editions of the authors' woiks, but rather includeonly title and date of original publication.

203 Reynolds, Judy. Women as Authors. San Jose: San Jose StateUniversity Library, 1974. 16p0. This bibliography lists morv than250 citations to books and articles on women writers includingnovelists, poets, playwtights, journalists. It lists works on thewoman writer in general, not on specific authors. Available inlimited supply to educational institutions only.

204. . Women in Literature. San Jose: San Jose State UniversityLibrary, 1974. 28pp. This bibliography lists more than fourhupdred citations to books and articles on the image of women inliterature. Available in limite,d supply to educational institutionsonly.

205 Rosenfelt, Deborah Silverton. Strong Women: An AnnotatedBibliography of Literatire for the High School Classroom. OldWestbury: The Feminist Press, 1976. 56pp. This attractivepamphlet lists more than one hundred annotated citations toworks by women writers. The title says the literature cited is forthe high, school classroom', but the introduction reveals theedilor's assumption that "high school readers will enjoy many ofthe same works that have moved older audiences." Thus, thebibliography will be of equal use to the, college teacher orstudent. The coMpilation is divided into sections by .form(anthologies, autobiography and biography, drama, novek,short stories, poetry) ind has a topical. index.

206 Schwartz, Narda Lacey. Articles on Women Writers 1960-1975,A Bibliography. Santa Birbara: ABC-Clio, 1977,. 236pp. NardaSchwartz has compiled an extensive bibliography of articles, bothpopular and scholarly, on more than six hundred women writersfrom the English-speaking world. She searched twenty-onebibliogiaphies and literature indexes as well as DissertationAbstracts. Included} is any woman writer and writer is definedbroadly to include diarists( essayists;and letter writers, as well asthe usual novelists and poets=about whom at least one articleappeared between 1960 and 19.75. The time frame was chosen togive a record of the changing attitudes about women writers

64

NEW FEMINIST SC1IOTARSI III)

occasioned by the emergence and growth of the womcn'smovement. The bibliography is arranged dictionary-style, fromHannah.' Adams sto Charlotte ZolotOw. Each entry gives thcauthor's name and pseudonym, birth and death dates, andcountry where most of the writing was done. The author entrieshave three subdivisions: Bibliography (collections of criticalstudies); General Works (biographical, thematic, and compara-tive studies); and individual Works (thc author's primary litera-ture listed by title and followed by the articles on each). This is afine source which should be of use to a large audience.

207 Showalter, Elaine. "Review Essay: Literary Criticism." Signs1(2):435-460i Winter 1975.

208

.2 (

U.S. Librilyture. Washingto

Congress. Litt of References on Women in Litera-1922. Out of print.

White, Barbara A. Ame Women Wthers: An AnnotatedBibliography of Criticism. York: Garland, 1977. 126pp.White's bibliography covers w she calls "criticism in

general" that is, criticism of women w , as a group, not thatof specific writers. It includes "published m on Americanwomen writers of fiction, p?etry, and drama" thro 1975. ThemateriaLfrarranged into ten chapters: biography; cri m onspecific groups; specific tonics (genre); literary history; conporary assessments '(contemporaries of the critic, that is, not othe 1970$); feminine sensibility; the problems of women writers;discriminatory - treatnitnt of women writers ("PhallicCriticism'i"); feminist criticisen; and rnisedlaneous. Her introduc=tion provides a brief, interesting overview of the major themes,problems, and assumptions in current and past thinking aboutwomen writers. Her conclusions: Plus fa chjInge, plus c'est lamime chose.

210 Women and Literature Collective. 11/orne,i anfi Literature: AnAnnotated Bibliography of li/dmen Writetir. 3d ed. Cambridge,1976. 212pp. Both the collective and the bibliography havechanged and grown over the years and through three editions.Thr third edition is greatly expanded and has been partialryrevised. While all annotations from the previous editions were

I "It

L.LITERKIVRE 67

read and -reconsidered; they were not all tewrittelf, thus, there isSubstaniial variety in style and outlook from entry to entry. Themoie than eight hundred citations arc arranged by tountryand

0 subdivided by chmnology. Most of the volume (morc than hall)is devoted to American and British writcrs, however, sixtccnothcr countries, continents, or geographical areas are ,alsocovered. Listings for major authors include biographical sketches.Not ev\ery work ofevery author:is listed; there arc inevitable gaps,none of them serious. There is a sectionfor inthologies and onefor literary criticism, and a special effort.was MaCIC to include thecpublications of the women's presses: There are author and .subject indexes. (On inal edition: Sense and Sensibility Collec-tive. Women and Literature: An Annotated Bibliography of

Iromen Writers. Cambridge, 1973. 58pp.)

4

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3

-3Marriage and the Family -

.%%:g..4:

New research has made sigbificint changes in die study of Marriagc and s, 4' 14

the Family,,which until recently has been the trAditional discipline for the /-

study of Wow& The tome no longer enjoys its reputation as a haven ofdomestic tranquility; it has been exposed'as a place of domestic violence.Research on yiolent husbands and battered womensonic of it problematicfrom a feminist point of viewis enjoying something of a vogue right now.There are three bibliographies on battered women. The gener.il area ofmarriage and the family is dominated by the comprehensive.efforts of theUniversity of Minnesota in its Internationil Bibliography of Research. Divorceis also included in this section, with two listings.

SEE ALSO: Child Care.

211 Howard, Pamela F. Wife Beating: A Selected Annotated Bibli-ography. San Diego: Current Bibliography Series, 1978. 57pp.Compiled primaiily for the general public, this bibliographywould be of interest as well to the researcher, student, or socialwork practitioner. lt cites a wide range of materials, running thegamut from research studies published in scholarly journals tonewspaper articles to "how-to" manuals produced by women'sshelters. The citations are organized into sections by format:Books and pamphlet, periodical articles, newspaper ,articks,.newsbank (a newspaper indexing service),.goverwent publica-dons, films. The last section is a brief listing of agencies in theUnited States, Canada, and England: from which writtenilnaterial is available; it is not a comprehensive list. The annota-tions are informative and Well-written.

212 International Bibliography of Research in Marriage and theFamilyf 1900-1964. Joan Aldous and Reuben Hill, eds. Minne-apolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1967. 508pp. See #215 forannôtation.

213 Itaernotional Bibliography of Research in Matriage and theFamily, Volume II, 1965;1972. Joan Aldous and Nacy Dahl,eds. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1974, 1,530pp.See #215 for annotation.

6867 .

MARRIAGE AND 'HIE FAMILY 69

214 Inventory qf Maniige and Family .literatule, 1973 & 197.4,Volume III. Nancy Dahl and David H. L. Olson; eds. St. PautUniversity of.Minnesota, Family Social Science, 1975: 376pp. See#215,for annotation.

215 Inventory of Marriage and Family L'ilerdture, 1975 & 1976,Volume IV. Nancy Dahl and David H. L. Olson,. eds. St, Paul:University .of Minnesota, Family Social Science, 1977. 638pp.This bibliography began in 1967 in an attempt to list everyresearch, item in the interdisciplinary 'area of marriage and thefamily published since.1900. "Research" was defined broadly toinclude any work that reports on empirical dat'a. Thus, it is easierto list what was not inAuded: unpublished theses, proscriptiveworks, studies of the individual in which the focns is not familybehavior, pOpulation studies which Flo not relate findings to thefamily, textbooks, popular works, legal treatises. The literaturesearch resulted in 12,850 citations to books, journal articles, andmiscellaneous papers in the first cOition. The-bibliography wascomputer-generated and consists of five parts:. KWIC (Key-Word-in-Context) Index, Subject index, Complete ReferenceList, Author Index, and Periodicals List. The regular subjectindex waS in 1u.ded in additiop to the KWIC index for theconvcniei1 cc of thcilse unfamiliar with KWIC indexing. CitationsWere listed alphabetically; foreign titles were translated. Theintroduction concludes with a literature review describing thetrends .in researdi over the years. Volume II follows thIsameformat as the first edition. It lists 12,870 citations to research onthe family, including titles for thc 1900-1964 period which wcrcmissed. Thc third volume represents-a change in scope; instcadof liSting all research published, it is essentially an index to neatlyfive hundred journals in the interdisciplinary.,area of marriageand the family. It lists 2,413 citations to articles published inEnglish. Volume IV follows the format of Volume III, andindexes approximately 750 journals. Thc editors intend thc bib-liography to bccomc an annual ,index, bin have not yct been

216 Israel, Stanley. A BiAliography on Divorce. Ncw York: BlochPublishing, 1974. 300pp. Israel's bibliography has sections on

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7

70 NEW FININIST.SMOLARSHIP

three major aspects of divorce: legal, rrligious, and sOciological.

Each- entry gives thespublisher's address and the complete tabk- of COntents of dr book in addition to-the usilti .citation infor-.mation and annotation. Though it is not so explained in theintroduction, the annotations do not appear to have been writtenby Stanley Israel, but rather to be jackct cdpy or some essentiallypromotional writing supplied by the publisher. The value of thistype of listing is certainly qüestiohable. Approximately 150books are Annotated iii this way, comprising the bulk of thebook. Additional titles for which full listings could not be Oro-vided are cited briefly at the end.

217 Lystad, Mary Henamani . "Violence-at Home: A Review of theLitermure." American journal .of OrthopsYchiatry 45:328-345,Aprir 1975.

J218 McKenney, Mary. Divorce: A Selected Annotated Bibliography.

Metuchen: Scarecrow Press, 1975. 157pp. Mary McKenney haslisted every "significant". work on divorce written in English andpublished before 1972 that she was able to locate. A few items ofdoubtful significancebut of particular interestare also in-cludtki, as are all popular and _statistical works and a sampling offiction and films. Her attitude to divorce is solidly feminist and isexpressed in the introduction and annotations. The bibliographyis arranged gy subject into eleven mijor sections; appendixes listresource organizations.and divorce laWs state by state. There areSuthor And subject indexes. .ftroba

219 McShane, Claudette. Annotated Bibliography on WomanBattering: Milwaukee: University of Wisconsin, School of Socia

Welfare, Midwest Parent-Child Welfare Resource Center, 1977,25pp. This bibliography combines the two major types of liteature available on battered women: the professionally-orient d

. sociological or psychological research studies and the activi t-oriented writings of feminists Who are trying to provide solutio s.The bibliography is arranged by format into five sections: mi o-graphs, articles, neWsletterst, guidebooks, and media. In achsection, the annotatcd entries' are followed by a list of cita ionsthe editor was not ible\tp review.

7

Minority and Ethnic Women

This section is domintited by nine bibliographies on black women. Thisis proba6ly largely5lue to the emergence of Black Studies as the first of thtethnic studies areas to develoP. There are three bibliographies on Spanish-speaking women and one on Native American woMen. No bibliographies onAsian-American women were found. Of the white ethnic groups, Onlybibliographies on Jewish women were located.

220 Cabello-Nrgendona, Roberto, Juan Gomez-Quinones, and PatHerxera Duran. The Chicana: A Comprehensive BibliographicStudy. Los Angeles: University of California, Chicano StudiesCenter, 1975. 308pp.

221 Cole, Johnetta. 'Black Women in America: "An AnnotatedBibliography." Black Scholar 3:42-53, December 1971.

222 Concilio Mujeres. Bibliogiaphy on la Mujer. San Francisco, 1974.12pp. Out of print. Compiled -by a Chicana women's rightsgroup, the bibliography includes articles, papers, films, photos,resources, and additional information on Chicea-and otherSpanish-speaking women. The compilers are at work on a newedition.

223 bavis, Lenwood G. The Black Woman in American Society: ASelected Annotated Bibliogr4phy. Boston: G. K. Hall, 1975.,159pp. Davis's bibliography includes approximately sevenhundred citations to books, articles, pamphlets., ansigoverrimentdocuments on the American black woman. The citations arearranged:by for,mat, with only the books and articles sectionsannotated. In addition to the chamers Of actual bibliography,there are listings of relevant library tollettions; 'organizations,black women ntcvspaper editors/publishers and elected officials,and population statistics.

I

224 -. Black Women in the Cities, 1872-1973'; Al3ibliographyof Published Work the Life and Achievements of BlackWomen in Cities i.to tk United States. 20 ed. Monticello:

'Council of Planning Libra rans, 1975. 75pp. The second edition

71

1

7 2 NEW FEMINIST SCIIOLARSIIIP

of this bibliography is approximately fifty percent longer thanthe first. In thc main bibliography section, it includes more thanfive hundred 6tations to books, articles, pamphlets; reports; Midgovernment documents on the urban black woMan.-fn adtlition,there are sections on general.ieference works, selected blackjournals, libraries with special collections .On black history, -

journals on urban affairs, related Council bibliographies, blackwomen's natibnal organizations and black women electedofficials. Several of these sections also appear in Davis's 1975 bib-liography, The Black Woman in American Society (#223), sothere is siime duplication. The bibliography is arranged byformat, witch may cause difficulties as there is no subject index.Arrangement by broad subjects - such as housing,unemployment, divorce, welfare, or education might have beenmore useful.. The materials range widely and cover urban prob-lems generally as much as they do the urban black woman.Davis's.bibliography is a starting point for the sociologist, urbanplanner, or historian, (Original edition: Davis, Lenwood G.Black Women in the Cities 1872-1972: A Bibliography of.Published Works on. .the Lift and Achievements of Black Womenin Cities in the United States. Montic.ello: Council of Planning.librarians, 1972.)

225 "The Jewish Woman: A Selected Bibliography." Response7:183-187, Summer 1973.

226 Klotman, Phyllis R. and Wilmer H. Baatz. The Black Family andthe Black Woman: A Bibliography. 2d ed. New York: ArnoPress, 1978. 231pp. This bibliography is in two major sections:one on the black family, the other on the black woman. Each of

4 these is subdivided by topic. There are two opening sections onperiodicals .,ind reference sources. Based .on the holdings of theIndiana University Library, this is an excellent source. (Originaledition: Klotman, Phyllis R. and Wilmer H. Baatz, The BlackFamily and the Black Woman.,../1 Bibliography. Bloomington:Indiana University,tibtaty, 1972.)

a

227 Medicine, Beatrice. "The Role of Women in. Native AmericanSocieties, A Bibliography." Indian Historian 8:50-54, August'1975.

MINORITY AND ETHNIC WOMEN 73

228 PortilloCristina, Gracie la Rios, and Martha Rodriguez. Bibliog-raphy of Writings oita Mujer. Berkdey: University of Califor-nia, Chicano StudieS Librar}i, 1976. 5600..The 264 kiurces liStedin this pam hlet arc all housed in thc Chicano Studies Library atBerkeley. c citations are listed alphabetically and numbered;an -index p °vides subject access. A second ection lists period-icals. Thc bibliography is illustrated with a number of excellentphotographs. ,

229 Scott, Patricia Bell. "A Cthical Overview of Sex Roles Researchon Black Families.", Women Studies itibitracts 5(2):1-9, Sum-mer 1976.

230 Terborg-Petin, R. M. "Historical Treatment. of Afro-American;in thc Women's Movement, 1900-1920: A BibliographicEssay." Cu4nt Bibliography of African Affairs 7:245-259,Summer 1974.

231 Williams, Ora. American Black Wonien in the Arts and SocialSciences: A' Bibliographic Study. Metucheh: Scarccrow Press,1973..141pp. More than 1,200 Works by American black women,including print ahd nonprint media, ,are listed in this bibliog-raphy. The comprehensive listing is subdivided by subject; inaddition, there are sections on selected individual bibliography,a section on "Other Arts" for black women in the graphic artsand music, audio-visual aids and periodicals, and black publish-itig.houses. There is a name index and there are selected portraitsthroughout.

232 . "A Bibliography of Works Wrhten by American Black .Women." College Language Association Journal 15:354-377,March 1972.

14s

233 Willingham, Louise N. "The Black Woman: Au Annotated Bib-liography. " The Unabashed Librarian 14: 16-17, Winter 1975.

234 Zuckoff, Aviva Cantor. Shah Edition of the Annotated Bibliog-raphy on the Jewish Woman. Fresh Meadows: Biblio Press, 1978.Thc new edition of this biblrography camc available a we weregoing to press. We wcrc able to include the ncw title and pub-

..

74 NEW l'EMINIST SOIOLARSHIP

lishing infounation, but were not able to correct the change inthe author's name from Aviva Cantor Zuckoff to Aviva Cantor.Thus, both Zuckoff and Cantor appear in the Author Index, Ci-tations in this bibliography arc arranged by format (books, arti-cles, papers, fiction) and subject (Israel, history/sociology, holo-caust and resistance, Jewish religion, and law, America). In thepost-1972. section, there is a subj&t division for the Jewishwomen's movement. (Original edition: Zuckoff, Aviva Cantor.Bibliography on the Jewish Woman. New York: Jewish FeminitOrganization, 1975. 15 pp.)

;.

.Philosophy

.,Perhaps a better title for this section would be, "Written by aProkssional Philosopher,- since liearly every issue raised by 'the women'smovement is a philosophical issue, and nearly every other section includesbibliographies with some philmophicAl writings. It is, of course, the oneplace to find compilations of philosophical works only. v,

235 Bazin; Nancy Topping. "The Concept ef Androgyny: AWorking Bibliography." Women's Studies 2(2):217-235, 1974.

236 English, Jane. "Review Essay: Philosophy." Sij;ns,3(4):823-831,Summer 1978.

237 Motilton, Janice. .Philosophy and Feminism: Recent Papers.Cambridge, 1976. 12pp, Moulton's,bibliography includes jour-nal articles (the bulk of the compilation) and unpublished papersin the following areas: Abortion, Preferential Hiring and gilualOpportunity, Language, The Nature of Women, R lationsbetween the Sexes, Women in the History Of PhilosopRi, TheWomen's Movement, and Related to Philosophical Femnism.All but one of the dated entries was published after 1970 Thebibliography inclu'des approxiMately 160 citations.

