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Paperback Women of Academe: Outsiders in the Sacred Grove Book

ISBN: 0870236075

ISBN13: 9780870236075

Women of Academe: Outsiders in the Sacred Grove

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Drawing on more than sixty interviews, this book examines women's struggle to gain authority in the academic profession and to use that authority to change conventional practices. The authors argue that as women rise in academe, they are stymied at a certain level by the remaining force of the old norms which in the past barred women from professional life altogether. These norms decreed a sharp division between public and private realms, assigning...

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

Good Starting Place for Anyone Interested in Woman and Work

Though some people seem set on dividing the universe into arbitrary segments, the universe is not so tidy. This book supposedly is aimed at women working in universities. It is of value to a wider audience, however. It shows the "rules" by which women are expected to play, explains where the rules came from, and shows how female academics have engaged in counter-hegemonic discourse and action. The role of mentoring is emphasized. This is a good source for blue-collar women who assume university professors have it made, for students who intend to teach, for academics of both sexes, and for readers who are starting to suspect they have feminist tendencies.

A must read for women in academia

Although written more than a decade ago, this book is still a valuable reference about the difficulties women in academia face. Based on interviews with 25 tenured women and 35 women off the normal academic career track, the authors discuss recurring themes in the experience of academic women. Arguably, little has changed since the interviews were conducted. Many of these themes indicate that women ascribe to values counter to the academic system, such as cooperation rather than competition, inclusivity rather than exclusivity, relative knowledge rather than absolute knowledge, and an impulse to integrate a work life and a personal life as a wholly natural way to live. The authors suggest that any achievement of equality of women with men in academia is necessarily a revolutionary process because it requires a change in powerful traditional social norms.
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