Está en la página 1de 25

Complete Bibliography, Girl Squads

Haenyeo
Byun, Kyeonghwa, Eun-Jung Kang, Changgen Yoo, and Kyu-Han Kim. “Spatial Transformation and
Functions of Bulteok as Space for Haenyeo on Jeju Island, Korea.” Journal of Asian Architecture
and Building Engineering, 14.3, 2015. 533-540.

Carratura, Vincenzo Acampora. Interview with Lee Mae-chun. Korea.net, 15 Feb. 2017.
www.korea.net/NewsFocus/People/view?articleId=144131

“Culture of Jeju Haenyeo (women divers).” UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage.


ich.unesco.org/en/RL/culture-of-jeju-haenyeo-women-divers-01068

DenHoed, Andrea. “The Sea Women of South Korea.” New Yorker, 29 Mar. 2015.

Flowers, Alison. “The Last Mermaids.” Utne, 170. 74-75.

Gwon, Gwi-Sook. “Changing Labor Processes of Women's Work: The Haenyo of Jeju Island.” Korean
Studies, 29, 2005. 114-136.

Hilty, Anne. Jeju Island: Reaching to the Core of Beauty. Korea Foundation, 2011.

Hong, Suk Ki. “Hae-Nyo, the Diving Women of Korea.” Physiology of Breath-Hold Diving and the Ama of
Japan. National Academy of Sciences National Research Council, 1965. 99-111.

Hyun-kyung, Kang. “Local politician touts Jeju ‘haenyeo’ for UNESCO cultural heritage. Korea Times, 12
Jan. 2016.

Il, Sun-Ae. “Why do Korean Women Dive? A Discussion from the Viewpoint of Gender.” Asian Fisheries
Science, 25S, 2012. 47-58.

Karikis, Mikhail. “Nonsense: Towards a vocal conceptual compass for art.” Voice Studies: Critical
Approaches to Process, Performance and Experience. Eds. Konstantinos Thomaidis and Ben
MacPherson. Routledge, 2015. 79-89.

Lee, Joo-Young and Hyo Hung Lee. “Korean Women Divers ‘Haenyeo’: Bathing Suits and Acclimatization
to Cold.” Journal of the Human-Environment System, 17.1, 2014. 1-11.

--, Joonhee Park, Eunsook Koh, and Seongwon Cha. “Finger cold-induced vasodilation of older Korean
female divers, haenyeo: effects of chronic cold exposure and aging.” International Journal of
Biometeorology, 61, 2017. 1299–1307.

Lee, Joung-Hun and Yoh Iwasa. “Tourists and traditional divers in a common fishing ground.” Ecological
Economics, 70, 2011. 2350–2360.

Moon, Suk-hie. “Musical Study on the Woman Diver’s Rowing Song Transmitted to Western Kyeong
Nam.” The Society of Korean Folk Song, 16, 2005. 117-152

Mundy, Simon. “The Sea Women of Jeju.” Financial Times, 4 Sept. 2015.
Oh, Yun Jung, Ji Yong Jung, Sung Soo Kim, Kyong-Suk Chae1, Jiwon Rhu1, and Chungsik Lee. “The
association of kidney function with repetitive breath-hold diving activities of female divers from
Korea, Haenyeo.” BMC Nephrology, 18.75, 2017.

Onishi, Norimitsu. “South Korea's 'Sea Women' Trap Prey and Turn Tables.” New York Times, 15 Feb.
2005.

Park, Diana. “Better Together.” Seoul Magazine, July 2017. 44-47.

Sang-hun, Choe. “Hardy Divers in Korea Strait, ‘Sea Women’ Are Dwindling.” New York Times, 29 Mar.
2014.

Schiot, Molly. “Korean Deep Sea Divers.” Game Changers: The Unsung Heroes of Sports History. Simon &
Schuster, 2016.

Shirley and Sharon Firth


Anselmi, Elaine. “The Town That Wouldn't Die.” Up Here, 13 Mar. 2017.

Brizinski, Peggy Martin. “The Summer Meddler: The Image of the Anthropologist as Tool for Indigenous
Formulations of Culture.” Anthropology, Public Policy, and Native Peoples in Canada. Eds. Noel
Dyck and James B. Waldram. McGill-Queen’s University Press, 1993. 146-165.

Cockney, Angus. “I was just a number.” Globe and Mail, 27 Feb. 2001.

“First indigenous women inducted into Canada's Sports Hall of Fame.” As It Happens. CBC, 21 Oct. 2015.

Francoeur, Renée. “She was a one-of-a-kind lady, a true role model.” Northern Journal, 1 May 2013.

Gobert, Trina. “Coaching goal of champ (retired skiers Shirley and Sharon Firth).” Windspeaker 18.5,
2000. 23-24.

Graves, Peter. “Bjorger Pettersen – A Pioneer of the Modern Era of XC Skiing.” Cross Country Ski de fond
Canada, 29 Dec. 2010. www.cccski.com/About/History/Photos-and-Stories/Bjorger-Pettersen-
%E2%80%93-A-Pioneer-of-the-Modern-Er-(1).aspx#.WnJlVGKPI1I

Hall, M. Ann. The Girl and the Game: A History of Women’s Sport in Canada. University of Toronto Press,
2016.

--. “Toward a History of Aboriginal Women in Canadian Sport.” Aboriginal Peoples and Sport in Canada:
Historical Foundations and Contemporary Issues. Eds. Janice Forsyth and Audrey R. Giles. UBC
Press, 2013. 64-94.

Hargreaves, Jennifer. Heroines of Sport: The politics of difference and identity. Routledge, 2000.

Kelland, Jenn. “Humble Olympian prefers the quiet life.” Windspeaker, 23.12, 2006. S11.

Luxen, Micah. “Survivors of Canada's 'cultural genocide' still healing.” BBC News, 4 June 2015.

Manning, Sally. Guts and Glory: The Arctic Skiers Who Challenged the World. Outcrop, 2006.
Meili, Dianne. “Shirley Firth-Larsson: quiet, accomplished and inspiring others to the end.” Windspeaker,
31.3, 2013. 22.

Miller, James Rodger. Shingwauk's Vision: A History of Native Residential Schools. University of Toronto
Press, 1996.

“N.W.T. Olympian dies of cancer at 59.” CBC, 2 May 2013.

O’Bonsawin, Christine M. Failed TEST: Aboriginal sport policy and the Olympian Firth sisters.
Dissertation, University of Western Ontario, 2002.

--. “The Construction of the Olympian Firth Sisters by the Canadian Press.” The Global Nexus Engaged:
Sixth International Symposium for Olympic Research. Eds. Kevin B. Wamsley, Robert K. Barney,
Scott G. Maryn. University of Western Ontario, 2002. 193-198.

“Sharon and Shirley Firth enter Canada's Sports Hall of Fame.” CBC, 21 Oct. 2015.

“Sharon Firth.” Sports Reference. www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/fi/sharon-firth-1.html

“Shirley Firth.” Sports Reference. www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/fi/shirley-firth-1.html

Simon, Roland. “Profile of Sharon Anne and Shirley Anne Firth.” Hidden in Plain Sight: Contributions of
Aboriginal Peoples to Canadian Identity and Culture. Eds. David R. Newhouse, Cora J. Voyageur,
and Dan Beavon. University of Toronto Press, 2005.

“The Firth Sisters: Northern Lights.” Cross Country Ski de fond Canada, 10 Jan. 2011.
www.cccski.com/About/History/Our-Olympians/The-Firth-Sisters--Northern-Lights-
%281%29.aspx

Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, The. Canada’s Residential Schools: The History, Part 2,
1939 to 2000. McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2015.

Valentine, John. “Shirley Firth.” Native Americans in Sports. Ed. C Richard King. Routledge, 2004. 114-
115.

Zeman, Brenda. To run with Longboat: twelve stories of Indian athletes in Canada. G.M.S. Ventures,
1988.

Witches of the Orient


Atkins, E. Taylor. A History of Popular Culture in Japan: From the Seventeenth Century to the Present.
Bloomsbury Academic, 2017.