238 . "Review Essay: Philosophy." Signs: 2(2):422-4 3,Winter 1976.

J

239 Pierce; Christine. "Review Essay: Philosophy.- Signs t(2):481-,

504, Winter 1975.

7 5

Politics

The ekven bibliographies in this section cover an array of topics:N

winnen's voting patterns and influence, women in appointive and electiveoffice, women's role in party politics, women in government employment,and women's volunteer pohtical activity. Stanwick and Li's The Political Par-ticipation of Womeo is the most comprehensive of the sources listed._

240 Boals, Kay. "Review Essay: Political Science." Signs 1(1):I.61-174 , Autumn 1975.

241 ()fewer for' the A merkpation among Womerraphy, 1950- 1976. Nebibliography "providesextent, and political impand affiliations." "che nform, including dissertatk

n Woman and Politics. Voluntary Partici-In the United States: A Selected Bibliog-

Brunswick, 1976. 35pp. The Center'sccess to information about the naturc,ct of U.S. women's volunteer activitiesaterial is organized into sections byns, unpublished works, and research

in progress. "How-to" literature on recruiting, training, andkeeping volunteers has not been included. There is an authorindex.

242 Fitch, Nancy E. Women in Politics: The United States andAbroad, A Select Bibliography. Washington: U.S. Library ofCongress, congressional Research Service, Governments Divi-sion, 1976. Fitch's bibliography is divided into two large sec-tions: General Works and Biographical Works. Each of these issubdivided into.American, Black American, and Foreign, as wellas by format. There are t'pproximately 150 annotated citations,about one-third of thcm newspaper articles.

243 Jacquette, Jane S. "Review Essay: Political Science." Signs2M:1217-164, Autumn 1976.

244 Krauss, Wilma 10le. "Political Implications of Gender Roles: AReview or the'Literature." American Political ,Science Review68(4):.1706-1723, December 1974. "The purpose of this essay is'to introduce thc reader- to the Contemporary literature on gender

76

Poirrics 77

roles and feminine behavior including the major concepts, em-pirical findings, And sociul thought which have implications forpolitical behavior and research." The review, has three maiuparts: The Contemporary Situation, Gcnder Roles and Women'sPolitical Movements in Historical Perspective, and Orisins ofGender Roles. More than two hundred research studies ared iscussed.

245 Levenson,.Rosaline. Women in Government and Politics: A Bib-libgraphy of American and Freign Sources. Monticello: Councilof, Planning Librarians, 1973. 80p0. Levensdn's bibliographyconies out of an interest in the long history'of women's partici-

,*ipat onor attempted participationin government and politics

since the nineteenth century. She presents more than one thou-sand citations, primarily to works published since 1940, butincluding major books and articles predating that. The bibliog-raphy is divided into four major sections: Bibliographies andIndexes; Women in Government (inCluding the armed forces,foreign service, and judicial work); Womcn in Politics (includingthe suffrage movement and the woman voter) ; and Women inGovernment and Politics in Other Countries.

246 Levitt, Morris. Wortten's Role in American Politics. Monticello:Council of. Planning Librarians, 1973. 25pp. Morris Levitt hasstudied thc political attitudes and behavior of American women,with particular regard for the effect of education ind employ-ment on their level of Participation. In a brief introduction., -he.discusses the re'sults of a 1965 to 1968 survex of voters; eittrapo-kiting and analyzing the data on women.ltased on this esSay, itbecomes clear that by "political participation" he means votingbehavior primarilynot wonien in appointive ordectiv.e office.The bibliography intlydes scholarly books and articles, mostlyfrom the late 1950s to early. 1970s; a few earlier works are cited.Levitt ha's included works on vbtingObehavior generally and onthe'status of women, in addition to those on women's politicalactivities.

247 'Sapiro, Viiginia. A Guide.to Published Works on Women andPolitics II. 2d ed. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan, Institutefor Social Research, Center for Political Studies, 1975. 81pp,. The

78 NM/ FEMINIST Sc :110f ARSI HP

title of Sapiro's bibliography is something of a misnomer, sinceher work iticludes a wealth of material on women's status andhistory, on si7x roles and the'women'e movement, as well as onwomen and politics. The broad areas covyred are: The PoliticalRealm; Cross-National Studies; Sociological, Psychological, andEconomic Perspectives; The. Women's Movement; Black Womenand Feminism; and,Historical Studies. Each of chess areas com-prises a section of the bibliography, and each is subdivided topi-cally. A final section lists a miscellany of iternS,--Mcluding anthol-ogies and bibliographies. Each section and subse'ction beginswith a brief overview pointing out the subjects and merits. ofvarious works listed. The bibliography is liOited to books andarticles in English. Most of the material has been 'publishedrecent ly.

248 Stanwick, Kathy and Christine Li. The Political Participation ofWomen in -the Ilnited States: A 'Selected Bibliography, 19501976. Metuchen: Scarecrow Press, 1977. 16Opp. This bibliog-raphy was prepared at the Center for the American Woman andPolitks (CAWP), Rutgers University (of which Stanwick and Liare staff) and supersedes the CAWP publication, Women andAmetican Politics, published in i974. It extends the coverage ofthat compilation backward to 19150 (from 1965) and forward to1976 (from 1974). The type of material cited remains the same; itincludes much that is unpublishM and hard to find, as well asresearch in progress. The subject scope is broad, includingwomen in appointive or elective office, Women's role in party

M politics, voting behavior, political socialization, women's lobby-ing and -volunteer political activity, women's participation insocialvmovement, and histories .of women's political activity.The more than 1,500 citations art: arranged by format: bibli-'ographies, directories, 'periodiCals, books, etc. A biographicalindex will help the researcher trace the lives of' individual women;the lack of a subject index Will cause the general user some prob-lem. Finally, many of the works listed are housed at the CAWPcollectio'n, and inquiries are invited. (Original edition: Chris-man, Sara B. Woman and American Politics: A Selected Bibliog-raphy, 1965-1974. New Brunwick: Rutgers'Uniyersity, Centerfor the American Woman and Politics, 1974. 56pp.)

to.

POLITICS 79

249 Swanick, M. Lynne Struthers. Women is Canadian Politics andGovernment,' A Bibliography. Monticello: Council of PlanningLibrarians, 1974. 29pp. The purpose of this bibliography is to'bring together references to ankles', books, and documents

which discuss and illuminate the role and rights of women in pol-itics and government in Canada," including the campaign forwoman suffrage. The bibliography includes 245 citations at.-

: ranged alphabetically and followed by a subject index. In addi-tion, there arc listings of women's magazines and newspapers,and of government bodies concerned with the status of Canadianwomen. This is one of the better Canadian sources since itincludes Canadian material almost exclusively.

250 Whaley, Sara. "American Women in National Political Life."Women Studies Abstmas 1:1-9, Spring 1972. A bibliographical,essay listing and discussing books and articles that contain infor-mation on the socialization of women and girls as well as the roleof women in the national government, political parties, and pres-sure groups.

t"..1

' (.3

Professions

These bibliographies on women in various pirofessions were pulled outof the Work section btCause they were numerous enough (rhere are twenty-two of then)) to stand on their own. Several of them are not concerned withwomen in specific professions, but rather the more general "management"or "executive" category. The professions represented include librarianship,medicine, police work, architecture, geography, journalism, engineering,the sciencesa varied and interesting cross-section. As explained in _theintroduction, this section also includes one bibliography on prostiiution.

SEE ALSO: Work.

251 Brugh, Anne E. and Benjamin R. Beede. "Review Essay: Ameri-can Librarianship." Signs 1(0:943-956, Summer 1976.

252 Bullough, Vern et al. A Bibliography ofProstitution. New York:Garland, 1977. 419pp. Bullough's aim in compiling this bibliog-raphy was to be all-encompassing. Thus, because of the variousdefinitions of prostitution (many of which arc described in theintroduction), works on "almost any aspect of extrarharital sex-iual activity" are cited. Evidently, the subject has been a popularonethe volume includes just under 6,500 citations. Organiza-tion is either by f9rm (including arca studies, biography, andfiction) or subject (including history, legal and police regula-tions, sociology, and war). There are twenty chapters in all, Medi-cine and Public Health being the largest. The bibliography wascompiled with the aid of a computer, which accounts for the un-pleasant style of type. Typesetting would have made a moreattractive, easier to read book, but the efficiency of the computerundoubtedly outweighed those considerations.

253 Business and Professional Women's Foundation. 1Vornen Execu-tives: A Selected Annotated Bibliography. Washington, 1970.

.f4. 26pp. This bibliography covers periodical articles for the mostpart, but also includes books, pamphlets, reports and theses. 'thematerials themselves cange from the popular and general to thescholarly; they have bern published within the past ten to fifteen

80, 9

PROFESSIONS 81

years on the w k, though a few earlier pieces are included. Thecitations are difrded inio Chapters by type of material: The anno--tations4e noti evaluative, and 211 the materials listed are avair-able in the Ftund,ation library.

254 . Women lir Positions at Managerial, Administrative andExecutive Levels. Washington, 1966. 19pp. Out 'Of print.

255 Chaff, Sandra L. et al. Women in Medicine: A Bibliography ofthe Literature on Women Physicians. Metuchen: Scarecrow Press,1977. 1,124pp. Women in Medicine is undoubtedly the majorreference work on women in the medical profession. Basedheavily on the Women in Medicine Collection at the Medical Col-lege of Pennsylvania (formerly the Women's Medical College), itincludes more than four thousand annotated entries. The bibli-ography is arranged into fourteen subject chapters (history,biography, recruitment, missionary activity, wartime activity,ctc.), each of which is subdiiided by geography. Materialsincluded range from the eighteenth century (the earliest datedcntry is a 1750 German pamphlet) througlr1975, and more thannincty percent are in English. The titles of foreign languageworks have been translated into English. Appendixes list direc-tories of women physicians and special collections on women inmedicine. There are author, subject, and personal namc indexestotalling m rc than one hundred pages. Certainly, any researchesinto thc hist ry and status of women in,Inedicine will have tobegin here.

256 Cheda, Sherrill. "Women and Management: A Selective Bib-liography 1970-1973." Canadian Library Journal 31(1):18-27,January/February 1974.

257 Coxe, Betsy and Florence Klemna. Women in the Military.Coloiado Springs: U.S. Air Force Academy, Library, 1975.

-

.258 Davis, Audrey B. Bibliography on Women: With SpecialEmphasis on their Roles in Science and Society. New York:

. Science History Publications, 1974. 5opp. This bibliography

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NEW FEMINIST SCI !MARS} HP

covers books and articles on Women in science internationally, aswell as their participation in society more generally. The citationsarc alphabetical y author; there is no subject classification.

259 Davis,' Lenwood G. The Policewoman in American Society.' APreliminary lurvey. Monticello: Council of Planning Librarians,1976. 15pp.1111 ayis's bibliogratihy is arranged by form into fivesections: articles, books, pamphlets, government documents,theses and dissertations: There is no introductiob to explain thebibliography's scope or purpose, but a quick survey indicates thcinclusion of twentieth-century materials in English. The earliestitem listed is a book dated 1909, and in the articles section espe-cially, there arc a great many works from the early part Of thc ccn-tury through the twenties.

260 Fitzpatrick, M. Louise. "Review Essay:- Nursing." Signs 2(4):818-834, Summer 1977.

261 Goerss, Katherine -Van Wessem. Women Administrators in Ed-ucation: A Review of Research 1960-1976. Washington: Nation-al Association for Womcn Deans, Administrators and Coun-selors, 1977. 24pp. Gocrss's review .discusses 'more than fortyrcscarch studies on the woman administrator, most of themconducted since 1970. Her paper "summarizes and compares thcpersonal, educational, professional, and psychological charactei-istics of women administrators who hold low-level and upper-echelon positions in public schools, public and private collegesand universities and professional organizations in all areas of the.United States."

262 Haist, Diannc. Women in Management: A Selected Thhhog-raphy, 1970-1975. Toronto: Ontario Ministry of Labour, Re-search Library, 1976. 18pp.The bibliography is divided into foursections: monographs, articles, periodicals, and bibliographies.The Canadian itemsthe minorityare starred.

263 Hayden, Dolores and Gwendolyn Wright. "Review Essay: Ar-chitecture and Urban Planning:' Signs 1(4):923--934, Summer1976.

S

"N.

PROITSSIONS

264 Healy, Barbara R. Women in Management: A Selected Anno-tated Bibliography of Current and Cited Books and Artkles.Rochestet: .University of Rochester, Management library, 1974.

265 Heim, Kathleen and Kathleen Weibd. The Role of Women inLibrariansA1876-1976; The Entry, Advancement and StrugglefOr Equaliz7ion_ in One Prvjession. New York: NealachumanPublishers, forthcoming. In the past, the American LikraryAssociation has distributed a bibhography on women in librar-ianship compiled and updated by different members of its TaskForce on Women. That will probably no longer be the case (or atleast not kr the current compilation), because a greatlyexAanded version of that bibliography will appear in Heim andWeibel's anthology, The Role of Women in LibrarianshrP. Thisentry is the one exception to the "separately-published bibliog-raphy rule' which guides the compilation of this volume. I havemade an exception in this case for two reasons: the nearness of thetopic to my librarian's heart and the ize and scope of the bibliog-raphy, The Role of WOInen in I. arianship is not in print as ofthis writing; however, the bibl ography-section has been com-pleted kind is three hundred manuscript pages. It would appeafthat the bibliography will dwarf the anthology mid not vice yersa

266 Jacquet, C. H. "Professional Woman in the United States: ABibliographical Essay.'' Information Service 48:1-7, May 1969.

267 Johnson, Cirolyn R, Women in Architecture: An AnnotatedBibliography and Guide /6 Sources of Information. Monticello:Council o,f Planning Librarians, -1974. 25pp. Jolmwn has, 1!brought together writings (books and periodical articles) on,opportunitieFfor women in architecture, on the achievements ofwomen architects, gtudies and surveys of women architects, 'andwomen M related career fields. Each one of the broad areas fOrmsa section of the bibliography, which then lists works in chron-ological order. There is a listing of 'organizations and associationsof women archikcts and a listing of statistical sources. Each itemis carefully sirtmOtated.

268 Loyd, Bonnie, Women and Geography: An Annotated Bibliog-raphy and Guide to Sources of Information. Mont icello:-Council

.r

81 NEW' 1.1 MIN IS 1 5C11()tARS111.1'

;

Of Pla9ning Librarians: 1976. 18pp: Loyd's bib4graphy listsmateriais, of two types: works on the woman ge4rapher,status and rarticipation; and geographical studies! On women.The pampl et is divided into these two sections, bath of whichcontain a miscellany Of materialsfilms, confererces, articles,ofg7anizations, and research in progresFf. Everything listed is veryrecent, most wi it from 1970.

16th.

269 Marzolf, Marion, Ramona R. Rush, and Darkne Ste n. !.'The Lit-erature of Women in Journalism History. Journ4lism History1(4):117-128, Winter 1974/7.5:

270 Roysdon, Christy. Women in Engineering: A Bib ography ontheir Progress and Prospeca Monticello: Council f PlanningLibrarians, 1975.,22p0. Roysdon has divided her ibliographyinto eight major stibject areas wHich provide.a good descriptionof the literature cited. The gect ions are Background: The Profes-sional Woman; Major Books (those dealing specifica ly with, thewoman engineer); The Status of Women Engineers Numbers,Trends; Recruitment: The Chronic Problem; EKlu ation andraining; On the Job: Performance, Opportunity, -S *action;Rote Models,Success Stories; and Government ocutnents.There -.aro ,two nonbibliographic sections listing ma or confer-ences and.relevant organizatiov. Items .of particular it terest andthose.with vague title-s have been annotated briefly.

271 Vetter, Betty M. "Review Essay; .Women in the NaturalSciences-I Signs 1(3):713-720, Spring 1976.

272 Williams, Martha, Jea Myer,. and Meg Gerrard. men inManagement:.A Vec. ed Bibliography.- Austin: Univ rsity ofTexas, School of Social Work, Center for Social Work 4 search,1977. Opp. Work pn this' bibliography began in 1975 in prepar-ation fora conference,' 'Women in Management,' '-spons red bythe University ofTexas that spring.. Cnnection of these m terialscOntinued in an ,effort to develoti a special library on th man-ageriaLwomah. The bibliography includes selected book , jour-nal article's, and uhpublished.papers of recent vintage_Th more

al

.d

..;

PROWSSIONS ,H)

than_ six hundred citations fall into seven issue areas with a.thaptcr for each: women in the Workforce-getierallY, the leis&issues, interhal (psychological) factors, personal/work roles and.conflicts, women as leaders, organizational. ?triers to women'sparticipation, and strategics for change,-.E h of these chaptershas a brief introd ion describing the major issu6 and settingthem in historic Itext. The best source I Have found in thearca.

,11

(

I . r

1:

Psychology

The psychology sectiin is substantial, with a number of excellentsources. However, there ts nothing comprehensive that i; recent. Sherman'sbook-letigth review essay was published in 1971, Walstedt's The Psychology

of Women in 1972, and thr American Psychological faosociation's A Topical

Bibliography in 1974. The most 'recent entry is Vaughter's review essay in the

Autumn 1976 issue of Signs. While this is an excellent source fur currentresearch, it is not comprehensive. The Signs review essays will continue to bean important resource in this area.

tin: ALso: Sex Roles and Sex Differences.

