So-called womens studies programs began cropping up on campuses across the country in the 1970s. Although they started largely in imitation of the militant black studies programs that had swept the countrys colleges and universities in the late Sixties, they soon vastly outstripped black and other minority studies programs in size and influence. Today, there is hardly a college campus that doesnt sport a womens studies program or department. At many institutions, it is even possible to major in womens studies.
The very familiarity of these developments has lulled many people into forgetting how odd they are. For what womens studies describes is not an academic discipline but rather a knot of grievances searching for recognition. Like black studies anda more recent phenomenonhomosexual (gay) studies, womens studies exists primarily t ...
This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 16 February 1998, on page 1
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