Faison, Elyssa. Managing Women: Disciplining Labor in Modern Japan. University of California Press,
2007.
Goldblatt, David and Johnny Acton. How to Watch the Olympics: The Essential Guide to the Rules,
Statistics, Heroes, and Zeroes of Every Sport. Penguin, 2011.

Igarashi, Yoshikuni. Bodies of Memory: Narratives of War in Postwar Japanese Culture, 1945-1970.
Princeton University Press, 2000. 155-162.

Kietlinski, Robin. Japanese Women and Sport: Beyond Baseball and Sumo. Bloomsbury Academic, 2011.

Kingston, Jeff. Nationalism in Asia: A History Since 1945. Wiley Blackwell, 2017.

Macnaughtan, Helen. “An interview with Kasai Masae, captain of the Japanese women’s volleyball team
at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics.” Japan Forum, 24.4, 2012. 491-500.

--. “The Oriental Witches: Women, Volleyball and the 1964 Tokyo Olympics.” Sport in History, 34:1,
2014. 134-156.

--. Women, Work and the Japanese Economic Miracle: The case of the cotton textile industry, 1945-1975.
RoutledgeCurzon, 2005.

Merklejn, Iwona. “Remembering the Oriental Witches: Sports, Gender and Shōwa Nostalgia in the NHK
Narratives of the Tokyo Olympics.” Social Science Japan, 16.2, 2013. 235-250.

--. “The taming of the witch: Daimatsu Hirobumi and coaching discourses of women’s volleyball in
Japan.” Asia Pacific Journal of Sport and Social Science, 3.2, 2014. 115-129.

Mobley, Alex M. A Secret History of Volleyball. Dissertation, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,


2013.

Otomo, Rio. “Narratives, the Body and the 1964 Tokyo.” Asian Studies Review, 31, 2007. 117-132.

Tagsold, Christian. “Remember to get back on your feet quickly: the Japanese women’s volleyball team
at the 1964 Olympics as a ‘Realm of Memory.’” Sport, Memory and Nationhood in Japan:
Remembering the Glory Days. Eds. Andreas Niehaus and Christian Tagsold. Routledge, 2013. 42-
51.

Whiting, Robert. “‘Witches of the Orient’ symbolized Japan’s fortitude.” Japan Times, 21 Oct. 2014.

Madison Keys and Sloane Stephens


Associated Press. “Sloane Stephens Wins U.S. Open Grand Slam Final Against Madison Keys.” Refinery29,
9 Sept. 2017.

Baggett, David and Neil Delaney Jr. “Friendship, Rivalry, and Excellence.” Tennis and Philosophy: What
the Racket is All About. Ed. David Baggett. University Press of Kentucky, 2010. 255-274.

Brennan, Christine. “In U.S. Open final, Sloane Stephens, Madison Keys show true meaning of
friendship.” USA Today Sports, 9 Sept. 2017.

Briggs, Simon. “Sloane Stephens cruises to US Open victory over 'best friend' Madison Keys.” Telegraph,
10 Sept. 2017.
Clarey, Christopher. “The Time Has Come, at Last, for Madison Keys and Sloane Stephens.” New York
Times, 8 Sept. 2017.

Culpepper, Chuck. “About that colossal, 19-second Sloane Stephens-Madison Keys hug…” Washington
Post, 10 Sept. 2017.

Elliott, Helene. “Friends Madison Keys and Sloane Stephens become foes in U.S. Open women's finals.”
Los Angeles Times, 8 Sept. 2017.

Fendrich, Howard. “US Open finalists Keys, Stephens commiserated over injuries.” Associated Press, 8
Sept. 2017.

Harwitt, Sandra. “Friends Madison Keys, Sloane Stephens face off in first U.S. Open final.” USA Today
Sports, 8 Sept. 2017.

Howard, Johnette. “The match made in heaven.” Guardian, 20 June 2005.

--. The Rivals: Chris Evert Vs. Martina Navratilova: Their Epic Duels and Extraordinary Friendship.
Broadway, 2005.

Keating, Steve. “Slams come and go, Keys and Stephens friendship remains.” Reuters, 9 Sept. 2017.

--. “Tennis: Madison Keys, Sloane Stephens put friendship to Grand Slam test.” Reuters, 10 Sept. 2017.

Mitchell, Kevin. “Sloane Stephens v Madison Keys: a landmark final between firm friends.” Guardian, 8
Sept. 2017.

--. “Sloane Stephens’ win over Madison Keys warms hearts after poor US Open final.” Guardian, 11 Sept.
2017.

Newman, Paul. ”US Open: Madison Keys and Sloane Stephens prepare for friendly battle in all-American
final.” Independent, 9 Sept. 2017.

Vecsey, George. “The Best of Rivals and Best of Friends, Then and Always.” New York Times, 29 Aug.
2010.

Waldman, Celia. “New Book Highlights Friendship Between Tennis Rivals.” Sports Illustrated Kids, 8 May
2017.

“Women’s tour not ‘Mean Girls, but some players don’t want friends.” Fox Sports, 25 Jan. 2015.

Trưng Trắc and Trưng Nhị


Bielenstein, Hans. “Wang Mang, the Restoration of the Han Dynasty, and Later Han.” The Cambridge
History of China: Volume I, the Ch’in and Han Empires, 221 BC – AD 220. Eds. Denis Twitchett
and Michael Loewe. Cambridge University Press, 1978. 271.

Chiricosta, Alessandra. “Following the trail of the fairy-bird: the search for a uniquely Vietnamese
women’s movement.” Women’s Movements in Asia: Feminisms and Transnational Activism. Eds.
Mina Roces and Louise Edwards. Routledge, 2010. 124-143.
Eller, Cynthia. The Myth of Matriarchal Prehistory: Why an Invented Past Won’t Give Women a Future.
Beacon Press, 2000.

Gilbert, Marc Jason. “When Heroism is Not Enough: Three Women Warriors of Vietnam, Their Historians
and World History.” World History Connected, 4.3, June 2007.

Hood, Steven J. Dragons Entangled: Indochina and the China-Vietnam War. East Gate, 1992.

Jamieson, Neil L. Understanding Vietnam. University of California Press, 1993. 8.

Liu, Rossina Zamora, as retold by. “Trung Sisters.” Encyclopedia of Asian American Folklore and Folklife.
Eds. Jonathan H.X. Lee and Kathleen M. Nadeau. ABC-CLIO, 2011. 1214, 1238.

Mann, Susan. “Presidential Address: Myths of Asian Womanhood.” Journal of Asian Studies 59.4, Nov.
2000. 837.

Schafer, John C. “Le Van and Notions of Vietnamese Womanhood.” Journal of Vietnamese Studies, 5.3,
Fall 2010. 138-41.

Tai, Hue-Tam Ho. “Faces of Remembrance and Forgetting.” The Country of Memory: Remaking the Past
in Late Socialist Vietnam. Ed. Hue-Tam Ho Tai. University of California Press, 2001. 173-4, 193.

Taylor, Keith Weller. The Birth of Vietnam. University of California Press, 1983. 38-41, 334-339.

Womack, Sarah. “The Remakings of a Legend: Women and Patriotism in the Hagiography of the Tru’ng
Sisters.” Crossroads: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 9.2, 1995. 31-50.

Xuyen, Ly Te. “The Two Trung Ladies.” Sources of Vietnamese Tradition. Eds. George E. Dutton, Jayne S.
Werner, John K. Whitmore. Translated by Brian E. Ostrowski and Brian A. Zottoli. Columbia
University Press, 2012. 56-57.

Ying-Shih, Yü. “Han Foreign Relations.” The Cambridge History of China: Volume I, the Ch’in and Han
Empires, 221 BC – AD 220. Eds. Denis Twitchett and Michael Loewe. Cambridge University Press,
1978. 454.

Yu, Insun. "Bilateral social pattern and the status of women in traditional Vietnam." South East Asia
Research, 7.2, 1999. 215-231.