273 Barr, llekn R. and Carolyn W. Biblioiraphy(Se/whit:1y. Annotated) on Psychology of Women. Wash'ingion:American Psychological Association, 1974. 104pp: gore thanone thousand works-are cited in this selected bibliiligraphy on thc ,

psychology of women. It covers a broad rangepf t'QpicS, from,/history to _feminism to anthrotiology, and is not, trictlyspcalç-ing

-

conceined only'w it h female psychology. Certarti major booksand articles have .been annotated; some of the b.00ks chapter by

chapter. The section titles are:. Historical Psrspectiye:s;Conttmporary Women's Movement; piological Bash for Sex

pifferences; Critique of:Research and Theory on SexCigerences;Cross.Cultural, Perspectiv6; Psychological 1Yevelopr4nt;search on Cognitivinifkrences and Achievehient; Sexuality:andReproduction; Psychological problems of Women; Apc)I.1ging.

274 Carey, Emily A. Issues in the Psyjholoky and Counseling of .

' Bgston: Womanspafe: Feminist' Therapy Collective,

1.976. 1'9pp. Aept&iniately half Olthis mimeographed bilzdiog-raphy. is 4 straight alphat;etical, listing of citations. Then follow

two lnigsilbject sec ons: Women and Alcbholism, Lesbians and/ Mental Health,

. 4...- ,

275 ------- Bianca Murphy, and Chkrlotte Wasserman Counseling'Women: A. Bibliography. Boston: Womanspate: Feminist,Thera6, Collcctiye, 1975, 12pp. Cmenseling Women is a straieWalphabcticd listing (if citatiops; there aririo annotations.

,

t

.86

S

. PSYCHOLOGY 87

276 (iromwell, Phyllis E. Women and Mental Health, SelectedAnnotated References 100-1973. Rockville: National Instituteof Mental Health, Division of Scientific and Technical Informa-

.

non, 1974. 247pp. Out of print.

277 Henley, Nancy. "Resources for the Study of Psychology andWomen. RT: journal. of Radical Therapy 4:20-21, December1974.

,278 ) ivonovich, Joann et al. Women and Psychology. Cambridge:(Cambridge-Goddard Graduate School for Social Change, 1972.

36pp. Out of prin,t. This selected, atindtated bibliography is anoutgrowth of the Psychology and Woman Seminar of the Femi-nist Studies Progiam at the Canibridge-Godclard GraduateSchool. Originally ;compiled in 1972, it was reprinted, but:not-revised, by the NeW.England Free Press. Each-section of the bib-

..

liography is preceded-by an introduction describing how and whythe, particular materials were seleoed. The compilers approachthe material with a feminist point of view. The sections include:Philosophy of Science, Methodology and StatisticUl Uses, Historyof Psychology,. ,5cx Differences, Sex, Role Development ancl.Socializatioti of Children, Individual Psychology and PersonalityTheory, Individual Devdoptnent and Group Dynamics, ThelSniali Group in the DeVelopment of Political Organization.Citations ate listad alphabetically by author,r ar_

279 Parke, Nary Brown. "Review Essay: Psychology." Signs 1(1):119-138, Autumn 1975.

280 Sherman, Jalia Ann. On the Psychology of Wemen: A Suivey ofEmpirical Studies. Springfield: Charles C. Thomas, 1971..304pp. This literature review examines more than nine hyndredwOrks. of research in the psycholoey of women. The research fallsinto eleven' major areas (there is a chapter otr each): Bib-log; ofSex Differences, Psychology of Sex-Differences, Freudian Theoryof Feminine Development, Female Oedipus Complex,and Sex Role Development, Adolescence, Cyclic Changes,Female Sexuality, Pregnancy, Motherhood, and The Later Years.

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281 Vaughter, RCM 14.4 .."Rcv,iew Essay: Psychology:: Sign; 2(1):,.120-146; Autumn 1976.

282 Walstedt Joycejennings. The Psychology of romen: A.-Partially\Annotated Bibliography. Pittsburgh: KNOW, 1972. 76pp. Part1 of this bibliography is arranged, according t4 the stages inwomen's lives: Infancy and Childhood, Adokscence, 'YoungAdulthood, Middle and Old Age. .Part 11 has six thematksubcategories: .Cross Cultural; General Source Material; PrimateStudies; Minority Group Status, Discrihiination; PsychoanalyticTheories, Mental Health; atid Sexuality and P.hysiology. It should

. be clear froth this list of categories that thc bibliography covers awide range of materials, though the majority of ,the citations arcto reSearch.artkles in academic jOurnals, The bibliography is notmeant to be exhaustive, except in thc (-Asc of jonrnal articles_published since 1970. Valstedr searched all ihe Major psycho;

journals Troll-N/70 for,rdevanc entries iind .a.pnotated all, .

of them-. All iNst-1970'mat.e.rials are Marked wit h1:16 asterisk; andthose considered to be of special ,intereg Are also,mark8d The.annotations are -"neutral". and -dCgcriptiye. In ases whereWal§tedt had a strong opinion, she has given it in a separate para-graph labelled "Commbnts."

,Both the lionotations and the

comments arc incisive and very -helpful. The only drawback to, this bibliography is its'age.

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:Rape 1 I

Rape has-been a cruciA topic in kminist literanire since the publicationof Susan triffl s "Rape: The All-American Crime' (Ramparts, Vol, 10,No.M in 1971. More recently; it ha's been taketiserioiMY as a research area by.Griminologists and psychologist's, ahd several bibliographies of . scholarlywriting have appeared.

"1283 Semmel. "Review Essay: Psychological Studiesof Rape." Signs 3(2):423-05, Winter 1977.

284 Barnes, DorOthy. L. Rape: A Bibliography, 1904975. Troy:Whitson Publishing, 1977. ,

285 Chappell, Duncan, Gilbert Geis, and Faith Fogarty. "ForcibleRape: Bibliography." The Journal of Criminal Law imd Crimi-noslogy..65(2):248-265, 1974. This bibliography is organized by

0. subject with cateful cross-referencing of the more than threehundred items. The introduction points out the shift in:the tont

.Of the material pre- and i)oo-women's movement. The subje0,. -

.. kc?fegotirs include Sociology, Victim, Offender, Law, Medical-, anid Polke investigatiOn. There is:an author:index.

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286 K mmer, Elizabeth -Jane: Rape.,and Rape-Relaled Issues: 4n

A notaied Bibliography. Neiv York: Garland, 1977, 174013.Ti is slim volume contaitis _348 citations to rape- literature: inEns.lish from 1965 to 1976. The annotations are cletailed and6elpful. There is` a list of the 150 liekiodicals cited.'and a good

.s'ubject- index; the' citations themselves ate not arranged 'byubjett, but listed alphabeeltally by main entry. However, it islwa?,6-ipsetting to see the.p4lisher skimp on the roduction

(the:body of the bOok is' typed, ii6,t typeset) of such a worthwhilebook.

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287 St., Louis Fen-imist Resc'arch Projc1: The Rape-Bibliogi Phyi AC'011ection ofAbstracts. St :Louis ,-197.7. 93.pp. The"kipe ibilog-

_

..

.. raphy covets scholarly Writing on fdur aspetts' of rqi,4 ' legal,:medical, psychological, ai\ socjological. Each of-these ections'is

.- divided into "Bibliography," v'vllich cites, wOtks written before, v. ic

, "*.

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NIAX/ 1.1.111NIST

1970, and 'ZAbstrac6;" which cites and ann9tattswoeks written.after.1970. A final section, "PoPtilie prrss,.. -covers all.nonscho-lady work on tk fouraspetf!s- published after 1970. The recentacceptance of rape as a legitimate and cruciid problem for oursociety is evidenced.by tile ratio of ppst- to pre-1970 works. Outof a total 443 citations, .169---or about forty percentare in thepost- j970 period. This bibliography is an excdlent resource forresearchers .tacklingthis djsturbing issue.

288 Schwendinger, julia,R. and Herman Schwendingen."A Reviewof Rape..Literature.'' Crime and Social Justice (! 792-85 , Fan/Wintkr 1976.

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Reference Sources

This is one ofrthe sections which did not exist in the original compila-tion, but has developed rapidly since 1974. The concept of reference serviceon women's issues has followed in the footsteps of women's studies research;it is now of concern to many librarians. In fact, most of these bibliographieswere compiled by college and university librarians who developed theirspecialty in response to their campus's women's studies program.

289 Eichler, Margrit and Sara Whaley," A Bibliography of Canadianand United States, Resources on Women." Women StudiesAbstracts 2(4):1, Fall 1973 and 3(1):1, Wintcr 1974. Eichkr andWhaley list and discuss reference works and bibliographies onwpmen in Canada and the United States, nyluding thosepublished over the preceding ten years as.well as a few,that arestill forthcoming. Their essay is arranged into sections by form:reference books, bibliographies, and other library resources(mostly indexes and abstracts), with a final section on the as yet

npublished works.

290 Hoffman, Rkith H. Women::A Basic Guide to Research. BowlingGreen: Bowling Grccn State University .Libraries, 1978. 25pp,Hoffman's research guide is typical of its type, giving A basic.Introduction to the card catalog, appropriate subject headings,general and specialized reference sources. It includes as well, a listof local women's programs and services.

291 Lynn, Naomi B., Ann B. Matastr, and Marie Barovic Rosenben.Research Guide in Women's Studies. Morristown: GeneralLearning Press, 1974. 194pp. This is a college-level introduction

. to social science research, reference work, and writitig of women'sstudies research.papers. Many college or university libraries haveput out similar guides for their own students.

° 292 Miteer-7 Carolyn, Rae Rohfeld, and Laverne Zell. Research Guideto Arben's Issues. Cleveland: Cleveland State University,Institute cif Urb Affairs, Clearinghouse for Research on.rIomen ahd Em yment,. 1976. 37pp. Out of print. ResearvhGuide .to WoMen's Issues is 'much like the other ['guides in this

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9.) NIAX'\ I I MINIS I St 1101 ARSIIIP

section, ln addition to desctibing basic research procedures andreference sources, it also .provides a series of suggestions forresearch needed in three major areas: education, conditions ofemployment, and implemcntatiori of equal employment oppor-tunities. The final section is a reprint of 'Research aM SupportStrategies for Women's Higher Education," a paper prepared bythe Project on the Status and Education of Women.

293 McKee, Kathleen Burke. Women's Studies: A Guide to Refer-ence Sources. Storrs: The University of Connecticut Library,1977. 112pp. This attractive paperback includes 364 citations tospecialized and general reference sources in the University ofConnecticut Library. Arranged by type of publication, the com-pilation covers guides; library catalogs; handbooks; directories;statistical sources; indexeg, abstracts, and bibliographies.Subdivisions by form and/or subject arc provided wherenecessary; the indexes, abstracts, and bibliographies section, forexample, is broken down into more than twenty subject areas. Afinal section, compiled 'by Joanne V. Akeroyd, lists feministserials-tound in the library's Alternative Press Collection. Theholdings as of January 1977 are given for each title; alohg with adescription of the type of periodical and its usuaf.contents. Itereare subject, author: and title. indexes. This is.an.Ac'ellcnt Ode tto reference sources in women's studies mid shot' be useful tOr awide audience beyond the University of Cneiçut

294 Papaziafi, Barbara aikErnestine S4act, Firr ding Materials by

.4

and4bout WomeEast Lansing: MiThe M.S.U. Librmanual is apartlists a variety of rethe type of information sO41117Triliding Books, Finding. News-paper and Periodical Articles, FindinZBiographical Information,

he Michigan Pate University Libraries.,State University Libraries, 1977. 21pp.e a "How to Find" series, of which this

t is.basically a guide to library research, itenCe sources. The sections are delineated by

etc..1

205 Schlachter, Gail and Donna Belli. "the Cbonging Rae of Womenin merica: A Selected:Annotatid Bibliography of ReferenceSources. Monticello: Council , of Planning Librarians, 1975.36pp. Schlachter and Belli have, divided their guide to reference

RITERINCI, )I 1R( TS 9

works into two Parts: Information Sources., which includes direc-tories, encyclopedias, biographical dictionaries, and so forth; andCitation Sources, which actually means bibliographies. Thiscompilation is less extensive than the McKee guide (#293); it listsonly sources which arc devoted exclusively to women and not thcmore general ones which may have sections on women. Foreignlanguage materials and minor or obscure items arc not included.Each entry is carefully annotated; the annotations arc descriptiverather than evaluative. There are auttior and .title indexes. Ingeneral, a good source.

296 . Minorities and Women: A Guide to Reference Literaturein the Social Sciences. Los Angeles: Reference Service Press, 1977.349pp. Schlachter and Belli's Guide is somewhat outside thcscope of this compilation in that it is not devoted exclusively toworks on women. I have included it, nevertheless, for tworeasons: one, it contains subsrantial material on women(approximately 130 citations) and two, because thc sources onminority women are few, the works on minorities in generalmight provide a useful lead. The volume is divided into twop4rts: Information Sources, subdivided by form (fact books,biographical sources, document sources, directories, statisticalsources); and Citation. Sources, subdivided by type of person(Minorities, American Indians, Asian Americans, Black Ameri-

:, cans, Spanish Americans, Women). Materials were consideredfor iwlusion if written in English, recently published (or classics),commercially avaPable, and on at least a high school level. Everyitem is annotated, and there are author, title, and subjectindexes. The resemblance between this work and thcir TheChanging Role of Women will be noted.

297 Seckelson-Simpson, Linda. With Reference to Women: An,Annotated Bibliography of Reference Materials on Women in theNorthwestern University Library. Evanston: NorthwesternUniversity Library, 19.75. 5)pp. With Reference. to Women listsgeneral and specialized reference sources in five subject areas.The 157 entries are carefully annotated in some detail. In

' adchtion to the straight bibliography sections, there arc lists ofwomen's organizations and special library collections on women.An Axcellent resource.

9.1 MAX/ FIr1 I NISI St1RWARSIIIP

29ti Woodsworth, Annc and Jane Clark. Women: A-Guidi t Bibli-ographic Sourres. 2d ed. Toronto: University of Toronto, John P.Robarts Research Library, 1974. 26pp. This bibliography ofreference sources was compiled by Anne Woodsworth; it firstappeared in 1972, with an addenda in 1973. The revision wasdone by Jane Ckrk and essentially combines the first edition andits addenda into one. Thc only revision is the interfiling of thetwo parts, there arc no substantial additions (a total increase ofthree citations), nor have the basic outline or annotationschanged. The Guide has five major sections: The CardCatalogues, Sources in the Reference Room, The GovernmentPublications Section, Women's Periodicals, and Sources Outsidethe University. The bulk of thc cotilpilation (fifteen out oftwenty-six pages) is the reference room ection, which is brokendown into subcategories kr bibliographiesA)iographical diction-aries, course sytlabi, directories and encyclopedias, and indexesand abstracts. The annotations arebrief but informative. There isan author/title index. Although this Guide is now a bit dated, itis still useful, especially for Canadian sources. (Original edition:Woodsworth, Anne. Women: .A Guide to Bibliographic Sourcesin the University of Toronto Library. Toronto: University of"Foronto, Library, 1972. 7pp. Addenda. 1973. 14pp.)

299 Wright, Maureen. Women's Studies: A- Student's Guide toReference Sources. ERIC, 1975, 12pp2 (ED 117 747). Wrightdivides her bibliography intO four main sections: Directories,Encyclopedias, Biographical Sources, .and Bibliographies. Thebibliography section is subdivided by topic and comprises half Ofthe pablication. Each entry is carefully annotated. This is a goodall-around source, .but is especially usefid for reference material

Aon Canadian women.

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Religion

The bibliographies in this section represent the variety of comemporaryissues concerning women and religion: the status of women in the church,feminist interpretations of theology, the Ordination of women.

300 Bass, Dorothy. American Women in Church and Society,1607-1920: A Bibliography, New York: Auburn TheologicalSeminary, 1973. 37pp. The title of this bibliography is perhaps abit misleading as it includes mateTial on women in a wide varietyof topics in addition to women and the church. There is,however, one lengthy section devoted to the church as well as oneon sects and utopias. There arc numerous works in other sectionsthat arc written by ministers or that concern the way Christianityhas affected women. The partially-annotated citations arcarranged into chapters broadly by subject, they then are furthersubdivided.

301 Ceding, C.E. "An Annotated Bibliography of the NewTestament Teachings about Women. "Jourtial of the EvangelicalTheology Society 16(1):47-53, .1973.

302 Christ, Carol P. "Feminist Studies in Religion and Liieratufe: AMethodological Reflection. "Journal 4 the American Academyof geligion 44:317-326, June 1976.

303 Driver, Anne Barstow. "Review Essay: Iteligion.'; Signs 2(2):434-442, Winter 1976.

304 Farians, Elizabeth. Vomen andReligion: Selected Bibliography,1965- 1972. Cincinnati, 1973.. 29pp. Farians's ielf-publishedbibliography is artanged first b form of material (books, articles;bibliographies, films, packets, reports, newsletters, specialperiodical issues)and then chronolOgicilly. The largest section byfar is the compilation of articles. There is also a brief listing ofwomen's religious and church organizations.

305 Fischer, Clare B. and Rochelle Gatlin. Woman: A TheologicalPerspective; Bibliography and Addendum, Berkeley: Graduate

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-96 NI \X' I I NIINIS I S( IR)! ARSI III'

Theological Union, Office of Women's Affairs, 1975. 47pp. LikeDorolby Bass's compilation (#)00), nman: A Theological Per-spective includes a broad spectrum of material which ranges,

beydnd works specifically on women and religious concerns.Fischer and Gatlin explaintin their introductiOn that they haveassunwd an "elastic interpretation of what theological inquiry isabout." Thcy do not, however, specifically explain how theadditional works have been selected beyon&noting the interdis-ciplinary natiire of women's studies, and need to understand thcgeneral history and status of women, and the parameters offeminist thinking. The bibliography is divided into ninesections: Bibliography and Resources; Women andScripture,History, Theology, Society, Psychology Socializatkm, Art; andWomen in Comparative Perspective. These are furthcrsubdivided, sometimes by form (books, articles), somctinies bysubject. The compilation is eckctic and interesting., undoubtedly

'reflecting the concerns and interests of thc.editors: It is also quite,substantial, approaching one thousand citations.

306 Kendall, Patricia A. Women and the Priisthood: A Selected andA nnotated Bibliography. Philadelphia: Episcopal Diocese ofPennsylvania, 1976. 57pp. This- bibliography wAs prepared aspart of the work of the Committee to Promote the Catise of andto Plan for the Ordination of Women, appointed by the Diocesein 1974. Since the C6mmittee's approach to the problem litheordination of women was one of advocacy, so arc the works citedin the bibliography. The primary oblective was to compile mate-rials providing 'Isound theological reasons for the ordination ofwomen." The bibliography was designed fora lay Audience, thussome interesting but difficult sources were 1Ailot cited. 'Theannotations are substantial; in the case of nthologics,individual article s annotated..

307 Kirby, Kathryn E. Status of Women in the Church: Vatican II,1968; Annotated Bibliography. Washington: Catholic Univer-sity of America. Department of Library Science, 1970. 52pp. Out.of print. Although-this bibliography i5 out of print, thc LibrarySchool Library has one copy that they will rox at cost; from:,Library, Department of Library Science, atholic University,Washington, DC 20064. -

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'308 Patrick, Anne "%morn 'and Religion: A Survey of SignificantLite9live, 1965-1974." Theological Studies 36:737-765,Decemtet 1975.

309 Porter. Harry B. "Women Priests: Some Recent kiteratunT."Anglican Theological Review 2:83-87, 1973.

310 Way,_Peggy, A. "Women, the Church and Liberation: A GrowthOriented Bibhography." Dialog 10:93-103, Spring 1971.

4'511 Wilsop, Martha M. "Womeh and the Church. Duke DivinitySchool Review 38:100-102, Spring 1973.

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Sex Roles and Sex Differences

The degree to which the, differences exhibited by men and women il redue to natureor to learned, sex-typed behavioris now the object of muchstudy.: This section includes a number of bibliograpkies4m sex-sole rescirchin general, the most comprehensive of which is Astin's Sex Roles: A ResearchBibliography. Other- bibliographies provide access to the literature on sex-stereotyped images in the media, sex differences in language, and sexdifferences in reading achievement..

SEE ALSO: Sociology; Psychology.

312 Astin, Helen et -al. Sex Roles: A Riseamh',Bibliography.Washington: National Institute of Mental Health, 1975. 362pp.This compilation is a substantial one (450 entries); probably themajor bibliography of sex-role research. An initial search of theliterature *as Made to determine a general framework of the ,

research and to facilitate development of categories. Then, the'.categories were "filled in" with selections, giving an overview 4the entire field. That is, the different areas of research were"highlighted" 'by an entry or two instead of.being covered .

exhaustively. The studies cited range from 1960 to 1972, and theemphasis is on literature with an empirkal basis. Thus, onli a fewfeMinist works are included. Th'e bibliography is divided inttofive categories: sex differences; the origin of sex differences anddeveldpment of sex roles; the manifestation of sex rales in varioussettings (family, work, school); overiliews of the status of thesexes; and general reviews and' theory on the . process ofsocialiiation. Because these categories are broad and 4he researchisoft very, specific and technical, a detaileelt su 1 ect index isinclud d and should be used. The annotations are su s tialand descriptive, generally running to two or three paragrap Inaddition to die sugiect index, subject descriptors printe in b kidface arc included with rach citation. Qvcrall, an indispe ablevolume*.

313 Friedman; Leslie J. Sex Role Stereotyping in the Mass Media: An,. Annotated Bibliography. New York; Garland,, 1977. 324pp.

Friedman's bibliography covers all aspects o theCommunications media and is. divided, into. sectons y form:

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SEX NQI.ES AND SEX DIEHiKENCIjS 99

mass media, advertising, broadcast, film, prent, and popular -

culture (comics, science -fiction, pornography): There arc -alsosections on the media image of minority Nvomeit and of men, onchildren's media,- and on the impact of all this media onoccupational choice. Works cited cover a broad range, fitomscholarlyresearch studies to con nt analysis to feminist tracts to.opinion polls. The annotations ar *ncisive and very helpful. Theintroduction gives a good, brie overview of the problems ofmedia stereotyping: There are author and subject indexes. Anexcellent reference tool for xnyone doing research in the field.

314 Henley, Nancy and Barrie Thorne, She Said/He Said: AnAnnotated Bibliography ofSex Differences in Language, Speech,and Nonverbal Communication. Pittsburgh: KNOW, 1975.3Llpp. This is a bibliography that has had a prc.publication life.Compilation began. in 1972, and various informal editionscirculated before this paper_ edition was published. It is dividedinto nine chapters: Comprehensive Sources; Vocabulary andSyntax; Phonology; Conversational Patterns; Women's andMen's Languages, Dialects; Mültilitigual Situations; Langttagtand ,Acquisition; Verbal Abilitx; and Nonverbal Aspects ofCommunication. The annotations are thdroughmany run tonearly a page in length. A final section lists womea's organiza-

'k- tions that are concerned with language issues. There is an authorindex.

315 Hochschild, lussell:k "A Review of Sex kole Research."'American jpurnal of Sociology. 78(4):1011-1029, January 1973.

316. Lipman-Blumen, Jean. "Changing Sex Roles in American'Culture: Future Directions for Research." Atrhives of-Sexual

- Behavior 4(4):433-446, 1975..

317 and Ann R. fichmyer. "Sex Roles in Transition: A Ten-Year Perspective." Annual Review of Sociology 1:297-337,1975.

318 jvlaferr Foundation. Bibliography: Male-Female Role Researrh:New York, 1976. 23pp. The Maferr Foundation has sponsoredresearch on male-female roles since 1966; many of the

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100 NEW FEMINIST SCHOLARSHIP'

blications cited in this bibliography are the result of thatresearch. The citations are organized into seven sectionsaccording to form .(papers, symposia, articles) and are listedchronologically within each section.

319 Sheridan, Rarcia. Sex Differences and Reading: AnAnnotated Bt _liography. Newark: International ReadingAssociation, 1,976. 4Opp. Marcia Sheridan has reviewed the fairlysubstantial research on reading and reading achievement, usingsex as a variable. Most bf this literature has been published sincethe mid- to tate sixties; 6nly a dozen or so olthe more than 151)titles predate 1960. Sheridan has grouped the citations accordingto the overall concern or topic of the research. This produces ninemajor sections, in addition to the general one on scx differencesin reading; they are; Sex Differences Based on Reading Methods,Materials and Sex Differences, Sex of Teacher, Separate SexClasses, Differences in Treatment of Boys and Girls., Sex Differ-ences in Interest and Attitude, Sex Differences in Achievement,Cognitive and Psychological Sex Differences, Development ofSex Role. Each citation has an annotation that briefly summarizesthe research.

320 Spiegel, Jeanne. Sex Role Concepts: How Women and Men SeeThemselves and Each Other; A Selected Annotated Bibliog-raphy.. Washington: Bnsiness and Professional Women'sFoundation, 1969. 31pp. This bibliography covers books pain-phkts, tiports, theses, articles, and microfilm, all of which areavailable in the-Foundation library. The.citations ire organizedby type of materiit into chapters,and thcn listed alphabeticallyby author. The annotations are nonevaluative. The materialincluded is limited to that published in the last fifteen years; itcovers a wide spectrumfrom ihe pop4ilar to the scholark

321. Tresemer, David. Reseatrh on For of Success: Full'AftnotatedBibliography. Washington: American Psychtological Association,1975. 179pp. In 1968, psychologist Matina Horner conductect apioneering study on women's attituaeg toward success out ofwhich the "fear of success" construct was born.. Since then, agreat variety of research has been. based .on this construct.Trdemer has pulled together 186 citations to 155 studies which

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R011.ES AND SFX DITEFRENCES 101

followed HorneeS, fully describirog each one. The annotatipns4proVide informatiOn on the number and type-of subjec6-uSed,-

details of meaSutement techniques employed, and full results ofthc sludy. Papers. collected in the course of.compiling thebibliography have been donated to the Sophia Smith Library at

Smith College where tiny form the."Fear ofSuccess ",

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fhird-World Colin'tries-This section focuses on three Thirds.World areas: Afric-A, India, and

Latin America. Although niAny of the bibliogrAphies in this section were notavailable fot 4eview, one can .assume that the concentration on theseparti(Ular geographical areas stems from..the same research concerns seen in

the Women and Development sectionthe crucial role of wórnen in national

economic,developmeut. a

sEI.SO: Women.and Development; Minority and Ethnic Women.

kIRlCA

322 African -Bibliographic Centre, Women's Africa Committee,African-American Inst,itute. Contemporary African Women: AnIntroductory Bibliographical Overview and a,Guide to leomeb'sOrganizations,. :1966767. New york: Negro University Press,1969. Out of print.

323 Al-Qazzaz, Ayad. Women in the Middle East and North Africa!'An Annotated Bibliography. Austin: University of Texas, Centerfor Middle.Eastern Studies, 1977. 178pp.

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324. Dryden, "Annotated. Bibliography of Political Rights ofAfrican Women." Afikan Law Studies 7:27-62, 19/2.

32, Murray, Jocelyn. Bilfliography on African Women. Los Angeles:University of Californi, African-Stddks Center, 1974. Out 'of

-print.. .

-326 Westfall, Gloria D. "Nigerian Women: A BibliographicalEssay." Africand Journal 5:0-138 ,&immer 1974. ,

INDIA,

327 Dasgupta, Kalpana. Women on the Indian Scene: An Ann:wa-led Bibliography. New Delhi: Abhinav Publications392pp. ,

328 Lakhanpal, Sarv K. "Indian Wornen" Bulletin ofBibliography2738-41: April/June 1970.

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THIRD-WOHLI) (01.1NTHIrS. 103

329 . Indian Women: A Bibliography. Saskatopn: University-Of Saskatchewan, 1967.-14pp.

330 Pearce; Margaret. "Bibhograkhy: Women In India." Hecate1:90195, January 1975.

331-.Young, Katherine K. and Arvind Sharma. Image of theFeminine; Mythk, Philosophic and Human; in the Buddhist,Hindu and Islamic Traditions; A Bibliography of Women inrnda Chico: New Horizons Press; 1974. 36pp.

LATIN AMERICA

432 Knaster, Meril0Women in Spanish America; ,An AnnotatedBibliography from Pre-Conquest to'. Contemporary Times.Bost* G.K. Hall,. 1977. 696pp.. This excellent bibliographyAttempts to be comprehensiive and, by the size of it, ajipears tohave succeeded2.Geographically,. it includes only the Spanish-speaking countries of Latin America. The earliest publicationslisted date from tie seventeenth centdry, and there is nothingpublished after 1974. All Material is in Spanish or Engjish. Thereare fourteen major subject sections, with a geogaphieal break-down under each fod Spanish America generally, .MiddleAmerica, Sourh America, and the Caribbean. There is a limitedlisting of Ph.D. and M..A. theses in the area. Scope notes begineach.section and there are subject andtitljir indexes.

333 Valdes, Nelson, 14: "A Bibliography On Cuban Women in theTwentieth Century. " Cuban Studies Newsletter 4 (2): 1-31 ,Juni1974. "A Bibliography on Cuban Women" has two major parts:one on women in the prerevolui3imary period' (1900-4958) andthe other on the revolution and after (1959-1973). The, secondsection is about three times the size of the first. Each of the twokarts has topical subcategories covering such aras as labor andproduction; social structure, aniily life, stx, politics', etc;, thesame categories were usea for both parts to facilitate comparisoi?.s.The liierature deals primarily with the "sOcip-political-economkaspects" of women's lives in Cuba. About one-third -of the 5613entries are briefly annotated, usually not more than mentence.

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Wom-h arid Desielopment

As the research into women's position in and,COntribUtion 40 socty

has grown, it has beCome crostrational in scope, and recently, women in

world development has been the focus of much Study. Women are now seen

is a potential resource whose actite participatiOn in the labor force could tipthe 'balance in the direction of prosperity for many developing econOmies.

Bibliographies on.populaticm studies are listed here, because rerarch intofertility and population is usually relpted to the economic staroks and labor

-force participation of ivomen.

f

334 American Council 'of Voluntary Agencies for Foreign Sayicep,Technical Assistance Information Clearinghouse.. Wonsels: ABibliography, 1975-6. New 'York, 1976. Opp. The Councilfrequently issues an updated bibliography of TAICH holdingson women. The materials arc mostly on' women and develop-ment, main, of them are government and United Nations publi-catkins. Entries arc briefly annotated.

335 Birdsall, Nancy. "Review Essay.: Women and Populationi!.Studies." Signs 1(3):699-712, Spring 1976.

336 Buvinic, Myra. Fomen and WorldDeveloi,mnt: An AnnotatedBibliography. Washington: Overseas, Development Council,1976. 162pp. Buvinic's bibliography is a companion volume to

1Vomen and IVO;ld Development, edited by Irene Tinker andMichele Bo Bramsen, a sprnmary of the proceedings a a .1975

seminar on women and development sponsored lay the Associa-tion for the Advancement of Science. Buvinic fotuses on worksconcerning "the effects of socio:ecohomic devtlopment and cul-tural change .on women and on women's reactions to thescchanges:" The bibliography has two stated objectives: first, todisseminate the information more widely since ittluiy of thestudies listed arc unpublished and second, to proxide an overall

view of the status of research. An introductory critical reOiely

discusses various areas of research and makes suggestions for tdrrection of funite 'study. There arc nine broad subject clivisio

.104

,

WOMEN AND DEVELOPMENT .105

each of which is, divided geographically (multi-regional, LatinArrierica and Caribbean-, North Africa and Middle East, sub=

Saharan Africa, Asia anti Pacific, Europe and North Amerka).Each citation ik carefully annotated. An appendix lists otherrelated bibliographio and special issUes </periodicals on womenand development. There is an authOr index.

337 Keiffer, Miriam. "Population Limitation and Women'Otatus:.:A Bibliography." Annals of the New York Act:limy of Science

175:1039, 1970.

338 Lear, Julia G. The Impact of Economic Development and SocialChange On the Status of Women: A :Select Bibliography.Washington: Society for International DevelopMent, .Commit-itee on Women in De elopment, 1973: Out of print.

'Mr

339 RihaRi, May. Development As If Women Alatiend: An Annota-tedBibliography with a Third World Focus. Washington: NotTransCentury Foundation, Secretariat for WoMen in

Development, 1978. 137pp. The compilation of this excellentbibliography was guided by several considerations: the need for*gram /action:oriented materials, the location of unpublished-works, theinclusion of documents authored primarily by Third-World writers, and concentration on recent souttes. The 287anpotate4ntries are classified by subject into ten chapters; each. ,.of these is subdivided by geographical area (multi-regional, Asia

arid the .Pacific, Latin America and the Caribbean, Middle East-, and North Africa, sub-Saharan Afrka). Extensive cross-

referencing should pride all the additional subject access a userneeds. In an introductory essay, Rihani summarizes the crucialconclms in planning for development "as if women mattered";she also provides a survey of the findirigs and retommendationsof the works listed in each section. This is a fine publication

'which should find many gratgul users.

340 harma, Prakash C. Female Working Role and EconomicDevelopment: A Selected Researrh' Bibliography. Monticello:

Council of Planning Librarians, 1974. 16pp. .Sharma hascompiled nearly 250 citations to works on women's work and

_

106 'NEW FEMINIST SCHOLARSHIr

economic development published between 1940 and 1972. Thebibliogriphy is arranged by form of material into two sections:books/monographs and periodical articles.

341 United Nations, Food and. Agricultural Organization. Womenand Family in Rural Development: Annotated Biliography. NewYork, 1977. 56pp. This is a computer-generated index of FAOdocuments published between 1966 and 1976.

A

Womenl Movement

Botb the first and second wave of the women's movement arerepresented in this,,section's bibliographies. Six large voluMes have been

published since 1972, and one is encouraged both by the quantity and file

range of feminist writing.

342 Franklin, Margaret Ladd. The Case for Woman Suffrage: A Bibli-ography., New Yorki National College Equal Suffrage League,.1913. 315pp. Reprint. Washington: Zenger Publishing, 1976.

. The Case for Woman Suffrage is the only bibliography I've foundthat comes close to being a "first wave" counterpart of the recentbibliographies in women's studies. Like many of thebibliographies here, it came.from a strOng social movement and..was cotnpiled with the college student in mind. The citations arearranged first by form (books," Congressional reports, leaflets,plays, periodical articles, contemporary suffrage periodicals) andthen chronologically. The books section opens with a citation toPlato!s Republic; it then jumps to the sixteenth century, coveringthe period from 1532 to 1911. There arc a-number of citations to

,pre-W011stonecraft works. The Congressional docuntents sectioncovers the period from 1874 to 1912, and the articles section from1839 to 1912; Franklin' has not defined her field -narrowly andcovers much more than the "case for woman suffrage,"4including a Wide range of works on the need for women'seconomic, Legal, and social equality. Most of the entries areannotated, some at length, and for the most part in a veryengaging style. Franklin is not afraid to criticize and lets youknow just what she thinks. The bibliography is available in areprint edition and is an invaluable source.

343 Grimstad, Kirsten and Susan 'Rennie. The New Woman's

' Survival Catalog. New York:"Coward, McCann and Geoghegan,1973. 223pp. but of print. This "Whole Earth Catalog" of thewomen's movement is not, strictly speaking, a'bibliography. Itwarrants inclusion here4 however, not only for the very subsean-tial bibliographic function it does serve, but also as a movement"classic." The organization is somewhat disorderly, the coveraieand text a bit uneven, but thesi so is' the movement it catalogs.