Manon Rolande and Sophie Grandchamp


Becker, Carl. “The Memoirs and the Letters of Madame Roland.” The American Historical Review, 33.4,
1928. 784-803.

Grandchamp, Sophie. “Souvenirs de Sophie Grandchamp.” Mémoires de Madame Roland, vol. 2. Ed. C.
Perroud. Plon, 1905.

Linton, Marisa. Choosing Terror: Virtue, Friendship, and Authenticity in the French Revolution. Oxford
University Press, 2013.

--. “Fatal Friendships: The Politics of Jacobin Friendship.” French Historical Studies, 31.1, 2008.

May, Gita. Madame Roland and the age of Revolution. Columbia University Press, 1970.
Nelson, Max. “Unseen, Even of Herself.” The Paris Review, 17 Nov. 2015.

Pope-Hennessy, Una. “Madame Roland: A Study in Revolution.” 1917. Forgotten Books, 2018.

Reynolds, Siân. Marriage and Revolution: Monsieur and Madame Roland. Oxford University Press, 2012.

Roland, Mme. Mémoires de Madame Roland. Ed. C. Perroud. Plon, 1905.

Tarbell, Ida M. “Madame Roland.” Scribner’s Magazine, 14, 1893. 561-578.

van Dijk, Susan. “Foreword: Foreign women’s writing as read in the Netherlands.” ‘I Have Heard About
You,’ Foreign women’s writing crossing the Dutch border: from Sappho to Selma Lagerlöf. Eds.
Susan van Dijk, Petra Broomans, Janet F. van der Muelen, and Pim van Oostrum. Ulligeverji
Verloren, 2004. 9-34.

Webster, Nesta H. The French Revolution: A Study in Democracy. Constable & Co., 1919.

The Patriotic Women’s League of Iran


Afary, Janet. The Iranian Constitutional Revolution, 1906-1911: Grassroots Democracy, Social
Democracy, and the Origins of Feminism. Columbia University Press, 1996.

Ahmadi Khorasani, Nooshin. Interview with Khadijeh Moghadam. Translated by MS. Archives of articles
and works of Noushin Ahmadi Khorasani, 21 April 1999.
noushinahmadi.wordpress.com/2010/11/14/oral-history-by-nooshin-ahmadi-khorasani/

Amin, Camron Michael. “Globalizing Iranian Feminism, 1910-1950.” Journal of Middle East Women’s
Studies, 4.1, Winter 2008. 6-30.

Ansary, Nina. The Roots of Feminist Invocations in Post-Revolutionary Iran. Dissertation, Columbia
University, 2013.

Bāmdād, Badr-al-Mulūk. From darkness into light: women's emancipation in Iran. Ed. and translated by
F.R.C. Bagley. 1977. Mazda Publishers, 2013.

Dawlatšāhī, Mehrangīz. “Eskandarī, Moḥtaram.” Encyclopaedia Iranica, 8.6, 1998. 606-607.

Ettehadieh, Mansoureh. “The Origins and Development of the Women’s Movement in Iran, 1906-41.”
Women in Iran from 1800 to the Islamic Republic. Eds. Lois Beck and Guity Nashat. University of
Illinois Press, 2004. 85-106.

Farhadpour, Lily. “Women, Gender Roles, Media, and Journalism.” Women, Power, and Politics in 21st
Century Iran. Eds. Tara Povey and Elaheh Rostami-Povey. Ashgate, 2012. 91-106.

Ghazimoradi, Shadi. “Women Writing Women: Early Iranian Feminism and the Memoir of Taj us-
Saltanih.” Journal of Women’s History, 28.1, 2016. 182-184.

Hoodfar, Homa. “The Women’s Movement in Iran: Women at the Crossroads of Secularizaion and
Islamization.” Women Living Under Muslim Law – The Women’s Movement, 1, Winter 1999.

Khibany, Gholam. Iranian Media: The Paradox of Modernity. Routledge, 2010.


Kia, Mana. “Negotiating Women’s Rights: Activism, Class, and Modernization in Pahlavi Iran.”
Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East 25.1, 2005. 227-244.

Mahdi, Ali Akbar. “The Iranian Women’s Movement: A Century Long Struggle.” The Muslim World, 94,
2004. 427-448.

Mottaghi, Somayyeh. “The Historical Relationship between Women’s Education and Women’s Activism
in Iran.” Asian Women, 31.1, 2015. 3-27.

Najmabadi, Afsaneh. “(Un)Veiling Feminism.” Social Text 64, 18.3, Fall 2000. 29-45.

Nakhshab Jones, Sheiveh. From Here to There? The Personal Constructs of 1.5-Generation Iranian
American Women Professionals. Dissertation, University of La Verne California, July 2011.

Nashat, Guity. Women and revolution in Iran. Westview Press, 1983.

Paidar, Parvin. Women and the political process in twentieth-century Iran. Cambridge University Press,
1995.

Sansarian, Eliz. The women's rights movement in Iran: mutiny, appeasement, and repression from 1900
to Khomeini. Praeger, 1982.

Sedghi, Hamideh. Women and Politics in Iran: Veiling, Unveiling, and Reveiling. Cambridge University
Press, 2007.

Seradj, Leila. "Upsetting the Idea of Centuries": The Origins of the Women's Movement in Iran, 1850-
1925. Dissertation, The Fletcher School, 2013.

Shahidi, Hossein. “Women and Journalism in Iran.” Women, Religion, and Culture in Iran. Eds. Sarah
Ansari and Vanessa Martin. Routledge, 2002. 70-87.

Shojaee, Mansoureh. Interview with Simin Behbahani. Change for Equality, 17 Dec. 2006. we-
change.org/site/english/spip.php?article6

Vanzan, Anna. “From the Royal Harem to a Post-modern Islamic Society: Some Considerations on
Women Prose Writers in Iran from Qajar Times to the 1990s.” Women, Religion, and Culture in
Iran. Eds. Sarah Ansari and Vanessa Martin. Routledge, 2002. 88-98.

Supreme Court of the United States


“2014 Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg Distinguished Lecture on Women and the Law by Justice Elena Kagan,
The.” New York City Bar, 5 Feb. 2014.

Barnes, Robert. “Ginsburg Is Latest Justice to Reflect on Faith.” Washington Post, 15 Jan. 2008.

--. “What does the junior Supreme Court justice do? Kagan tells Gorsuch it starts in the kitchen.”
Washington Post, 9 Apr. 2017.

Biskupic, Joan. Breaking In: The Rise of Sonia Sotomayor and the Politics of Justice. Sarah Crichton, 2014.

Brockes, Emma. “Notorious RBG and 'Sonia from the block': turning justices into pop culture heroines.”
The Guardian, 24 June 2016.
Carmon, Irin and Shana Knizhnik. Notorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Dey Street,
2015.

Cary, Mary Kate. “Ruth Bader Ginsburg's Experience Shows the Supreme Court Needs More Women.”
U.S. News, 20 May 2009.

Collins, Lauren. “Number Nine.” New Yorker, 11 Jan. 2010.

Coyle, Marcia. The Roberts Court: The Struggle for the Constitution. Simon & Schuster, 2014.

“Current Members: Supreme Court of the United States.” USA.gov, 16 Oct. 2017.
www.supremecourt.gov/about/biographies.aspx

Dalin, David G. Jewish Justices of the Supreme Court: From Brandeis to Kagan. Brandeis University Press,
2017. 268.

de Vogue, Ariane. “Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Sonia Sotomayor dish out Supreme Court lunchroom secrets.”
CNN, 2 June 2016.

Felsenthal, Carol. “Three women on the Supreme Court; one thing in common.” The Hill, 5 Oct. 2010.

Foderaro, Lisa W. “Growing Up, Kagan Tested Boundaries of Her Faith.” New York Times, 12 May 2010.

Fontana, David. “The Obama Justices.” Slate, 13 Jan. 2015.

Galanes, Philip. “Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Gloria Steinem on the Unending Fight for Women’s Rights.”
New York Times, 14 Nov. 2015.

Gilinsky, Adam. "Germany, Sotomayor receive 1976 Pyne Prize." Daily Princetonian, 28 Feb. 1976. 3.