107

4

108 ITM IN 1ST 5( I IOLA Rtil IIP k

344 . The Nem) Woman's Survival Sourcebook. New York:Alfred A. Knopf, 1975. 245pp. A slightly different title and newpublisher do not disgUise what is the sequel to the Catalog listedabove. While this volunie is better organized and morethorough, it too reflects the diverse and ever-changing nature ofthe women's Movement.

345 g'richmar, Albert. The Women's Movement iir the Seventies: AnInternational English-Language Bibliography. Metuchen:Scarecrow Press, 1977. 875pp. At first glance, the most notice-able aspect of this bibliography is its sheer size: 875 pages, nearlyten thousattd citations, two and one-half inches thick, and'weighing nearly three pounds. Enough tO make the most stalwartbibliographer!s head swim. Inside, however, the volume isorganized so as to be quitc comprehensible and easy io use. It isarranged geographically imp nine-,major sections: International,Africa, Asia, Australia and Oceania, Europe, Latin America, MidEast, North AmericasCanada, North AmericaUnited States.Each of these primary continent divisions is subdivided two ways:by subject and by geographical area (countty, state, or province).The subject divisions, which are uniform throughout, are:General, Cultural and Literary, Legal and Political,

-Psychological, Religious and . Philosophical, Scieutific andTechnical, Sociological and AnthroPological Studies. Workslisted include Ph.D. dissertations, books, pamphlets, researchreports, periodical articles, and government documentspublished betW6en 1970 and 1975. They are English-language-publications on theistatus of women in society wiith the emphasisI 1 on change, attempted change, and contirfuing problemsconfronting women in the countries in which they live.'Approximately seventy-five percent of thf volume is devoted tothe section on the United States, though not by delsign. The nextlargest section by country- i;the United Kingdom, with only sixpercent of the total; the dtop is fairly dramatic. A little more thanfive thousand of the entries are,annotated, or about sixty percentOverall. This percentage is not uniform, however, with a greaterproportion of the U.S. materials annotated. A final majot sectionlists just over two hundred reference works. There is a comHeteauthor index and a substantial subject index of nearly onehuridied pages.

di

ir/OMEN!S M9V1iMPNT 109

a

346 . The Women's .Rights Movement in the U.S., 1848-1970... Metuchen: Scarecrow Press, 1972. 436pp. This is more,than just a bibliography, it is a handbook for anyone beginningserious study of the history of women's rights. Bringing togethermuch important literature published between 1848 (the date ofthe first women's rights convention) and.1970, the bibliographyincludes books, articles, dissertations, pamphlets, andgovernment publications. Relevant manuscript collettions andmovement periodicals both are listed with indexes. Thc voluineis partially annotated.

347 Rowliotham, Sheila. Women's Liberation and Revolution.London: Falling Wall Press, 1973. 24pp. This bibliography wascompiled as part of the research for Rowbotham's Icook Women:Rdistance and Revolution. It includes books, pamphlets, andarticles which explore the relationship between ferriinjsm andrevolutionary politics. It is organized 6y subject and includesmaterials published up to February 1972.

349

350

351

352

U.S. Library of Congress. Lut-of RecenkPooki on FeMinism.Washington, 1915.Qu.tofpht,i .

..

. Lirt ofReferences on the Gnrd Federation of Women .7

Clubs. Washington, 1916: Out of print. -

. List of References on Woman Suffrage. Washington,'1913. Out of print.

. List of Reference,s on Woman's Movement in EnglandNTV-a-fington, 1922. ()Lit of print.

, . -

Winslow, Barbara. Women's Liberation: .Black Women, Work-ing Women, Revolutionary Feminism. Highla,nd Pirk: SunPress, 1976. 32pp. This brief bibliography has its limititions.Sun Preis, the titiblisher, is the publications division of Interna-tional Socialists and so the bibliography shows .a small, but.notiCeable bias. )A more anttaying problem is the occasionalincomplete citation. Other miscellaneous typing errors, incorrectdates, and so on, leave one questioning 'the bibliography'sreliability.

1 o 8

It

7

111.

Work',47

The participation of women in the labor force and the discriminatiOnagitinst them as.workers have been key issuesin the women's movement7and the subject.of many a vOluttes as ovidinced by the sizeof this section.With thirty-nine entries,: it is/second only..to the general section, There are

.bilaliographies here on a numbei of specific topics concerning the.woman atwbrkf part-time.employment, eqUal pay for mull mirk, working 'Mothers,night work, nontraditional occupations the tniniqfum .wage. Severalbibliograplies coyer the literature on legal matters relating to.emplOyment:

:equal emplroyment oppoitunity, -discriniination, affirmative action. Alsoinducted in this section are bibliographies on women whO work but are notpaidh9meniakers and volunteers.

SEE ALSO: economics; Professions.

353 Almquist, Elizabeth M. "Review Essay; Women in the LaborFOrce." Signs 2(4):843-855, Summer 1977.

354 Ilayefsky, Evelyn. "Women and the Status of Part=time Work: AReview and Annfated !1Bib1iQgraphy. " Ontario Library Review.58:124-141, June 1974.

355 . "Women and Work: A Selection of Books'and Articles."Ontario: Library Review 56:79-90, June 1972. This annotatedlist, which is quite selective, covers books, pamphlets, andperiodicals. It is good for references on Canadian women, thoughsome American publications are listed.

356 Bickner, Mei Liang. Women at Work: An Annotated Bibli-ography. Los Angeles: Universit,y44tof California, ManpowerResearch Center, Institute of Industrial Relations, 1974. n.p.This bibliography is "selective, including material of majorimporiadce published on working' women in the United Statesti?rough 1973. It is designed with researchers and serious studentsin 'mind. Subheads are: Geneial, Historical Development,Education and Traiding, Working Women, Occupations, SpecialGroups, Public Policy, and Bibliographies. There are fOurindexes: author, subject, title, and KWIC (Key-Word-In-Context).

1 10 1 99

WORK I I I

357;Catalyst. Wight l3tbliogrriphy Series. Catalyst, a research andpublishing orwi ation concerned with ;ivomen's employment,.has produced as is of grief (the longest is siipages) bibliog-raphies on a wide ge of i s surrounding the workingwoman. Currently, there are apprOximately forty bibliographiesavailable, with titles such as Absenteeism and Turnover ofWomen Workers, Child-Care Deductions, Alternktive WorkPatterns, and IVomen in Academia (or one, of several othercareers). Most of the current set was ilkipiled in 1975, but anpdate is in progress as of this writing. This series is an excellent

source. of information on new trends and issues in theemployment of woinen. Write for a publications/price list.

358 Center for Women Policy StUdies, Resourre Listing: Wage-Earning ,Women. Washington, n.d. 8pp. Out.of print. This brief

listing is in five sections: General, Blue Collar Workers, S(atistics,

Uniong, and Vocational Education.

359 Elkin, Anna. The Emerging R6le of Mature Women: BasicBackground' Data in Employment and Continuing Education.

0 New York: Federation Employment and Guidance Servite, 1976.

2Opp. Elkin's bibliography includes "relevant, free and inexpen-

. sive" materials on the mature woman, women's education, andwomen's employment for the period 1969-1975. It is a straightalphabetical listing with no subject-index, which makp it a,bitdifficult to use. Nevertheless, the annotations are,helpful and a'wide variety of ma\terial is covered.

360 Felmley, Jenrose. Working Women: Homemakers and Volun-

teers: An Annotated Selected Bibliography. Washington:

Business and Professional. Women's Foundation,- 1975. 25pp.The introduction tO this bibliography is a 'review essay on theliterature. There are eighty-two entries listed alphabetically by

main entry.

361 Feminist Theory Collective. American Women: Our Lives andLibor, An Annotated Bibliography of Women and Work in the

U.S., 100-1975. Eugdne: Amaion Reality, 1976. 36pp. Thisbibliography comes, as many do, from a feminist srudy. group

1 1 o

I I 2 NIAX1 flM INIT SC1101.ARSI UP

anxidus to share the results of its work. The majority of workslisted are on women and work in the twentieth century, but thereare two short sections on general historical, works and thenineteenth century. The bibliography is selective; criteria forinclusion were readability, availability, inclusion of minoritywomen. Material on housework as work was sought, .as werepersonal acconnts and fiction. There .is, a general emphasisth'ioughout on women in social moyments And unionorganizing: The annotations are quite good.

1

362 Foreman, Jo Ann T. romen: A Selected AnnotatedBibliography on Their Equal Opportunity ?Ind Emplo:yment.Baton -Rduge: Loyisiana State Univ,ersity, College of BusinessAdministration, Division of Research, 1973. 20 pp. Foreman hasdivided her bibliography into two parts: an annotated listing oftwenty citations to books and articles arid a listing of approx-imately 175 addifopal citations (the first twenty repeat) whichare not anno d. The second section is divided- into subcate-gories by form: books, articles, government dovuments, andmiscellaneous (mostly unpublished) papers. There is nd intro-duction, so we Itave no explanation of how or why, the twentycitations were chosen for annbtation. Most of the materials listed

k are fairly recentconcentrating 'in the 1960s and 70sthoughthe books section includes some works published in the early partof the century and the 1890s. The subject coverage is broad,including overviews of women's labor,force participation aridstatus, analysis of and remedies for employmeht discrimination,:and women in business and management.

363 Glaser-Malbin, Nona. "Review Essay: HouSework." Signs 1(4):905-922, Summer 1976.

-'

364 Haist, Dianne. Equal Pay for Work of Equal Value: A Selected,Bibliography. Toronto: Ontario Ministry of Labor, ReearchBranch, 1976. 15pp.

365 Hallowe4l, Ila M. Employment Discrimination Against Women,A Selected Annotated Bibliography. Albany: New York StateLibrity, Legislative Reference LibraT 1972. 41-pp.

.4%711.

WORK 113

366 Kievit, Mary Back Review and Syntbeth ofResearrh on Womenin the World of Work. Columbus: ERIC Clearinghouse onVocational and Technical Education, 1972. (ED 066 553):

367 Matthews, Catherine J. and Mamie Shed. Affirmative Action; ASelected Bibliography. Toronto: Ontario Nitiistry .of Lil;our,Research Library, 1975. 17pp.

368 McKitti,Joanne. Women and'Employment Bibliography. SantaAria, 1973. 33pp. Otit of Print McKim describes her bibliog-raphy as an'extensive, hough not ytt comPlete list of sources".on women at work in A ica from Colonial times to the present

\14.

(1973). It is divided into sections by chronology, and there isconsiderable variation among them. For instance, tir first andlargest chronological category, Colonial Period to 1890, has onlytwenty-nine citations, while the smallest of the other sections,1915 to 1930, has sixty-nine citations for the fifteen year period.Women and Employment is perhaps better described a% anextensive list of sources on women and work in the twentiethcenturi/ (nearly 475 entries out of the total 550).

369 Moore, Louise. Occupations for Girls and Women: SelectedReference* July 1943-June 1948. Washington: U.S. 'Depart-ment of Labor, Women's Bureau, .1942. Out of print.

370 Moser, Collette and Deborah Johnson. Rural Women Workers inthe Twentieth Century:- An Annotated Bibliography. EastLansing: Michigan State University, 'College of AgricultUre andNatural Resources, Department of Agricultural Economics,1973. 63pp. This.bibliography includes all formats of material(books, articles,- etc.), with some pieces-dating back to the nine-teenth century. The authors have defined "rural" to includeboth, farm and nonfarm work, household and manual labor.Different sections cover women's preparation for work, thequalitative and quantitative aspects of their labor forceparticipation, their problems in working, farm and women's or-gani"zations, and international trends.

371 Nicolas, Suzanne. Bibliography on Women Workers 1861-1965.Geneva: International Labour Office; Central Library and

I IJ NEW FEMINIST SCI1aARSI

Documentation Branch, 1970. 252pp. Most ofthe nearly 1,800works cited in this bibliography are. _either., government dc;cu-ments or publications of the International Labour Office itself.The volume is divided into eleven broad subject iectione. Itincludes many foreign language works. Thtre are subject, geo.graphical, and author indexes that were computer-generated.

372 Pinto, Patrick R. andkanne 0.:Buchmeier. Problems and Issuesin the Employment of Minority, Duadvantaged and Feinale

7 . Groups: An Annotatd Bibliography.. ERtC, 1973. 62pp. (ED083 339). This. bibliography lists sekcted materials publishedfrom July 2, 1965the effectiVe date of Title VII of the' 1964Civil Rights Actto 1972. It .includes books, articles, reports,and government documenN

373 Samuels, Victoria. Nowhere to Be Found, A Literature Reviewand Annotated Bibliogtvphy on White Working Class Women.New York: Institute on Pluralism and Group Identity, 1975.29 pp. While it is only a beginning, Samuels's literatur6 review isboth interesting and helpful. SI(e points to.the paucity of materi-al on the working-class woman and offers some explanations. I-krunderlying theme is tile lack of communication and under-standing between the women's movement ind working-classwomen. She blames the stereotyped media image of eachandboth groups' willingness to believe in it. She discusses only eightworks in the literature review and annotates in depth ad- addi-tional twenty,nine in the bibliography section. Nevertheless, thisis a valuable compilation.

374 Schroeder, Paul E. Women in the World of Work: A Bibliographyof ERIC Documents. ERIC, 1973. 29pp. (ED 083 479).

375 Soltow, Martha J. and Mary K. Wery. American Women and theLabor Movement, )825-1974. Metuchen: Scarecrow Press, 1976.247pp. This revised edition of Soltow's bibliography brings theinclusive dates up to 1974the original edition covered theperiod up to 1935. It is selective, annotated, and includes books,artickg, pamphlets, and U.S. government documents. Thesection on women in unions has been expanded, a section on theCoalition of Labor Union Women added. Materials on employ-

s'

(

WORK I 15

v

ment discrimination and protectii)e kgislatidn receive kss em-,

pl.r.isis as they arc covered in other bibliographies. An appendixlists archival sources on women and rabor. There is a cross-Jeference, a subject, and an author index. (Originateaition: So ltow,Marthh g . "Women in Labor Unions in the United Slates,1825-1935; A Bibliography.: Review of Radical Political Eco-

nomics 4:156-154,July 1972.)

4

-376 Spiegel, Jeanne. Working- Mothers:. A Seleckd Annotat4dBiblio4raphy. Washington: BusiiVem..anci ProfessionalNomed'sFoundation, 1968.'24pp. The materials coVerect are those aboutand of interest to working mothers publiSheil within t,he last ten

to fifteen years. Books, pamphlets, reportst;- periodical articles,microfilmt and tape recordings arc inclutied. 'The citations are"arranged into chapters by type of material .and then liSfedalphabetically by author. Eveeything' listed is available in theFoundation library. Annotations arc descriptive':

377 U.S. Department of Health: Education and Welfare, Office ofEducation: Bureau of Occupational and Adult Education,Women in. Non-Traditional Occupatioits.A Bibliography:Washington, 1976. 189pp. BecauSe there is no detailed, widely-.

accepted definition of which occupations are ,traditional or.non-traditional for women, a working definition was developed forthe preparation of)this bibliography. The percentage of womenin the labor force in 1970the cut-off publication date for inclu-sion of materialswas established from government statistics.This figure, thirty-eight percent, Was then used asa base, so that

any field less than thirty-eight percent female was regarded ag

nontraditional. The materials collected using these guidelines.were organized into three categories: Overview,, Women in theSkilled Trades, and Women in Professional _Occupations., Thethird section is by far the largest. The annotations are descriptiveonly. There arc author, title, and subject indexes.

378 U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor,Statistics. WhAre toFind BLS Statistics on Women. Washington, 1978. This slimpamphlet is an excellent guide that takes one by. the handthrough the maze of government publications on working

women. There are statistical areas covered in four sections: Labor

dr

, 16 . NEW FEMINIST SCHOLARSHIP

./Force Status, -Employment andlnemployment; Earnings andHours of Work; Edtetttion; Membership in Labor Organkations.The information is organized into four columns for easy access:Characteristics of Data Desired, Where Published, Frequency ofPuplication, and Most Recent Issue. Complete orderiilg informa-tion is given in a section at the back. For anyone whO needs accessto government statistics, this is a lifesaver.

37.0 U.S. Department of Labor, Women's Bureau. Bibliography onNight Work for Women. Washington, 1946. 39pp. Out of print.

< The bibliography covers reports from government agencies',refeirch agencies, academic institutions, personnel officers, andpsychologisz, primarily fro'm the years 1936 to 1946. The ;dec-

o tions ate-annotated, and the annotations arc quite long, includ- \nig tables. The citationS are arranged by countryUnited States,Great Britain, and Au-straliiand subdivided into government;and private-sources under each. There is a final section on inter-national publications.

380 . Employment of Older Women: An Annotated Bibliog-raphy. Washington, 1954. 89pp. Out of print. Included in this 4biblibgraphy arc articles, books, and conference papers dealingwith hirihg practices, psychological barriers, and woik perform-ance in the employment of older women. The annotations,which ar quite long and detailed, are listed alphabetically by 2U-

thor and re numbered; access is through the subjeCt inclex.

38 Employment of Older Womep: APi Alnotated Bibliog-raphy: Hiring Practices, Attitudes, Work Petformance. Washing-.ton; 1957. 83pp. Out of print.

382 . Guide to Sources of Data On Women and rompWorkers for the U.S. and Regions , States and Local Areas. Wash-ington, 1972. 15pp. Compiled to help those drafting-affirmativeaction`plans find statistics to back up their cases, this bibliog-raphy indicates whether or not each publication includes databased on sex, race, educational kttainment, labor force participa-tion, occupation, and industvt. Publications arc listed by the fol-lowing subjects: population, education, civic labor force andunemployment, occupation and industry, and labor force

\ A

,

WORK 117

reserve:Also indicated is whetkier or not data relates to UnitedStates,19gion, state, -or 5 ndard Metropolitan Statistical Arca

4 (metropolitan areas of t e than fifty thousandpopulation):

383' . List of Refirences on Minimum Wage for WoWen in theU. S.trnd Canada. Washington, 1925. 42pp. 'Out of print. Thisbibliography is international iri scope and includes articles,,gtovernmerit reports, court decisions, and industry aqd union'b'rilletins. There are occasional .arinotations. e bibliographyhas been 'divided into chwters which include:. Bibliograpilies;

General; U.S., States Which 'Have Adopted MinimumWage Laws; U.S., Other Stws; Cankla,

384 U.S. Library of Congress. Brief Lift on Legislation and CoiirtDecisions Pmteeting Women Workers. ,Washington, 1916. Outof print

385 . List of References on Women's Work and Wages..Washington., 1909. Out of print.

386 fo Select List of References on a Minimum Ira,)-. forWomen. Washington, 19F3. Out ofprint.

87 . Select List of References on the Work of Women in CivilRefgrm. Washington, 1913. Out of print;

388 Select List .of References .Relating .to.Night Work forWomen. Washington,-191.3. Out of print:

389 . Select List ofWorks on Women in Business. Washington,1909. Out of print.

390 . A Short List ofReferences on the Wages of Women in theUnited States. Washington, 1923. Out of print.

391 Wird, Dennis F. Sex Discrimination in Employment, 1969-197.5: A Selective Bibliography. Part I. Sacramento: CaliforniaStatt Law Library, 1976. 15pp.' Ward's compilation updates a1969 version of this bibliogriphy prepared by Marija Hughes.Part I covers notes (brief factual summaries) arid comments

/

II

.

118 NEW WMINIST SCHOLARSHIP4

(analysis, intcrpretationa longer treatment) published inscholarly journals on the ti :s. statutory and ci.44 law involving sexdiscrimination in eMployment. 0,Wy cases involving federal tawhave been included, and,only, those Articles published between1969 and 1915. The bibliography is arranged by case, rather than,tiile.pr author, with all citations to rekvint articles listed undereach. The.-rnajor points and. arguments Of each cue are given,/v/Nch makes the bibliography very useful to the uninitiated legalresearcher,Part H was never published:

- .

,

A

Author IndexThe number following the author's

.name refers. to the publication's entryielhis bibliography.

Adams, David 139African Bibliograplklc CentreAlbin, Roc Rene Semmel 283Aldous, Joan 211, 212Almqiiist, Elizabeth M. 353

. Alqjzzaz. Ayad 313Amato; Katherine). 052American Council of Voludh A encies

322

Bowker, Lee H. 107Breinich, Susan C. 115BrodSky, Ann'e«e M. 101Brown, Leslie 117Bruemmer, Linda "609,Brugh, Anne Et 251Buchmeicr, Jeanye 0. 372Bullough, Vern 752431rsihess & Professional Women's

Foundation 122, 152, 253, 254Buvinic, Wyra 336

rY gfor Foreign Servi Ces 334

, American Library Apociation, SRRTTask Force on Gay Liberation 183

Anderson, Etta A. 097Anderson, Philip B. 192 1

Angrist, Shirley S. 007ArnIstrong, Douglas 608

. Arthur:' Marilyn B. 111.Associaiion of Collegiate Alumnae 119Rstin. Helen S. 120, 312

Baatz, Wilmer H. 226Babcock, Barbara 17LBackschcidcr, Paula'7. 192Baer, Helen R. 273Ballou, Patricia K. 061Barabas, Jean 121Barnes, Dorothy L. 284Barnett, Jean D. 063Barrett, Carol J. 188Bass, Dorothy 300Batchekler, Eleanor 193Bayefsky, Evelyn 354, 355Bazin, Nancy Topping 235Beckman, Linda). 106Beede, Benjamin R. 251Belli, Donna 295Bergstrom. Len V. 044Bickner, Mei Liang 356Birdsall, N'ancy 335Boals, Kay 240Boos, Florence.194, 195, 196

Clbello-Atgendotia,'Roberto 220

Cantor, Aviva 234Cardinale, Susan 011Carey, Emily A. 274, 275Casey,.Kathleen 155Catalyst 357

s

Center for the American Woman andPOlitics 241

Center for Women Policy Studies 358Ceding, C. E. 301Chaff, Sandra L. 255Chapman, jane RoberiS 11Chappell, Duncan. 285Chcda, Sherrill 256Christ, Carol P. 302'Christenson: Susan J. 108Cisler, Lucinda 012Cismaksco, Francoise 123Clark, Jane 298Cole, johnetta 221College of St. Catherine Library 053Comnion Women Collective, Thc 153Concilio Mujeres 222Conway, Jill 1(.. 154Covency, Pctcr 030Cowan, Belita 140Coxe, Betsr.257Cromi,411, Phyllis E. 276.Crowc, Edith L. 075

Dahl, Nancy 212, 213, 214Damon, Gene 184

.11

-to

120 NEW FEMINIST SCHOLARSHIP

Danids, Arknc Kaplan 013Dasgupta, Kalpana 327Daunis, Actioc Me.'197 --Davis, Audrcy B. 258Davis, Lcnwood G. 014, 233,.224, 259Davis, Natalic Zcrnon 154Dctkfson, Gay 034Dokschal, E. 098Do Ilcn,'Char Ics 1%1

Donovan, Lynn Bonfidd 088, 096Drake, Kirsten 047Drinkcr, Sophie H. 163Driver, Annc Barstow 303Dryden, P. K. 324Dupont, Julic A. 112Duran, Pat Herrcra 220 .

Dweck, Susan 120Dworaczck, Marian 008

-Een, Jo Ann 045Ehrlich, Carol 015, 016Eichkr, Margrit 002, 003, 042, 069,

289Elkin, .Anna 359Ellis, Dickiiou 048English, Jane 236Equal Rights AmcndmetitTioject 178Erickson, Carolly 155

farians, Elizabeth 304FclmIcy, Jcnrosc 360Fcminist Thcory Colkctivc 361Fisgter, Clarc B. 305Fitch, Nancy E. 242Fitzpatrick, M. Louisc 260Fixter, Deborah 137Floyd, Mary K. 142Fogarty, Fiith 285Forcrnan, Jo Ann T. 362Fox, Vicki G. 156Franklin, Margarct Ladd 342Frccman, Vcah 054 0FricdmaiilBarbara 049Friedman, Lcslic J. 313PriCs, MatIrCrn 197Froschl, McrIc 124Frost, Judith 081

Ic

Galloway, Sue 017.Gathn, Rochell1 305Gcijerstomtmar K.143Gcis, Gilbcft 285Gerrard, Meg 272Glab, Kathi 144 .

Glazcr-Millbin, Nona 363Gocrss, Katherinc Van WesscmGorucz-Quinbncs, Juan 220Goodwatcr, Leanna 157Goycr-Michaud, Francync 099Graham, Patricia Alberg 158Grcco, Norma 1)9Grimstad,- Itirstcn 343, 344

Habcr, Barbara 018Hkist, Diannc 262, 364Hallijian, John T. 019HallowcII, Ilk M. 365Hargravcs, Ruth 109Harmon, Linda A7 125Harrison, Cynthia Elkn 020Haydcn, Dolorcs 263Headrick, Linda 030Hcaly, Barbara R. 264Hcim, Kathlecn.265Henky, Nancy 277, 314Hcnncssce, Don 076Hcnriques, Cynthia 145Hill, Rcuben 211 .

HiAding, Andrca 089Nixon, Don L. 076Hochschild, Arlic /144ssell 315Hoffman, Ruth H. 055", 290Holdcn, Miriam Y. 163Hornc, Grcnda 160Howard, Norma K. 082Howard, Pamela F. 215.Hubcr, Joan 073Hughes, Marija Matich 021, 179Hunt, Veilma R. 146Hu, Teh-wei 083

Intcrfacc Bibliographcrs 189Israel, Stanley 216

Jacobs, Suc-Ellen 070

,)

4

*

Jacquet, C. H.' 266Jacquette, Jane S...! 243Javonovich, Joann 278Johnson, Carolyn R. 267Johnson, Deborah 370Jordan, Robin 184Joyce, Lyi Ida 022Jusenius, Carol L. 113

Kahne, Hilda 114Kanner, S. Barbara 161}tenter, Miriam 337Kelly, Joan 162Kemmer, Elizabeth Jane 286Kendall, Patrkia A. 306Kennard, June A. 147Kievit, Mary Bach 366Kilson, Marion 126King, Judith D. 023Kirby, Kathryn E. 307Klemna, Florence 257Klotman, Phyllis R. 226Knaster, Meri 332Koelliker, Marsha 004Kohen, Andrew I. 114, 115Kolodny, Annette 198Kowalski, Rosemary Ribich 077Krasilovsky, Alexis Rafael 078Krauss, Wilma Rule 244Krichmar, Albert 056, 341\ 346Kriegel, Phyllis 067Kuda, Marie). 186Kusnerz, Peggy Ann 024

Lakhanapal Sarv K. 328, 329Lamphere, Louise 071Lasky,Jane 057Lear, Julia G: 338Lee, Sylvia. 127Leonard, Eugenie A. 163Lerner, Gerda 164Levenson, Rosaline 245Levitrt, Morris 246Lewis, Ediiin C. 025Li, Christine 248 -

Lipman-Blumen, Jean 316, 317Livesey, Sharon 100

I

AUTHOR INDEX' 121

Lloyd,'Cynthia B..116 ."'Lloyd, Diane 084Loader, Joyce1165Lo, Henrietta Wai-Hing 058Lopata, Helena Znaniecki 072,Lougee, Carolyn C. 166

'QLoventhal, Milton 199Loyd, Bonnie 268Lynn, Naoini B. 291Lystad: Mary Henamann 217

McKee, Kathleen Rule 293McKenney, Mary 218McKim, Joanne 060, 368McMillan, Pat 061McShane, Claudette 219Maferr Foundation 318Marecki, John 042Marks, Dorothy 047Marks, Elaine 200Marlow, Carleton H. 026Marzolf, Marion 269MassachUsetts Institute of Technology,

Human Studies Collection 059Matasar, Ann B. 291Mateer, Carolyn 292MatthewsCatherine J. 367Mazur, Carol 027Medicine, Beatrice 227Meyers, Miriam 08-1Mills, Gladys H. 128, 129Moore,-Louise 69Moore, Susanne '028MoSer, Collette 370Moulton, Janice-237, 238Murphy, Bianca 275Murray, Jocelyn 325Myeis, Carol Fairbanks 201

National Association for Women and 'Girls in Sport 148

National Institute on Drug Abuse 110Nellis, Muriel 109Newton, Jennifer 042, 043New York Public Library 029Nicolas, Suzanne 371Nilan, Roxanne-Louise 090

1 20

in ,NEWFININft SCHOLARgHIP

-4Nokn, Anita 1.. 091Novot ny , Ronaele .1.59Nowa, Joyce 202NussbauM, Fc ic it y 192

O'Connor, Patricia 030Oliver, Jean 272 .

Olson, David H. L. 213, 214Oltman, Ruth M. 130Orenstein, Gloria Fcman 079

Palmegiano, E. tit 167Papazian, Barbara 294Parke, Mary Brown 279Pastine, Maureen 062Patrick, Anne E. 308PearCe, Margaret 330Pepper, Sheila 027Perez, Louis A. 168Pettingill, Ann H. 063Pierce, Christine 239Pinto, Patrick 372Pollack, Ann Martin 024Pomeroy, Sarah B. 169

-Pool, Jeannie G. 080Porter, Harry B. 309Porter, Jean 061Portillo, Cristina 228Portis, Juanita W. 064Power, Elizabeth 093

Radcliffe College 092Rader, Hannelore B. 131Rans, Laurel 103Reif, Nadine 085Rennie, Susan 343, 344Reynoldi; Judy 203, 204Rihani, May 339 .

Rios, Graciela 228Robinson, Lora H. 132Roby, Pamela 133Rodriguez, Martha 28Rohfeld, Rae 292Rosenberg-Dishenan, Marie 13-045.Rosenberg, Marie B. 044, 291Rosenfelt:DebOrahSilverton 205

Rosenzweig, Marianne 1'01Rothstein, Pauline Marcus 031.Rowbotharn, heila 347Roysdon, Christy 270Rupen, Alice 117Rush, Ramona R. 269Ruzek, Sbcryl k. 149

St. Louis Femtnist Research Project 287Salzer, Elilabeth M. 066 'Samalonis, Bernice 032Samuels, Victoria .373San Diego State University, Women's

Studies Faculty 033Sapiro, Virginia 247Schlachter,-Gail 295, 296Schroeder, Paul E. 374Schuman, Pat034Schwartz, Narda Lacey 206

.Schwendinger, Herman 288Schwendingcr, Julia R. 288Scott, Marda 093Scott, Patricia Bell 229Seckelson-Simpson, Linda 297Scidlitz, Sarah 190Shaffer, Earl R. 032Sharma, Argind 331Sharma, Prakash C. 340Shea, Marnie 367Sheridan, E. Marcia 319Sherif, Carolyn W. 2,73Sherman, Julia Ann 280Shields, Patricia 115Showalter, Elaine 207Sicherman, Barbara 170Snead, Ernestine 294Soltow, Martha). 375Sophia Smith Collection 094Spiegel, Jeanne 134, 320, 376Stack, Carol.B. 074Stanwick, Kathy 248Stern, Darlene 269Strugnell, Cecile 191Sturgeon, Susan 102; 103Suniewick, Nancy 120Sussman, Barbara 067

I

'

Sutton, Ottic K. 18.Swanick, M. Lynne Struthers 249

_ . .

Swanson, Alice Q. 108

Terborg-Penn, R.M. 230Thoreen, Bonnie 095Thorne, Bat Tic 314Tkkamyer, Ann R. 317Tobias, She037Tresemer, Diavid 321 .

Ullited Nations, FoodOrganization' 341

U. S. Council of Natiorial Defense,Woman Committee 171

U. S. Department of Health, Efucationand Welfare, Office of Education,Bureau of Occupational and AdultEducation 377

U. S. Department.q Labor, Bureau ofLabor Statistics 378

U. S. Department of Labor, Wom(n'sBureau 150, 379: 380, 381, 382, 383

.U. S*Libraty of-Congress 038, 039440,

172, 173, 174, 175, 180_181, 182,208, 348, 349., 350, 351, 384, 385,386, 387, 388, 389, 390

rA1511108 I2i

Walsfedt, Joyce Jennitigs 282WardDennis F. 391Wasserman, Charlotte 27iWatermulder, deorgia P. 135Wayon, Jan 184Way, Peggy A. 3.10Weibel; Kathleen 265Wells, Alberta 086Wery, Mary K. 375WesteVtd, Esther Manning 136, '137Westfa , Gloria U. 326Wexford, Mary 09Whaley, Sara 250, 289Wheeler, Helen 041White, Barbara A. 209Williains, Martha 272Williams, Ora 231, 232Williamson, Jane 124Willingham, Louise N. 213Wilson, Joan.Hoff 096Wilson, Martha M. 311Winslow, Barbara 352 IJWomen and Literature Collective 210.Women's History Research Center 006Woodsworth, Anne 24Wright, Gwendolyn 263Wright, Maureen 299

..and Agricultural'

Valdes, Nelson P. 333Vaughter, Reesa M. 281VelimeSis, Margaret L. 1Q4Verbrugge, Martha H. 176Vetter, Betty M. 271

Waibel, Gr-ace T. 068Waid, Candace 117

.

Young, Katherine.K. 331Young, Louise M. 050

Zangrando, Joanna Schneider 05.1Zavitz, Carol 043Zell, Laverne 292 .

Zuckoff, Aviva Cantor 234

1

s.

Title IndexThe number following the title refersto the publication's entry in thisbibliography.

Abortion Bibliography 142Abortion in Context: A Select Bibliog-

raphy 141Adjustment to Widowhood qttd. Some

Related Problems: A Selected andAnnotated Bibliography 191

"Adult Female Offender, The: A Se-lected BibliograPhy" 099

Affirmative Action: A Selected Bibli-ography 367

Age Is Becoming: An Annotated Bib-

4liography ort Women and Aging 189

American Black Women in the Arts. and Social Sciences: A Bibliographic

Study 231"American Worpan at Mid-Century,

The: Bibliographic Essay" 050American Woman in Colonial and Rev-

olutionary Times, The, 1565-1800163

American Women and the Labor Move-ment, 1825-1974 375

American-Women in Churrh and So-ciety, 1607-1920: A Bibliog!raphy 300

"Arherican Women in National PoliticalLife." 250

American Women: Our Lives andLabor, An Annotated Bibliography ofWomen and Work in the U.S.,1900-197.5 361

American Women Writers: An Anno-tated Bibliography of Criticism 209

Annotated Bibliography, 1964-1974, ofthe Needs, Concerns and Aspirationsof Adolescent Girls, 12-18 Years 187

Annotated Bibliography of Day CamReference Materials, An 085

A 11 ?rotated Bibliography of InducedAbortion, An 143

124

"Annotated Bibliography of PoliticalRights of African Women" 324

"Annotated Bibliography of thc NcwTestarnent Teachings about Women,An" \A(11

AnnotatedBigliography of Twentieth-Centuryeritical Studies of Womenand Literature, An 1660-1800 192

Annotated Bibliography of Women illRural America? With a Review of theLiterature about Women in RuralAmerica, Bibliography'of Women inRural Areas Worldwide, and Re-sourre Material 022

Annotated Bibliography Olt WomanBattering 219

Annotated Selected Bibliography ofBibliographies on Women, An 002,003

Arthurand Elizabeth Schlesinger Li-brary or, the History of Women inAmerica: The Martuscnfit Inventoriesand the Catalogs of Manuscripts,Books, and Pktitres 092

Articles on Women ifititers 1960-1975,A Bibliography 206

Autobiographies of Women, 1946-1970, A Bibliography 199

Barriers to Women's Participation inPostsecondary Education: A Reviewof Researrh and Commentary as of1973-74 136

Bibliographies on Women 004Bibliographies on Women Indexed by

Topic 006_Bibliography: Equal Educational Op-

portsmity: Myth.or Reality 128Bibliography in the History of Amer-

kan Worrier, 104Bibliography in the History of Euro-

pean Women 162 .Bibliography: Male-Fernale Role

1.23

Researrh 318

41%

Bibliog4'phy of American Women, PartI .026

"Bibliography of Canadian and.UnitedStates Resources on Women, A" 289

Bibliography of Prostitution, A 252Bibliography of Research Involving

Female Subjects: A Compilation ofTheses and Dissertations in Physical

'Education, yealth and Recreation148

"Bibliography of Women in the EnglishRenaissance" 159

"Bibliography ot Works Written by .