Ginsburg, Ruth Bader. My Own Words. Simon & Schuster, 2016.

Hess, Amanda. “Three Women Serve on the Supreme Court, and the New York Times Is on It.” Slate, 3
July 2013.

Holan, Angie Drobnic. "Elena Kagan's law review article said Supreme Court nominees should be
forthcoming." Politifact, 29 June 2010.

Kagan, Elena. "Private Speech, Public Purpose: The Role of Governmental Motive in First Amendment
Doctrine." The University of Chicago Law Review, 63.2, 1996. 413-517.

--. "The Changing Faces of First Amendment Neutrality: R.A.V. v St. Paul, Rust v Sullivan, and the
Problem of Content-Based Underinclusion." The Supreme Court Review, 1992, 1992. 29-77.

Kantor, Jodi and David Gonzalez. “For Sotomayor and Thomas, Paths Diverge at Race.” New York Times,
6 June 2009.

Kopan, Tal. “Sotomayor in fiery dissent: Illegal stops 'corrode all our civil liberties.” CNN, 21 July 2016.

Lat, David. “Elena Kagan v. Sonia Sotomayor: Who Wore It Better?” Above the Law, 28 Jan. 2010.

Liptak, Adam. “Kagan Says Her Path to Supreme Court Was Made Smoother by Ginsburg’s.” New York
Times, 10 Feb. 2014.
--. “Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan Muse Over a Cookie-Cutter Supreme Court.” New York Times. 5
Sept. 2016.

--. “Three Justices Bound by Beliefs, Not Just Gender.” New York Times, 1 July 2013.

Lithwick, Dahlia. “What the Women of SCOTUS Know.” Slate, 15 Dec. 2016.

LoGiurato, Brett. “Female Justices Issue Scathing Dissent In The First Post-Hobby Lobby Birth Control
Exemption.” Business Insider, 3 July 2014.

Margolick, David. “Trial by Adversity Shapes Jurist's Outlook.” New York Times, 25 June 1993.

McKinley, James C. "BASEBALL: Woman in the News; Strike-Zone Arbitrator -- Sonia Sotomayor." New
York Times, 1 Apr. 1995.

Mencimer, Stephanie. “Even Female Supreme Court Justices Get Interrupted a Lot by Men.” Mother
Jones, 26 May 2016.

“Pals from student days remember a determined Elena Kagan.” CNN, 11 May 2010.

@rachelbiggio. “ATTENTION: Ruth Bader Ginsburg carries a tote with her face on one side and I DISSENT
written on the other.” Twitter, 27 Apr. 2017, 4:21 p.m.
https://twitter.com/RACHELBIGGIO/status/857691211695390720

Rackley, Erika. Women, Judging, and the Judiciary: from difference to diversity. Routledge, 2013.

Raju, Manu. “In Kagan, 'a Democrat's Democrat'.” Politico, 11 May 2010.

Rubino, Kathryn. “It Doesn’t Get Better — Women Supreme Court Justices Get Interrupted Too.” Above
the Law, 6 Apr. 2017.

Schleifer, Theodore. “Ruth Bader Ginsburg moniker graces new praying mantis species.” CNN, 1 June
2016.

Smith, Ben. “Princeton key to knowing Sotomayor.” Politico, 29 May 2009.

Sotomayor, Sonia. "Anti-Latino discrimination at Princeton." Daily Princetonian, 10 May 1974. 8.

--. My Beloved World. Vintage, 2014.

"Sotomayor's resume, record on notable cases." CNN, 26 May 2009.

Stolberg, Sheryl Gay. “Sotomayor, a Trailblazer and a Dreamer.” New York Times, 26 May 2009.

Sweet, Lynn. “Elena Kagan played Chicago-style 16-inch softball at U of Chicago.” Chicago Sun-Times, 10
May 2010.

Totenberg, Nina. “No, Ruth Bader Ginsburg Does Not Intend To Retire Anytime Soon.” NPR, 3 Oct. 2016.

"Transcript of Obama-Sotomayor announcement." CNN, 26 MAy 2009

Tremmel, Pat Vaughan. “Kagan Talks About Life on the Supreme Court.” Northwestern Now, 5 Feb.
2015.
Zillman, Claire. “Ruth Bader Ginsburg Used This Simple Trick to Cut Down on 'Manterrupting.’” Fortune,
6 Apr. 2017.

Dahomey Amazons
Alimi, Shina. “Dahomey.” African Kingdoms: An Encyclopedia of Empires and Civilizations. Ed. Saheed
Aderinto. ABC-CLIO, 2017. 53-57.

Alpern, Stanley B. Amazons of Black Sparta: The Women Warriors of Dahomey. New York University
Press, 2nd ed., 2011.

--. “On the Origins of the Amazons of Dahomey.” History in Africa, 25, 1998. 9-25.

Bay, Edna G. Wives of the Leopard: Gender, Politics, and Culture in the Kingdom of Dahomey. University
of Virginia Press, 1998.

Burton, Richard F. A Mission to Gelele, King of Dahome, with notices of the So-Called “Amazons,” the
Grand Customs, the Yearly Customs, the Human Sacrifices, the Present State of the Slave Trade,
and the Negro’s Place in Nature, vol. 1. Ed. Isabel Burton. Tylston and Edwards, 1893.

Chaudoin, Edmond. “Three Months’ Captivity in Dahomey.” Times [London, England], 11 Aug. 1890. 3.

Dash, Mike. “Dahomey’s Women Warriors.” Smithsonian Magazine, 23 Sept. 2011.

Edgerton, Robert B. Warrior Women: The Amazons of Dahomey and the Nature of War. Westview Press,
2000.

“His Sable Majesty’s Customs.” All the Year Round. 10 Dec. 1864. 414-420.

Jones, B.C. One Hundred Lectures on The Greek Poets, Grecian History, Mythology, Athenian Comedy,
English Tragedy, and Burlesque. W. H. Allen, 1867.

Joubeaud, Edouard. The Women Soldiers of Dahomey. UNESCO, 2014.


http://www.unesco.org/fileadmin/MULTIMEDIA/HQ/CI/CI/pdf/publications/dahome_en.pdf

Law, Robin. “Dahomey and the Slave Trade: Reflections on the Historiography of the Rise of Dahomey.”
The Journal of African History, 27.2, 1986. 237-267.

--. “The ‘Amazons’ of Dahomey.” Paideuma: Mitteilungen zur Kulturkunde, 39, 1993. 245-260.

Noble, Vicki. The Double Goddess: Women Sharing Power. Bear & Co., 2003.

Salmonson, Jessica Amanda. The Encyclopedia of Amazons: Women Warriors from Antiquity to the
Modern Era. Paragon House, 1991.

Souayibou, Varissou and Agueh Marie-Thérèse. “The Amazons.” Historical Museum of Abomey.
Translated by Dulling Penelope. epa-prema.net/abomeyGB/resources/amazons.htm

Anne Bonny and Mary Read


Appleby, John C. “Women and Piracy in Ireland: From Gráinne O’Malley to Anne Bonny.” Bandits at Sea:
A Pirates Reader. Ed. C.R. Pennell. New York University Press, 2001. 283-298.
“By his Excellency Woodes Rogers, Esq; Governour of New-Providence, &c. A Proclamation.” Boston
Gazette, 10-17 Oct. 1720.

Canfield, Rob. “Something's Mizzen: Anne Bonny, Mary Read, "Polly", and Female Counter-Roles on the
Imperialist Stage.” South Atlantic Review, 66.2, 2001. 45-63.

Cordingly, David. “Bonny, Anne (1698–1782).” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Ed. Sir David
Cannadine. Oxford University Press, 3 Jan. 2008.

--. Life Among the Pirates: The Romance and the Reality. Abacus, 1996.

--. “Read, Mary (c. 1695–1721).” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Ed. Sir David Cannadine.
Oxford University Press, 3 Jan. 2008.

--. Under the Black Flag: The Romance and the Reality of Life Among the Pirates. Random House, 2006.

Duncombe, Laura Sook. Pirate Women: The Princesses, Prostitutes, and Privateers Who Ruled the Seven
Seas. Chicago Review Press, 2017.

Frankel, Estelle Valerie. Women in Game of Thrones: Power, Conformity, and Resistance. MacFarland,
2014.

Goldsmith, Oliver. “Essay X [Female Warriors].” The Miscellaneous Works of Oliver Goldsmith, with an
Account of his Life and Writings, Volume 4. Ed. Washington Irvine, Esq. Baudry’s, 1837. 314-319.

Johnson, Charles. A General History of the Pyrates. T. Warner, 1724.

Little, Benerson. The Golden Age of Piracy: The Truth Behind Pirate Myths. Skyhorse, 2016.

Meyer, W.R., revised by Randolph Cock. “Rackam, John [nicknamed Calico Jack] (d. 1720).” Oxford
Dictionary of National Biography. Ed. Sir David Cannadine. Oxford University Press, 3 Jan. 2008.

O’Driscoll, Sally. “The Pirate's Breasts: Criminal Women and the Meanings of the Body.” The Eighteenth
Century, 53.3, 2012. 357-379.

Rediker, Marcus. “Liberty beneath the Jolly Roger: The Lives of Anne Bonny and Mary Read, Pirates.”
Iron Men, Wooden Women: Gender and Seafaring in the Atlantic World, 1700-1920. Eds.
Margaret S. Creighton and Lisa Norling. Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996. 1-33.

Salmonson, Jessica Amanda. The Encyclopedia of Amazons: Women Warriors from Antiquity to the
Modern Era. Paragon House, 1991.

Sharp, Anne Wallace. Daring Pirate Women. Lerner Publications, 2002.

Sjoholm, Barbara. The Pirate Queen: In Search of Grace O’Malley and Other Legendary Women of the
Sea. Avalon, 2004.

Tryals of Captain John Rackam and other Pirates, The. Pamphlet, printed by Robert Baldwin, Jamaica,
1721.

Woodward, Colin. The Republic of Pirates: Being the True and Surprising Story of the Caribbean Pirates
and the Man who Brought Them Down. Harcourt, 2007.
Yolen, Jane. Sea Queens: Women Pirates Around the World. Charlesbridge, 2010.

Red Lanterns Shining


Chen, Fan-Pen Li. Chinese shadow theatre: history, popular religion, and women warriors. McGill-
Queen’s University Press, 2007.

Clark, Anthony E. Heaven in Conflict: Franciscans and the Boxer Uprising in Shanxi. University of
Washington Press, 2015.

Cohen, Paul A. History in Three Keys: The Boxers as Event, Experience, and Myth. Columbia University
Press, 1997.

Esherick, Joseph. The Origins of the Boxer Uprising. University of California Press, 1987.

Honglin, MA. “Lin Hei’er.” Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Women, The Qing Period, 1844-1911. Eds.
Lily Xia Hong Lee, AD Stefanowska, Clara Wing-chung Ho. Translated by NG Wing Chung. East
Gate, 1998. 131-133.

LaFeber, Walter. The Cambridge History of American Foreign Relations, Vol. II: The American Search for
Opportunity, 1865-1913. Cambridge University Press, 1993.

Liang, Ying. “A Comparative Study of Eighteenth to Twentieth Century Chinese and American Country-
of-women Utopian Fictions.” Dissertation, Purdue University, 2008.

Liu, Fei-Wen. “The Confrontation between Fidelity and Fertility: Nüshu, Nüge, and Peasant Women's
Conceptions of Widowhood in Jiangyong County, Hunan Province, China.” Journal of Asian
Studies 60.4, 2001. 1051-1084.

Lynch, George. The War of Civilisations: Being the Record of a “Foreign Devil’s” Experiences with the
Allies in China. Longmans, Green, and Co., 1901.

Mann, Susan. “"Fuxue" (Women's Learning) by Zhang Xuecheng (1738-1801): China's First History of
Women's Culture.” Late Imperial China, 13.1, 1992. 40-62.

Ono, Kazuko. Chinese Women in a Century of Revolution, 1850-1950. Ed. Joshua A. Fogel. Stanford
University Press, 1978.

Xiang, Lanxin. The Origins of the Boxer War: A Multinational Study. RoutledgeCurzon, 2003.

Finnish Red Guards


Blanc, Eric. “Revolutionary roots of women’s suffrage: Finland 1906 — an International Women’s Day
tribute.” Links International Journal of Socialist Review. 4 Mar. 2015.

Ghodsee, Kristen R. “Finalnd’s Red Women.” Jacobin, 10 Jan. 2018.

Katainen, Elina. “Mäkelä, Toini.” Kansallisbiografia-e, Studia Biographica 4. Finnish Literature Society,
2005.

--. “Punaisen amatsonin jäljillä.” Elämää arkistossa: Kansan arkisto 60 vuotta, 2005. 125-134.

Lappalainen, Jussi T. Punakaartin sota, vol. 1. Opetusministeriö, Punakaartin historiakomitea, 1981.


Lintunen, Tiina. “‘A Danger to the State and Society’: Effects of the Civil War on Red Women’s Civil
Rights in Finland in 1918.” Suffrage, Gender and Citizenship: International Prespectives on
Parliamentary Reforms. Eds. Irma Sulkunen, Seija-Leena Nevala-Nurmi, and Pirjo Markkola.
Cambridge Scholars, 2009. 177-192.

--. “Filthy Whores and Brave Mothers: Women in War Propaganda.” Enemy Images in War Propaganda.
Ed. Marja Vuorinen. Cambridge Scholars, 2012. 15-34.

--. “Red women’s paths: The wartime activity, sentences and subsequent lives of the women from the
Pori area taken to political crime courts in 1918.” Dissertation, University of Turku. October
2015.

--. “‘She Wolves and Russian Brides’ – Women Enemies in War Propaganda.” Proceedings of the 9th
European Conference on Information Warfare and Security. University of Macedonia, 2010. 183-
189.

Paasivirta, Juhani. Finland and Europe: The Period of Autonomy & the International Crises 1808-1914.
Translated by Anthony F. Upton and Sirkka R. Upton. Ed. D.G. Kirby. University of Minnesota
Press, 1981.

“Pispalan Naiskaarti – nuoria tyttöjä vartiotehtävissä.” Punainen Pispala.


www.pispala.fi/historia/punainenpispala/1910/naiskaarti.php?id=8&id2=53

Rentola, Kimmo. “Generations of Finnish communism.” Twentieth Century Communism, 4, 2012. 159-
180.

Saarinen, Oiva W. Between a Rock and a Hard Place: A Historical Geography of the Finns in the Sudbury
Area. Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 1999.

Sotejeff-Wilson, Kate. “Finland 100: The Red women.” Found in Translation, 16 Aug. 2017.

Anandi Joshi, Kei Okami, and Sabat Islambooly

"An Event for Hindostan and for Philadelphia, also." Philadelphia Public Ledger, April 1886. South Asian
American Digital Archive.

Arnold, David. Colonizing the Body: State Medicine and Epidemic Disease in Nineteenth-century India.
University of California Press, 1993. 280-281.

B., R. L. [Rachel L. Bodley?]. "Distinguished Brahmin Lady in Philadelphia." Philadelphia Public Ledger,
April 1886. South Asian American Digital Archive.

Bodley, Rachel L. Introduction. The High-Caste Hindu Woman, by Pundita Ramabai Sarwati. Philadelphia,
1888.

-- to Alfred Jones, June 19, 1883. Drexel University College of Medicine: The Legacy Center Archives &
Special Collections.

-- to “my dear friend,” December 9, 1887. Drexel University College of Medicine: The Legacy Center
Archives & Special Collections.
Brief Biographical Sketches of Three Foreign Students. 1 Feb. 1950. From the Women’s Medical College
of Pennsylvania Library. South Asian American Digital Archive.

Bulletin of the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, April 1931: Chemistry at the Woman's Medical
College of Pennsylvania. 1 Apr. 1931. Drexel University College of Medicine Archives & Special
Collections: Women Physicians, 1850s-1970s.