Atperican Black Women, A" 232Bibliography of Writings by andabout

Women Authors, British and Amer-ican, A, 1957-1969 197

Bibliography of Writi;sgs on La Mujer228

Bibliography on. African'Women 325."Bibhography on Cuban Women in

the Twentieth Century, A" 333Bibliography on Divorce, A 216Bibliography on L Muj'er. 222Bibliograd'y on Nigh, Work for Wom-

en 379Biblitigraphy on Women: With Special

Emphasis on their Roles in Scienceand Society 258

Iiibliography on Womrr Workers 1861-1965 371

,"Bibliography: Women in India" 330Black Family and the Bikk Woman,

The: A Bibliography 226"Black Woman, The: An Annotated

Bibliography" 233 ,

Black Woman in American Society,The: A Selected Annotated Bibliog-raPhy 223

"Black Women in America: An Anno-tated Bibliography" 221

Black Women in the Cities, 1872-1473;A Bibliographiof Published Workson the Lif4 and Achievements ofBlack Women in Cities in 'the UnitedStates : 224

Brief List of References on the Rights

TITI1 INDEX 125

of Women 180Brief List of References on Woinan's

Part in the World Today 038Brief Lirt of References on Women in

the Russian Revolution 172Brief List on Legs:dation and Court

Decisions Protecting WomenWorkers 384

Canadian Newsletter of Research onWomen 010

Career Counseling.: New Perspectivesfor Women and Girls 122

Careen for College Women: A Bibliog-raphy of Vocational Materials 135

Case for Woman Suffrage, The: A Bib-liography 342

Catalogs of the SophiaSmith Collec-tion, Women 's History Archive,Smith College 094

Catalogue of the Galatea Collection ofBooks Relating to thf History ofWomen in the Public Library of theCity of Boston 087

Changing Role of Women, The: A Se-lected Bibliography 054

Changing Roci of Women in America,The: A Selected Annotated Bibliog-raphy of Reference Sources 295

"Changing Sex Roles in American Cul-ture: Future Directions forResearch" 316

Chicanes, The: A Comprehessive Biblio-graphic Study 20

Child Care in the 1970's: 4 Bibliog-raphy 084

" 'Chivalrous' Treatment of the FemaleOffender in the Arnis of the Crimi-nal Justice System, The: A Review of -the Literature" 097

"Concept of Androgyny, The: A Work-° ing Bibliography" 235

"Condition of Women in SocietyToday, The: A Review" 009

Conditions of Feminist Research,The 015

Contemporary African Women: An In-

I 124

126 NEW FEMINIST SCHOLARSHIP

tryductory Bibliographical Overviewand a Guide to Women's Organiza-tions, 1960-67 322

Continuing Education for Women: ASelected Annotated Bibliography 134

Contributions toward a Bibliography ofthe Higher Education,of Women 119

Counseling Women: A Bibliograpby275

"Critical Overview of Sex Wiles Re-search on Black Families, A" 229

Day Care: An Annotated Bibliography082

Day Care: An Annotated Bibliography086

Day Care Reference Sources: An. An-notated Bibliography 081

Developing Woman's Potential 025Development As If Women Mattered:

An Annotated Bibliography with a,Third World Focus 339

Divorce: A Selected Annotated Bibliography 218

"Economic Perspective on. the Roles ofWomen in the American Economy"114

"Education and Training of Women"123

Emerging Role of Mature Women, The:Basic Background Data in Employ.ment and Continuing Education359

Employment Discrimination AgainstWomen, A Selectee(Annotated Bib-liography 365

Er;iployment of Older Women; An An-notated Biblibgraphy 380

Employment of Older Women; An An-nbtated Bibliography: HfringPractices, Attitudes, Work Per-formance 38L

Equal Pay for Work of Equal Value: ASelected Bibliography 364

Equal Righti Amendment, The: A Bib-.

liographic Study 17gEqual Rights for WOINSN in Education'H 29

"Female Offender, The" 104"Female Offender, The: A Guide to

Published Materials" 098Female Working'Role and Economic

DevelOpment: A Selected ResearchBibliography 340

"Feminine Presence, The: Women'sPapers i4 the Manuscript Division"091

"Feminism in the Arts: An InterimBibliography" 078

Feminist Collection, The, Nedlylibrary 060

Feminist Resources for Schools and Col-. Ages: A Guide to Curricular Ma-

terials 124

"Feminist Studies in Religion and Lit-erature: A Methodological Reflec-tion" 302

Finding Materials by and about Womenin the Michigan State University Li-braries 294

First Sampler: A Bibliography of Workson Women at the George PeabodyDepartment of the Enoch' Piot FreeLibrary 028

"Forcible Rape: Bibliography" 285

Gay Bibliography, A 183Gay Biblio,goraphy, A 185Guide to Published Works on Women

and Politics II, A 247Guide to Sources of bata on Women

and Women Workers for the U. S.and Regions, States and Local Areas382

Health of Women at Work, The 146"Historical Treatment of Afro-

, Americans in the Women's Move-ment, 1900-1920: A BibliographicEssay" 230

A

1,

Image of the Feminine; Mythic, Philo-sophic and Human; in the Buddhist,Hindu and Islamic Aid:irons: A 114-hography of Women in India 331

Impact of Economic Development andSocial Change on the Status ofWomen, The: A Select Biblibgraphy338

Implkations of Women 's Work Patientsfin- Vocational and Thchnical Educa-tion; An Annotated Bibliography127

"Indian Woman" 328Indian Women: A Bibliography 329InSight BibliOgraphy Series 357

,Insistutional Analysis of Sex Discn Ma-hon: A Review and Annotated li-

ography 132IniernationalBibliography of Research

Marriage and ae Family, 19(X)- 1 -1964 211

International Bibliography of Researchin Marriage and the Family, Volume

1965-1972 212-"Inteoduction and Bibliographical

Guide to the Literature on Femlde'Drug Use, A" 107

Inventory of Marriage and Plamily Lit-erature, 1973101974, Volume III 213

Inventory of Marnage and FamilY Lit-erature, 1975 &1976, Volume IV214

Issues in the Psychology a nn' Counsel-ing'of Women 274

"Jewish Women, The: A Selected Bib-liography" 225

Lesbian in Literature,. The: A Bibliog-raphy 184

"Liberation of British and AmericanWomen's History, The" 160...

"Library Resources: CHS Colkctions onthe History of Women in California"088

TITLE 1NbEX 127

List of Bibliographies on leomen andFeminism 005

La I of Recent Book on -Feminism 348List of Refetiftkes on CitizenshiP and

Nationality of Women 039List of References on Minimum Wage

'for Women in the U. S. and Canada383

,List of References on theEqual RightsAmendment Pmposed by NationalWoman's Party 181

List of References on the Genetal Fed-eration of Wom'en's Clubs 349

List of References 15,1 the Legal Status ofWomen 182

List -of References on Woman 's Move-mew in England 351

List of References on Woman Suffrage350

GI of References on Women in Lit-.\erature 208Liof References of Women's Work

and Wages 385List of References on Women's Work in

the European War 173bit of Works in the New York Public

Library Relating to Women 029"Literature of Women in Journalism

History, The" 269t-

Menopause, A Selective Bibliog-. raphy 190Minorities and Women: A Guide to

Reference Literature in the SocialSfiences 296

New Woman 's Survival Catalog,The 343

New Woman's-Survivd Sourceboak,The 344

"Nigerian Women: A BibliograPhical.Essay" 326

"1974 Bibliography of Women in Brit-ish and American Literature: 1660--1900" 194

"1/75 Bibliography of Literature in

1 ?6

120 NEW FEMINIST SCHOLARSHIP

English by and about Women,600-1960" 195

"1976 Bibhography of Literature rn .

English by and about Women,600-1960" 196

Nowhere to Be Found, A Literatoinf Re-view and Annotated Bibliography ONWhile Working Class Women 373

Oicripations for Girls and Women:SelectedRefeonces, July 1943.-June 1948 369

Philosdphy and Feminism: RecentPapers 237

Plays by Women: A Bibliograth 193

Policeworesi6 in American Society, The:A Preliminary Survey 259

"Political Implications of Gender Roles:A Review of the Literature" 244

Political Participation of Women in theUnited States, The: A Selected Bibli-ography, 1930-1976 248

"Population Limitation and Women'sStatus! A Bibliography" 337

Problems and Issues in the Employmentof Minority, Disadvantaged andFemde Grumps: AN Annotated Bib- ,

liography 372"Professional Wohian in the United

States!.A Bibliographical Essay" 166Psychology of the Female Offender,

The: A Research Biblii)graphy 101

Psychology of Women, The: A PartiallyAnnotated Bibliography 282

Psychology of Women, ON the: A Sur-, vey of Empirical Studies 280 ,

Rape: A Bibliography, 1965-1975 284

Rapc and Rape-Related Issues: ANAknotated Bibliogriphy 286

Rape Bibliography, The; A Collectionof Abstracts 287

Research Guide in Women's Studies291 No,

Research Guide to Women's Issues 292

Research on Fear of Success: Full Anno-tated Bibliography 321

Resource Listing: Wage,EarningWOMen 358

"Resoutces for the Study of Psychologyahd-Women" 277

Review and Synthesis of Research ONWomen in the World of Work .366

Essay: American History","Review170

'Reviewship"

''Review"Review"Review"Review

Essay: American Librarian-251

Essay: An bverview" 001Essay: Anthropology" 071Essay: Anthropology" 074,Essay: Architecture and Urban'

Planning" 263 -'Review Essay: Art History' 079'Review Essay: Biblioghwhies for Re-

search on Wtmtati' 001,

'Review Essay: Classics" 151'Review Essay: Economics" 111

"Review Essay: Economics" 113"Review Essay: Housework" 363."Review Essay: Literary Criticism" 198"Review Essay: Literary,Criticism" 207"Review Essay: Modern European His-

tory" 166"Review Essay: Nursing" 260"Review Essay: Philosophy 236'Review Espy: Philosophy.' 238"Review Essay: Philoeophy", 239"Review Essay: Political Science" 240"Review Essay: Political Science"- 243"Review Essay: Psychological Studies

of Rape" 283'Rtvicy; Essay: PsycholRgy'. 279"Review Essay: NycholOgy" 281"Review Essay: Religion" 303"Review Essay: Sociology" 012

": "Review Essay: Sociology'' '073"Review Essay: Sociology of Feminist

Research in Canada" 069"Review Essay: The History of Physical

Education", 147"Review Essay: The Status of Women

in Higher Education" 126

"

4,

V.

"Review Esser Women and Literaturein Fnuice" 200

"Review Essay: .Women and Medicinein Ninctccnth Century America" 176

"Review Essay: Women and PopulationStudies" 335

"Review Essay: Women in the laborForcc,' 353

"Review Essay: Women in the NaturalSciences" 271

"Review Essay: Women in Widow-hood'' 188 .

"Review of Rape Literature, A" 288Review of Sex Role Research, A'' 315

Role of Women in Librurians4, The1876-1976: Ihe Entry, Advancementand Struggle for Equalization in OnePM/0 lion 265

"Role of Women in Modern EconomicLife, The: A Working Bibliography" .

116"Role of Women in Native American

Societies, Thc, A Bibliography" 227"Role of Women in the Americin Rev-

olution, The: An Annotated Bibliog-raphy" 156

Rural Women 1r/br4ers in the Twenti-eth Century: An Annotatetirgphy 370

Selected Biblio,fraphy qf Books onWomen in the Librdries of the State

A University of New York at Albany', A066

"Sckcted Bibliography of Primed Ma;tethls on,Women and thc Women'sMovement in Booth Library" 057

Selected Bibliography of WomenWriters 202

Selected Bibliography on Child CareEvaluation Studies 083 '

"Selected 43ibliography on Women inAmiquity" 169

Selected References on the Health ofWomen 1.4 Industry 150

Select List of References on a MinimumWage for Women 386

INDP-X. I 2)

Select List of Refeeences Off the Wol'llanof Today 040

Select bit of Refarerwet ore the Workof Wome; ix Civil Reform 387

Select Lift ofReferences on Women inColonial Days 174

Seleit List of References Relating toNi$ht Vork for Women 388

Select bst.of Works on Women inBusiness 389

Sex Differences and Reading: AnAnnotated Bibliography 319

Sex Discrimination in Employment,.1969-19741 Selective Bibliogiuphy391

Sex Role Concepts: How Women andMen See Themsekes dirt' Each Other;.i4Selected Annotated Bibliography320

Sex Roles: A Researth Bibliography 312

"Scx Roles in Transition: A Ten-YearPerspective" 317

Sex Role Stereotypinon the MasiMedia: An ArmotatedWhy 313

Sexual Barrier, The: Legal, Media,Economic arid Social Aspects of SexDiscrimination 021

She Said/He Said: An AnnotatedBibliography of Sex Differences inLanguage, Speech, and NonverbalCommunication 314

Short list of References on the Wagesof Women in the United States, A391)

Si:gris, Journal of Women in Culturemid Society 035 1

'.'Sisterhood Is Serious, An Annotated,Bibliography" 034

SiXth Edition of the Annotated Bib"-, ography on the Jewish Inman 234Society and the Sexes; A Bibliography

of Women's History in Early ModernEumpe, Colonial America, and theUnited States 154

Some Sourres of BibliographiesPertaireing to Women's Studies 0324

130 NEW FEMINIST SCHOLARSHIP

"So Math To Do: Guides for HistoricalResearch on Women in HigherEducation" 58

Special Issues of Serials about Women,1965-1973 -011

"Sporting Women" 144Status of Graduate and Professional

'Education of Women:v1974; A Rd-view of the Literature and Bibliog-raphy 130

Status of Women Bibliography, A Se-lective Bibliography of Government

. Publications 036Status of Women in Higher Education:

1963 1972, A Selective Bibliography125

Status of Women in.the Church: Vati-can II 1968; Annotated BibliograPh.y307

Strung Women: An Annotated Bibli-ography of Literature for the HighSchool Classroom 205

"Study of Women, The" 037Survey of Legal Literature on Women

Offenders 100

Survey of Research Concerns on Worn-ex's Issues, A 013

Therapeutic Abortion: Am AnnotatedBibliography 139

Topical Bibliography (Selectively An-notated) on Psychology of Women, A

273

"Violence at Home: A Review of theLiterature" 217

Voluntary Participation among Womenin the United States: A Selected Bib-liography, 1950-197q 241.

Where to Find BLS Statistics onWomen 378

Wil'e Beating: A Selected AnnotatedBibliography 215

With Reference to Women: An An-notated Bibliography of ReferenceMaterials on Women in the North-

,

1.9I.

western University Library 207

Woman: A TheologiCal Perspective:Bibliography and Addendum 30)

"Woman Book industry" 016Womanhood Media Supplement: Addi-

tional Current Resources about.Women 041

Woman in American Society, The: ASelected Bibliography 0j4

Woman in the War; A Bibliography171 ,

Woman Offender, The: A Biblio-graphk Sourcebook 103

Woman Question, The: An AnnotatedGuide to the Women'damphletCollection 090

Woman's Collection at the University of' North Carolina at Greensboro, The:A Checi-List of Holdings 093

Woman's Part of World War II, A Listof Reference; 175

Woman's World: A Selected 13ibliog-raphy on Women 061

"Women" 017Women: A Bask Guide to Research

290

Women: A Bibliography 012

Women: A Bibliography, 1975-6 334Women: A Bibliography of Books and

Other Makerials 063Women: A Bibliography of Materials

Held in the Research Library 008

Women: A Bibliography of Periodical'Vides 019

Women: A Bibliography of Special Pe-riodical Issues (1960-1975) 042

Women: A Bibliography of SpecialPeriodical Issues Volume II 043 .

Women: A Bibliography on their u-

cation arid Careers 120Women Adminirtrators in Education: A

Review of Research 1960,1976 261

Women: A Guide to BibliographkSources 298

"Women Alcoholics: A Review of Socialand Psychological Studies" 106

Women: An. Annotated Bibliography

'

Based on the Holdings of CaliforniaState College Dominguez Hills, 064

"Women and Amerktm.HigherEducation" 133

Women arid British Periodicals 167Women and Credit: An Annotated

Bibliography 117Women and Drug Cojrcerns Bibliog-

raphy 109 .

Women and Drugs: AN Annotated Bib-liography 110

"Women and Drug Use: An AnnotatedBibliography" 108 ..

WoMen and Employment Bibliography368

Women and Family in bind Develop-Ment: Annotated Bibliography 341

Women and Film: A Bibliography 077Women and Geo

l.aphy: AN Annotated

Vibliography and Guide.to.Sources ofInformation. 268

Women and Health Care: A Bibliog-raphy with Selected Annotation 149

Women and Literature: An AnnotatedBibliography of WOMEN Wr'iters 210

"Women and Management: A Sekc-'tive Bibliography 1970-1973" 256 .