--, January 1926: College news. 1 Jan. 1926. Drexel University College of Medicine Archives & Special
Collections: Women Physicians, 1850s-1970s.

--, March 1919. 1 Mar. 1919. Drexel University College of Medicine Archives & Special Collections:
Women Physicians, 1850s-1970s.

“By the Queen’s Command.” Philadelphia Public Ledger, August 3, 1886. Enclosed in a letter from Anna
Thoburn to Rachel Bodley. Drexel University College of Medicine: The Legacy Center Archives &
Special Collections.

Carpenter, Theodicia E. to Rachel Bodley, June 18, 1883. Drexel University College of Medicine: The
Legacy Center Archives & Special Collections.

Dall, Caroline Healey. The Life of Dr. Anandabai Joshee: A Kinswoman of the Pundita Ramabai. Roberts
Brothers, 1888.

Dengel, Anna. “The Work of Medical Women in India.” The Medical Woman’s Journal 37.5, 1930. 132-
135.

“Editorial Notes.” Journal of the American Medical Association, 12, 1889. 455.

“Favors Women Doctors.” New Ulm review [New Ulm, Minnesota], 30 May 1900. 6.

Forbes, Geraldine H. “In Search of the 'Pure Heathen': Missionary Women in Nineteenth Century India.”
Economic and Political Weekly 21.17, 1986. WS2-WS8.

Fortieth annual announcement of the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, North College Avenue
and Twenty-first Street, Philadelphia. Session of 1889-90. iDEA: Drexel Libraries E-Repository and
Archives.

Forty-first annual announcement of the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, North College Avenue
and Twenty-first Street, Philadelphia. Session of 1890-91. Drexel University College of Medicine
Archives & Special Collections: Women Physicians, 1850s-1970s.

Gracey, J. T. “The First Woman Medical Student from India.” [Newspaper unknown], 1 Jan. 1883. iDEA:
Drexel Libraries E-Repository and Archives.

Gurjarpadhye, Prachi. “Through a Changing Feminist Lens Three Biographies of Anandibai Joshi.”
Economic and Political Weekly, 49.33, 2014. 37-40.

Ion, Hamish. American Missionaries, Christian Oyatoi, and Japan 1859-73. UBC Press, 2009.

“Japanese and Indian Women Doctors.” Jamestown Weekly Alert [Jamestown North Dakota], 21 Mar.
1889. 5.
“Japanese Women in the United States.” Japan Weekly Mail, 24 Jan. 1891. 88.

Joshee, Anandibai’s Commencement Materials. From the Thirty-Fourth Annual Commencement of the
Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, 11 Mar. 1886. South Asian American Digital Archive.

Joshee, Anandibai. Obstetrics Among the Aryan Hindoos. Dissertation, Women’s Medical College of
Pennsylvania, 1886.

-- to Alfred Jones, June 28, 1883. South Asian American Digital Archive.

“Keiko Okami.” Prominent People of Minato City, 2006. www.lib.city.minato.tokyo.jp/yukari/e/man-


detail.cgi?id=17

Kosambi, Meera. “Anandibai Joshee: Retrieving a Fragmented Feminist Image.” Economic and Political
Weekly 31.49, 1996. 3189-3197.

--. “Joshee, Anandibai.” The Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History. Ed. Bonnie G. Smith.
Oxford University Press, 2008. 663-664.

Lotlikar, Sarojini D. “Anandibai Joshee.” Notable Women in the Life Sciences: A Biographical Dictionary.
Eds. Benjamin F. Shearer and Barbara S. Shearer. Greenwood Press, 1996. 208-214.

Marshall, Clara. The Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania: An Historical Outline. P. Blakiston, Son, &
Co., 1897. 82.

Matsuda, Makoto. “The Curious Students of Jikei 4: The First Female Doctor of Jikei Hospital Doctor
Keiko Okami.” Kakke o nakushita otoko Takaki Kanehiro den. Translated by Cheridan Scott.
Kodansha, 1990. 610-623.

Okami, Kei. “Japanese Costume.” Children’s Work for Children, 13.1, 1888. 162-162.

Pearce, Louise. “A Century of Medical Education for Women.” Independent Woman, 29.4, 1950. 104-
106, 122.

Peitzman, Steven J. A New and Untried Course: Women’s Medical College and Medical College of
Pennsylvania, 1850-1998. Rutgers University Press, 2000.

Pripas-Kapit, Sarah Ross. Educating Women Physicians of the World: International Students of the
Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1883-1911. Dissertation, UCLA, 2015.

Register of the Alumnae Association of the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, now the Medical
College of Pennsylvania. 1 Jan. 1970. Drexel University College of Medicine Archives & Special
Collections: Women Physicians, 1850s-1970s. 116.

Rimner, Steffen. “Beyond the Call of Duty: Cosmopolitan Education and the Origins of Asian-American
Women’s Medicine.” Asia Pacific in the Age of Globalization. Ed. Robert David Johnson. Palgrave
Macmillan, 2015. 231-244.

Rose, Barbara. Tsuda Umeko and Women’s Education in Japan. Yale University Press, 1992.

Starita, Joe. A Warrior of the People: How Susan La Flesche Overcame Racial and Gender Inequality to
Become America’s First Indian Doctor. St. Martin’s, 2016.
“The Hindoo Woman at the Medical College.” Daily Enterprise, 10 May 1884.

“The Women of India.” Jamestown Weekly Alert, June 28, 1887.

Thirty-seventh annual announcement of the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, North College
Ave. and Twenty-First Street, Philadelphia. Session of 1886-87. iDEA: Drexel Libraries E-
Repository and Archives.

Verghese, Danielle. “The Graduates.” The Triangle. thetriangle.org/snowball/the-graduates/

“Woman’s Foreign Missionary of the Presbyterian Church.” Woman’s Work for Woman and Our Mission
Field. Woman’s Foreign Missionary Societies of the Presbyterian Church, 4, 1889. 136.

“Women Receive the Degree of M.D.” Marietta Daily Leader [Marietta, Ohio], 18 May 1900. 1.

Woolf, Christopher. “Historical Photos Depict Women Medical Pioneers.” PRI’s The World. Public Radio
International, 12 July 2013.

The Edinburgh Seven


Anagol, Padma. “Phipson, (Mary) Edith Pechey- (1845–1908).” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
Ed. Sir David Cannadine. Oxford University Press, 25 May 2006.

Chaplin Ayrton, M. Child Life in Japan and Japanese Child Stories. D. C. Heath & Co., 1909.

Chaplin-Ayrton, Matilda. “Lady Medicals in Japan.” The Scotsman, 5 May 1874. 3.

“Deaths.” Times [London, England], 10 Oct. 1910. 1.

“Dr. Mary Marshall." Times [London, England], 12 Aug. 1910. 9.

“Edith Pechey-Phipson, M.D.Bern, L.R.C.P.I.” The British Medical Journal, 1.2469, 1908. 1025.

Elston, M.A. “Ayrton [née Chaplin], Matilda Charlotte (1846-1883).” Oxford Dictionary of National
Biography. Ed. Sir David Cannadine. Oxford University Press, 23 Sept. 2004.

--. “Edinburgh Seven (act. 1869–1873).” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Ed. Sir David
Cannadine. Oxford University Press, 23 Sept. 2004.

“Female Doctors.” Medical Times, 19 July 1873. 672.

“Female Medical Education.” Scotsman, 24 Nov. 1870. 5.

Gazdar, Kaevan. Feminism’s Founding Fathers: The Men Who Fought for Women’s Rights. Zero Books,
2016.

Jex Blake, Sophia [sic]. A Visit to Some American Schools and Colleges. Macmillan, 1867.

Jex-Blake, Sophia. “Medical Education of Women.” Times [London, England], 20 June 1874. 12.

--. Medical Women: A Thesis and a History. Oliphant, Anderson, & Ferrier, 1886.

--. “The Late Disturbance at Surgeons’ Hall.” Scotsman, 21 Nov. 1870. 7.


Kelly, Laura. Irish Women in medicine, c.1880s-1920s: Origins, education, and careers. Palgrave
Macmillan, 2012.

Knox, William W. J. Lives of Scottish Women: Women and Scottish Society, 1800-1980. Edinburgh
University Press, 2006.

Mair, George. “Tribute paid to first UK women to go to university.” Edinburgh News, 11 Sept. 2015.

“Medical Education of Women.” The Englishwoman’s Review of Social and Industrial Questions. 1871.

Michaelsen, Kaarin Leigh. Becoming "Medical Women": British Female Physicians and the Politics of
Professionalism, 1860-1933. Dissertation, UC Berkeley, 2003.

Orme, Eliza, “Art. II.--Matilda Chaplin Ayrton. M. D.” The Englishwoman's review of social and industrial
questions, 124.14, 1883. 343-350.

“Probationer, A Former Lady.” “Female Medical Education.” Scotsman, 21 Nov. 1870. 7.

Reynolds, Siân. Paris-Edinburgh: Cultural Connections in the Belle Époque. Routledge, 2007.

Roberts, Shirley. Sophia Jex-Blake: A woman pioneer in nineteenth-century medical reform. Routledge,
1993.

“The Edinburgh Medical Students.” The Englishwoman’s Review of Social and Industrial Questions. 1871.

“The Female Medical Students and the Royal Infirmary.” Scotsman, 14 Nov. 1870. 2.

Thomson, Elaine. “Physiology, Hygiene and the Entry of Women to the Medical Profession in Edinburgh
c. 1869–c. 1900.” Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences, 32.1,
2001. 105-126.

Thorne, Isabel [sic]. “Medical Education of Women.” Times [London, England], 18 June 1874. 6.

Todd, Margaret. The Life of Sophia Jex-Blake. Macmillan, 1918.

Women of Antarctica
“Airliner is First in Deep Antarctic.” Polar Times, Dec. 1957. 14.

“All-women scientific expedition to Antarctica to be made next year.” Women in the World [in
association with New York Times], 16 Nov. 2015.

Baker, Billy-Ace. “This Quarter in History.” Explorer’s Gazette [Old Antarctic Explorer’s Association], 1.3,
2001. 4-5.

Bancroft, Ann. “We Persevered in a World That Did Not Want Us to Succeed, and We Did, and We Did It
Together.” Women in the Antarctic. Eds. Esther D. Rothblum, Jacqueline S. Weinstock, Jessica F.
Morris. Haworth Press, 1998. 43-58.

“Bancroft Arensen Explore.” BAE Institute. 2017. https://bancroftarnesen.eco/

Belanger, Dian Olson. Deep Freeze: The United States, the International Geophysical Tear, and the
Origins of Antarctica’s Age of Science. University Press of Colorado, 2006.
Blackadder, Jesse. “Frozen Voices: Women, Silence, and Antarctica.” Antarctica: Music, sounds, and
cultural connections. Eds. Bernadette Hince, Rupert Summerson, and Arnan Wiesel. Australian
National University Press, 2015.

--. “Heroines of the Ice.” Australian Geographic, 113, 2013. 88-98.

Brueck, Hilary. “Meet The All-Woman Team Heading To Antarctica This Year.” Forbes, 13 Feb. 2016.

Bull, Colin. “Behind the Scenes: Colin Bull Recalls His 10-Year Quest To Send Women Researchers To
Antarctica.” Antarctic Sun, 13 Nov. 2009.

Burns, Robin. “Women in Antarctic Science: Forging New Practices and Meanings.” Women’s Studies
Quarterly, 28.1/2, 2000. 165-180.

--. “Women in Antarctica: From Companions to Professionals.” Encyclopedia of the Antarctic: Volume 1,
A-K. Ed. Beau Riffenburgh. Routledge, 2007. 1092-1096.

Cahoon, Sister Mary Odile. “If Women Are in Science and Science Is in the Antarctic, Then Women
Belong There.” Women in the Antarctic. Eds. Esther D. Rothblum, Jacqueline S. Weinstock,
Jessica F. Morris. Haworth Press, 1998. 31-40.

Cimons, Marlene. “Forty Years of Women Researchers in Antarctica.” US News, 2 Dec. 2009.

--. “The First Women in Antarctica.” National Science Foundation, 11 Jan. 2010.

Collis, Christy. “The Australian Antarctic Territory: A Man's World?” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture
and Society, 34.3, 2009. 514-519.

Daoud, Elizabeth. “Australia leads first ever all female scientific expedition to Antarctica.” News.com.au,
8 Sept. 2016.

Davis, Amanda. “This IEEE Fellow Blazed a Trail for Female Scientists in Antarctica.” Institute, 14 April
2016.

Glasberg, Elena. “Refusing History at the End of the Earth: Ursula Le Guin's ‘Sur’ and the 2000-01
Women's Antarctica Crossing.” Tulsa Studies in Women’s Literature, 21.1, 2002. 99-121.

Harvey, Kay. “Ann Bancroft's book reveals the struggle of a South Pole expedition.” Peninsula Clarion, 23
Aug. 2001.

Herbert, Kari and Huw Lewis-Jones. In Search of the South Pole. Bloomsbury, 2014.

Hulbe, Christina L., Wang Weili, and Simon Ommanney. “Women in glaciology, a historical perspective.”
Journal of Glaciology, 56.200, 2010. 944-964.

Jones, Beth. “'Women won’t like working in Antarctica as there are no shops and hairdressers.’”
Telegraph, 20 May 2012.

“Kingussie woman to run world's southern most post office.” BBC News, 8 Oct. 2015.

“Largest all-women expedition heads to Antarctica.” BBC News, 1 Dec. 2016.

“Largest All-Women Scientific Expedition Sets Sail for Antarctica.” Makers, 5 Dec. 2016.
Legler, Gretchen. On the Ice: An Intimate Portrait of Life at McMurdo Station, Antarctica. Milkweed,
2005.

--. “The Sky, the Earth, the Sea, the Soul.” Eco-Man: New Perspectives on Masculinity and Nature. Ed.
Mark Allister. University of Virginia Press, 2004. 28-40.

Martin, Stephen. A History of Antarctica. Rosenberg, 2013.

McCormack, Madura. “Perth researchers on world-first, women-only Antarctic expedition.” PerthNow,


15 Nov. 2015.

Merchant, Paul. Interview with Janet Thompson. “Janet Thomson: an 'improper segregation of
scientists' at the British Antarctic Survey.” Voices of Science. British Library, 27 May 2010.

Neider, Charles. Edge of the World: Ross Island, Antarctica, A Personal & Historical Narrative of
Exploration, Adventure, Tragedy, & Survival. Cooper Square Press, 2001.

Peden, Irene C. “If You Fail, There Won’t Be Another Woman on the Antarctic Continent for a
Generation.” Women in the Antarctic. Eds. Esther D. Rothblum, Jacqueline S. Weinstock, Jessica
F. Morris. Haworth Press, 1998. 17-30.

Peter Rejcek. “Breaking The Ice: First U.S. Female Scientists Enter Antarctic History In 1969.” Antarctic
Sun, 13 Nov. 2009.

Rosner, Victoria. “Gender and Polar Studies: Mapping the Terrain.” Signs, 34.3, 2009. 489-494.

--. “Where No Woman Has Gone Before.” Women’s Review of Books, 25.3, 2008. 21-23.

Sims, Burt. “South Pole or Bust.” Skiing, Oct. 1989. 18.

“Two Women Set Antarctic Record.” CBS News, 21 Mar. 2001.

“Women Scientists Antarctica Bound.” Alamogordo Daily News, 24 Jan. 1969. 7.

West Area Computers


Buckley, Cara. “Uncovering a Tale of Rocket Science, Race and the ’60s.” New York Times, 20 May 2016.

Champine, Gloria R. “Mary Jackson.” NASA.gov. crgis.ndc.nasa.gov/crgis/images/4/4a/MaryJackson.pdf

Golemba, Beverly E. “Human Computers: The Women in Aeronautical Research.” Unpublished


manuscript, NASA Langley Archives, 1994.