Women an$ Mental HealthVelectedArricrotated References 1970-73 '276

Women arid Psychology 278Women and Religion: Selected Bibliog- .

raph,y, 1965-1972 344"Women and Religion: A Survey of

Significant Literature" 308Wornen and Society: Annotated Bibli-

ography 045Women and Society: A Critical Review

of the Litera lure with. a Selected An-notated Bibliography 044 .

Women and the American Economy118

Women and to American Experience:An Annotated Bibliography ofSelected lioldings on Women andTheir Work: 1890-1920 Located inthe.Sarah Lawrence College Library067

'1

Trau INDEX 13 I

fr

"Worn& and the Church"Women and the Economy: A Bibliog-4raphy andReview of the literatureON Sex Differentiation in the LaborMarket 115

Women and the Law: A Collection ofsr

Reading Lists 177Women and the Priesthood: A Selected

and Annotated Bibliography 306''Women and the Status Of Part-Time

Work: A Review and Annotated Bib-liography" 354

"Women and Work: A SeleZtion ofBooks and Articles" 355

Worm,' and World Development: ,AnAnnotated Bibliography 336

Woresen Artists: A Selected Biblibg-raphy,,of Periodical Material,1929-1974 075

Women as Authors 203Women: A Select Bibliography 024Women: A Selected Annotated Bibliog.

raphy ON Their Equal Opportunityand Employment 362

,Women: A Selected Bibliography 030Women: A Selected Bibliography and

Guide to Library Resourres 068"Wmpen: A Selected Bibliography of

Books 031Women: A Selected Bibliography of

Books 065Women at Work: An Annotated Bibli-

ography 356Women Executives: A Selected Anno-

tated Bibliography 253Women in America:

1963-1973 018Women in Antiquity: An Annotated

Bibliography 157

Women in Arrhitecture: AN AnnotatedBibliography and Guide to Sources ofInformation 247

Women in Canada 1963 to 1975: A Bib-

.liography 027,

Women in Canadian Politics andGovernment: A Bibliography 249

Women in Engineering: A Bibliography

A Guide to Books,

1 3 o4

,112 NEW FyMIN1ST SCHOLARSHIP

on their Progress and hospects 270Women in English Society, 1066-1945:

-Interpretive and BiMographical&says 161

Women in Government and Politics: ABibliography of American and -Foreign Sources 245

Women in Health: An Annotated Bib-liography 145

Women in Higher Education Admini-stration: Annotated Bibliography 131

Ifiomen in Literature 204Women in Literature: Criticism of the

Seventies 201Women IN fflanagement: A Selected

Annotated Bibliography of Currentand Cited Books and Articles '264

Women in Management: A SelectedBibliography 272

Women in Management: A SelectedBibliography, 1970-1975 262

Women in Medicine: A Bibliography ofthe LiteraturW Om Women Physicians255

Women in Music: A Bibliography 076Women in Musk History: A Research

Guide 080Women in Non-Traditional.Occupa

tionsA Bibliography 377Women in Perspective: A Guide to

Cross-Cultural Studies 070Women in Politics: The United States

and Abroad, 0 Select BibliogralthY242 .

Women in Positions at Managerial, Ad-ministrative and Executive Levels 254

Women in Prison: An Annotpted Bibli-ography 102

Women in Spanish America: An Ammo-tared BibliOgraphy fry'', Pre-Conquest to Contemporary Times332

"Women in the Cuban RevolutionaryWar, 1951-58: A Bibliography" 168

"Wnmen in the Left, 1906-1941: Bibli-of Primary Sources" .16)

1

"Women in the Middk Ages: A Work,ing Bibliography" 155

Women in the Middle &stand NorthAfrica:. An Annotated Bibliography323

Women in the Military 257Women in the World of Work: A Bibli-

ography of ER)C DOCIIMONts 374Women in U. S. History: An Annotat-

ed Bibliography 153Women Loving WomeniA Select and

Annotated Bibliography of WomenLoving Women ñ Literature 186

Women Offenders: A Bibliography 105Women owthe Indian Scene: An An-

notated Bibliography 327"Women Priests: Some Recent

Literature" 309Women's Bibliography 055Women's Health Care: Resources, Writ-

ings, Bibliographies 140Women's Higher and Continuini Edu-

,.cation, Mt Annotated Bibliography137

"Women's Histoiii: A Listing of WestCoast Archival and ManuscriptSources" 096

Women's History Sources: A Guide toArchives and Manuscript Collectionslin the United States 0$9

Women's Liberation and Revolution347

Women's Liberation: Black Women,Working Women, RevolutionaryFeminiim 352

Women's Movement in the Seventies,The: An International English-language Bibliography 345

Women's Movement Media: A SourceGuide 020

"Women's Reference Cobections"095

"Women's Rights: A Selected Bibliog-a raphy" 170Women's Rights Movement in the

U. S., The, 1848-1970 346

Women's Role in American Poditics 246Women 'I Studies: A BibliographY 058Worrieni Straker: A Giiide to Publica.

lions and Services Available in the Li-brary of the University of Californiaat Santa Barbara 056

Women's Studies: A Guide to Reference Sourres 293

Women's Studies: A Student's Guideto Reference Sourres 299

Women's Studies Bibliography: SeventyEssential Readings 033

"Women's Studies.in the United .

States: Approaching Reality" 051Women's Studies Resourres 062Women's Studies Sourrebooks: A Com-

prehensive, Classified Bibliography ofB?)ois 023

If

ILE INDEX 133

A

Women Studies Abstracts 046 'WomenstUdy: Guides for Reseatrh

Women's Work and Women's Studies047, 048, 049

"Women, the Church and Liberation:A Growth Oriented Bibliography"310

Women: Their Education and CareerGoals: An Annotated Bibliography ofSelected ERIC References 121

WomenTheir Soeial and EconomicStatus. Selected References 112

Working Mothers: A Selected Annotat-ed Bibliography 376

Working Women: Homemakers and.Volunteers: An Annotated SelectedBibliography 360

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Catalyst14 East 60th StreetNew York, NY 10022

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Ciskr, LhcindaP. 0. Box 240Planetarium StationNew York, NY 10024

College Entrance Examination BoardPublications Order OfficeP. 0. Box 592Princeton, NJ 08540

Common Women Collective, The5 Upland-RoadCambridge, MA 02140

Connecticut, University ofLibrary Acquisitions DepartmentBox U-TStorrs, CT 06268

'Council of Planning LibrariansP. 0. Box 229Monticello, 11. 61856

PUBI.ISHERS 135

Cowan, Btlita3821 1' St. N.W.Washington, DC 20007

Current Bibliography SeriesP. 0. Box 2709San Diego, CA 92112

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Entropy Ltd.215 Tennyson Ave.Pittsburgh, PA 15213'

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oPhiladelphia, PA 19103ERIC

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Falling Wall PressSee: The Feminist Press

Parians, Elizabeth6125 Webbland Pl.Cincinnati, OH 45213

Federation Employment and GuidanceService

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Feminist Press, The 11111P

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Garland545 Madison Ave.New York, NY 10022

General Learning PressSilver Burdett250 James St.Morristown, tsu 07960

Glide PublicationsP330 Ellis St.San Francisco, CA 94102

Graduate Theological UnionOffice of Women's Affairs

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136 NEW FEMINIST SCHOLARSHIP

2465 Le Conte Ave.Berkeley, CA 94709

Greenwood Press51 Riverside AvT.Westport, CT 0080

Hall, G. K.70,Lincoln St.BOston, MA 02111

Harvard UniversityDepartment of PhilosophyCambridge, MA 02138AIM: Louise Anthony

Hawaii, University ofSee: Sturgeon, Susan

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Henriques, CynthiaSee: Bart, Pauline

Hera PressP. 0. Box 18037-

, Cleveland, OH 44118Hughes Press

500 23rd St. N.W.Washington, DC 20037

Institute for Scientific AnalysisSee: Northwestern University

Institute on Pluralism and GroupIdentity

165 E. 56th St.New York, NY 10022

International Labor Office1750 New York Ave.Washington, DC 20006 !

International Reading Association. 400 Barksdale

Newark, DE 19711Iowa State University Library

Ames, IA 50010Arrbi: Photoduplication

Kent State UniversitySchool of Library ScienceKent, OH 44240

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King, Judith D.3327 Campus View ApartmentsMkndale_, M1 49401

Knopf, Alfred A.201 East 50th St.New York, NY 10022

KNOW, Inc.P. 0. Box 86031'Pittsburgh, PA 15221

Ladder, TheSee: Naiad Press

Lake Forest CollegeDonnelly LibraryLake Forest,'IL 60045

Louisiana State UniversityCollege of Bug,ass AdministrationDivision of RfsearchBaton Rouge, LA 70803

McMaster University Library PressMills -Memorial LibraryMcMaster UniversityHamilton, Ont. L8S 4L6Canada

McMaster Unii!ersity Medical"CentreHamilton, Ont. L8S 4L6Canada

Maferr Foundation140 W. 57th St.New York, NY 10019

Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyHuman Studies tollectionHumanities LibraryCambridge, MA 02139

Michigan State UniversityCollege of Agricultural and Natural

ResourcesDepartmentd Agricultural

Economics .

East Lansing, MI 48823Michigan Start University Libraries

East Lansing, MI 48823Michigan, University of

CCntee for Population Planning %Ann Arbor, MI 48104

I 1.

r -

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Mkhigan, University ofInstitute for Social ResearchCenter for-Political Studiek-'Ann Arbor, MI 48105

Moulton, JaniceSee: Harvard Univerity

Naiad Press20 Rue Jacob AcresBates City, MO 64011

National Association forWomen Deans,Administrators and Counselors

1028 Connecticut Ave N.W.Washington, DC 20036

National-Center For Education Statistics400 MarYland Ave. S.W.Washington, DC 20202

National Institute on Drug AbuseClearinghouse for Drug Information "1400 Rockville PikeRockiille, MD 20852

National Organization for Women:Task Force on Older Women

See: Glide PublicationsNational TechMcal Information Service

5285 Port Royal Rd..,Springfield, VA 22151

Neal-Schuman Publishiog64 University Pl.New York, NY 10003

New Horizons PressP. 0. BoX 1758Chico, CA 95926

New liansCentury FoundationSecretariat for Women in

Developmem1789 Columliia Rd. N.W.Washington, DC 20009

New York State-Library. Legislative Reference 'Library

Albany, NY 1222-3Northeirilllinciis University I,ibrary

Education Clusterbe Kalb, IL 60115ATTN: Pat McMillan

PUBLISHITS 137

Northwestern UniversityThe Program on Women.619'Emerson St.Evanston, IL 60201

Northwestern University LibraryEvanston, IL 60201

Nower, JoyceSee: Center for Women's Studies and

Servites

. ,

Ohio State UniversityCenter for 1-luman ResoUrce Research1375 Perry St.Columbus, OH 43201

Ohio State UniversityCenter for-Vocational and technical

Education980 KinnearColumbus, OH 43212

Ontario Ministry of lAbourResearch Library400 University-Ave.Thronto, Ont.Canada

Oilerseas Development Co'uncil1717 Massachusetts Ave. N.W.

-Washington, DC 20036

Prnnsylvania State UniversityAgricultural Experiment StationDepartment of Agricultural

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Kesearch Group One2743 Maryland Ave.Baltimore, MD 21218

6

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Rese rch Publications12 unar Dr.W bridge, CT 06525

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Sage PUblicatibus275 S. Beverly.Dr.'Beverly Hills, CA 90212

St. Louis Feminist Research Project4431 McPhersonSt. Louis, MO 63108

San Jose State University LibraryCollection Coordinator250 S. 4th St.San Jose, CA 95)92 .

Sarah Lawrence CollegeLibraryBronxville, NY 10708

Sarah Lawrence College, Women's Studies ProgramBronxville, NY 10708

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Scarecrow Press52 Liberty St.Metuchen, NJ 08840

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Sturgeon, Susan45 Blaisdell Dr.Carlisle, MA 07141

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Texas, University ofCenter for Middle Eastern StudiesAustin, TX 78712

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Texas, University ofSchool of SUcial WorkCenter for Social Work ResearchAustin, TX 78712

Thomas, Charles C.301 LawrenceSpringfield; IL 62703

Toronto, University ofJohn P. Roberts Research LibraryToronto, Ont. M5S 1A5Canada

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, Murray Hill Sta.New York, NY 10016

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ServiceU. S. Department of Health, Education

and WelfareOffice of Education .Bureau of Occupational and Adult

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PUBLISHERS 139

Womanspace: Feminist TherapyCollective

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San Francisco, CA 94103Women's Studies Abstracts

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Washington, DC 20031

3

About the AuthorJane Williathson, co-author of Feminist Resources fr.* Schools an 'd Col-

leges: A GUide to Curricular Materials and Wonien's Action Almanac: A Com-plete Resource Guide, receivld her M.S. degree from the School of LibraryService, Columbia University. Former Managing Editor of the Iffomen 's StudiesNewsletter, at present she is the Director of Information Services at theWomen's Action Alliance, a national center for information oh women's issuesand programs.

-

About The Feminist PressThe Feminist Press offerw alterntRives in cdtkation and in literature.

Founded in 1970, this nonprofit, tax-exempt educationalAand publishingorganization works to eliminate sexual stereotypes in books and schools, pro-viding instead a rim or neglectedfiterature with a broader vision of human po-tential. Our books include rcprints of important works about women, feministbiographies of wopen, and nonsexist children's books. Curricular materials,bibliographies, directories, and a newsletter provide information and supportfor wothen's studies at every educational level. Our inservice projects helpteachers develop new methods to encourage students to become their best andfreest selves. Through our publications aild projects we can begin to recreatethe forgotten history of women and begin to create a more humane and equit-able society for the future.

This book was Made possible by the work of rn ny,people, including TheFeminist Press Staff and Board. The Board, the decision-making body of thePress, includes all staff members and other individuals who have an ongoingrelationship to The Fcminist Press: Phyllis Arlow, Jeanne Bracken, BrendaCarter, Toni Cerutti, Ikanice Crosby, Sue Davidson, Michelinaiyitzmaurice,Jeanne Ford, Shirley Frank, Merle Froschl, Barbara Gorc, Brett Harvey, IleneHertz, Florence Howc, Paul Lautcr, Carol Levin, Corrinc Lucido, MaryMulrooncy, Ethel J. Phelps, Elizabeth Phillips, Karen Raphael, HelenSchrader, Mcrryl Sloane, Susan Trowbridge, Sandy Weinbaum, SharonWigutoff, Jane Williamson, Sophie Zimmerman.

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4111

Other Books from The Feminist Press'sClearinghouse on Women's Studies"

GENERAL EDUCATION

Femilist Resourres for Schools and Colleges

Merle Froschl and Jane Wilhamson, eds. (Revised ed. 1977). A selective guideto curricular materials at every level from thc elementary school to the universi-tyfor teachers, students, librarians, and parents who want to challengesexism in education and create nonsexist and feminist curriculum.

Women's Studies Newsletter

A quarterly published by The Feminist Press and the National Women'sStudies Association. Contains articles On women's studies at allievels of educa-tion: new programs, innovative courses, teaching techniques, curricularmaterials, book reviews, conference reports, bibliography, job in mation,

ELEMENTARY EDUCATION

Books for Today's Children

JeanneBracken and Sharon Wigutoff, eds. (1979). Critically annotated list of

two hundred recent picture books. Subject index includes Working Mothers,Handicaps, Contemporary Grandparents, Multi-Racial, Adoption, SingleParents, Sensitive Males,. Adventur.9n,s Females.

Nonsexist Curricular Materiatrfor Elementary SchoolsLauric. Olsen Johnson, cd. (1974). A collection of materials for the elemen- .tary teacher and student, including quizzes, checklist's, bibliographies,workbook, model units.

.SECONDARY EDUCATION

Changing Learning, Changing Lives

garbara Gate< Susan Klaw, and Adria Steinboig. (1979). A comprehensivewomen's studies curricultim developed by The Group 'School, an alternativehigh school for working-class.youth in Cambridge; Massachusetts. Includesnine thematic units plus suggestions for role plays; trips, interviewing, makinga film, and publishing a newspaper.

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High School Feminist StudiesCaiol Ahlum and Jacqueline Fralley, compilers. FkVence Howe, ed. (1976). Acollection of curricular materials in women's studies for, amt from high schools

including essays, bibliographies, teaching units.

Strong WomenDeborah Silverton Rosenfelt, ed. (1976). Annotated bibliography of widelyavailable paperbacks ti help the teacher supplement the male-biased cur-riculum: anthologies, autobiography, novels, short stories, drama, poetry.

HIGHER\ EDUCATION

Who's Who and Where in Women's Studies

Tamar Berkowitz, Jean Mangi, and Jane Williamson, eds. (1974). Completedirectory of women's studies programs, courses, and...Leachers, arranged by in-

tstitution, department, and instructor.

Female Studies VICloser to the Ground: Wpmen's Classes, Criticism, Programs-1972Nancy Hoffman, Cynthia Secor, and Adrian Tinsley, eds., for the Commissionon the Status of Women of the Modem Language Association. (1972). Essayson women's studies in the classroom, literary criticism from a feminist perspec-

tivp, Course materials.

S.

Female Studies VIIGoing S : New Courses/New ProgramsDeborah Rosenfelt, ed. (1973). Syllabi for over sixty recent women's studiescourses; descriptions of twelve new programs. Introductory essay assessing re-

cent devdopments in women's studies.

&male Studies IXTeaching about Women in the Foreign Languages

Sidoni Cassirer, ed., for tbe Commission on the Status of Women of the Mod-ern Language Association. (1975). Listings and outlines of courses with a focuson women offered by departments of French, Spanish, and German incolleges

ind universities across the country.

Female Studies XStudent Wor4Learning to Spea4Deborah Silverton Rosenfelt, ed. (1975). The fruits of some five years ofundergraduate women's studies courses on campuses across the country: a firstplay, a ''group autobiography," poems, short stories, papers.

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