Harris, Duchess, Margot Lee Shetterly, Lucy Short, and Ayaan Natala. “Timeline.” Human Computers at
NASA. Department of American Studies, Macalester College [Minnesota], 2015.
omeka.macalester.edu/humancomputerproject/timeline

Harris, Miriam Mann. “Miriam Daniel Mann.” NASA.gov, 12 Sept. 2011.


crgis.ndc.nasa.gov/crgis/images/d/d3/MannBio.pdf

Hodges, Jim. “She Was a Computer When Computers Wore Skirts.” Langley Researcher News, 8 Aug.
2008.
Johnson, Sandra. Interview with Annie J. Easley. NASA Oral History Project, 21 Aug. 2001.
www.jsc.nasa.gov/history/oral_histories/NASA_HQ/Herstory/EasleyAJ/AJE_8-21-01.pdf

Lineberry, Denise. “A Look Back with Langley's NACA Alumni: NACA's 95th Anniversary.” Langley
Researcher News, 3 Mar. 2010.

McLennan, Sarah and Mary Gainer. “When the Computer Wore a Skirt: Langley’s Computers, 1935-
1970.” NASA History Program Office News & Notes, 29.1, 2012. 25-32.

Merry, Stephanie. “The nearly forgotten story of the black women who helped land a man on the
moon.” Washington Post, 13 Sept. 2016.

Saville, Kirk. “50 Years: Flying High In A Man's World.” Daily Press, 8 Nov. 1992.

Shetterly, Margot Lee. “Dorothy Vaughan Biography.” NASA.gov, 3 Aug. 2017.


www.nasa.gov/content/dorothy-vaughan-biography

--. “Hidden Figures.” Margot Lee Shetterly: Research. Write. Repeat. margotleeshetterly.com/hidden-
figures-nasas-african-american-computers/

--. Hidden Figures: The American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Mathematicians Who
Helped Win the Space Race. William Morrow, 2016.

--. “Katherine Johnson Biography.” NASA.gov, 3 Aug. 2017. www.nasa.gov/content/katherine-johnson-


biography

--. “Mary Jackson Biography.” NASA.gov, 3 Aug. 2017. www.nasa.gov/content/mary-jackson-biography

Smith, Yvette. “Katherine Johnson: The Girl Who Loved to Count.” NASA.gov, 6 Aug. 2017.
www.nasa.gov/feature/katherine-johnson-the-girl-who-loved-to-count

Trobairitz
Amtower, Laurel. “Private Desire and Public Identity in Trobairitz Poetry.” Dalhousie French Studies, 73,
2005. 3-18.

Bruckner, Matilda Tomaryn. “The Trobairitz.” A Handbook of the Troubadours. Eds. F.R.P. Akehurst and
Judith M. Davis. University of California Press, 1995. 201-232.

Burl, Aubrey. Courts of Love, Castles of Hate: Troubadours and Trobairitz in Southern France 1071-1321.
History Press, 2009.

Callahan, Anne. “The Trobairitz (c. 1170-1260).” French Women Writers. Eds. Eva Martin Sartori and
Dorothy Wynne Zimmerman. University of Nebraska Press, 1994. 495-502.

Dronke, Peter. Women Writers of the Middle Ages: A Critical Study of Texts from Perpetua (203) to
Marguerite Porete (1310). Cambridge University Press, 1984.

Fraser, Veronica. “Two Contrasting Views of Love in the Songs of the Troubadours and the Trobairitz.”
Tenso, 13.1, 1997. 24-47.
Keelan, Claudia. “Do You or Don’t You Love Me, Baby? Finding the Trobairitz: An Essay and
Translations.” The American Poetry Review, 42.3, 2013. 23-29.

--. Truth of My Songs: Poems of the Trobairitz. Omnidawn, 2015.

Klinck, Anne L. “Poetic Markers of Gender in Medieval ‘Woman’s Song’: Was Anonymous a Woman?”
Neophilologus, 87, 2003. 339-359.

Langdon, Alison. “‘Pois Dompna S’ave/D’amar’: Na Castellosa’s Cansos and Medieval Feminist
Scholarship.” Medieval Feminist Forum: A Journal of Gender and Sexuality, 32.1, 2001. 32-42.

“Na Carenza al bel cors avinenz.” Songs of the Women Troubadours. Eds. Matilda Tomaryn Bruckner,
Laurie Shepard, and Sarah White. Garland, 2000.

O’Sullivan, Daniel E. “Shaping Marian Devotion in Old Occitan Song.” Shaping Courtliness in Medieval
France: Essays in Honor of Matilda Tomaryn Bruckner. Eds. Daniel E. O’Sullivan and Laurie
Shepard. Gallica, 2013. 186-198.

Oliver, Sophie. “Subversive Acts: Female Voice and Performance in the Songs of the Trobairitz.” French
Studies Bulletin, 26.95, 2005. 2-7.

Paterson, Linda. “Women, Property, and the Rise of Courtly Love.” The Court Reconvenes: Courtly
Literature Across the Disciplines. Eds. Barbara K. Altmann and Carleton W. Carroll. D.S. Brewer,
2003. 41-55.

Paterson, Linda M. The World of the Troubadours: Medieval Occitan society, c. 1100 – c. 1300.
Cambridge University Press, 1993.

Pfeffer, Wendy. “Gormonda de Monpeslier.” Writings by Pre-Revolutionary French Women. Eds. Anne R.
Larsen and Colette H. Winn. Garland, 2000. 17-34.

Puckett, Jennifer. “When a Woman Says ‘Yes,’ She Really Means ‘No’: The Subversive Rape Rhetoric of
Domna H.” Tenso, 27.1-2, 2012. 1-24.

Sankovitch, Tilde. “The trobairitz.” The Troubadours: An Introduction. Eds. Simon Gaunt and Sarah Kay.
Cambridge University Press, 1999. 115-125.

Sigal, Gale. “Troubadours, Trobairitz, and Trouvères.” Literature of the French and Occitan Middle Ages:
Eleventh to Fifteenth Centuries. Ed. Deborah M. Sinnreich-Levi and Ian S. Laurie. Dictionary of
Literary Biography, vol. 208. Gale, 1999. 351-366.

Taylor, Robert A. A Bibliographical Guide to the Study of the Troubadours and Old Occitan Literature.
Medieval Institute Publications, 2015.

Wells, Elaine Marcia. Trobairitz Poetry as an Overlooked Feminist Genre. Dissertation, Tarleton State
University, 2001.

The Blue Stockings


Chapone, Hester. “Matrimonial Creed.” The Posthumous Works of Mrs. Chapone, vol. 1. John Murray,
1807. 147-159.
Dobbs, Jeannine. “The Blue-Stockings: Getting It Together.” A Journal of Women Studies, 1.3, 1976. 81-
93.

Eger, Elizabeth. “Bluestocking circle (act. c. 1755–c. 1795).” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Ed.
Sir David Cannadine. Oxford University Press, 1 Sept. 2017.

--. Bluestockings: Women of Reason from Enlightenment to Romanticism. Palgrave Macmillan, 2010.

--. “Boscawen [née Glanville], Frances Evelyn [Fanny] (1719–1805).” Oxford Dictionary of National
Biography. Ed. Sir David Cannadine. Oxford University Press, 23 Sept. 2004.

Miegon, Anna. “Biographical Sketches of Principal Bluestocking Women.” Huntington Library Quarterly,
65.1/2, 2002. 25-37.

Nathans, Heather S. “Colonial-Era Leisure And Recreation.” Encyclopedia of Recreation and Leisure in
America. Gale, 2004.

“Origin of the Blue-stockings.” New York Times, 17 Apr. 1881.

Robinson, Jane. Bluestockings: The Remarkable Story of the First Women to Fight for an Education.
Viking, 2009.

Schnorrenberg, Barbara Brandon. “Montagu [née Robinson], Elizabeth. (1718-1800).” Oxford Dictionary
of National Biography. Ed. Sir David Cannadine. Oxford University Press, 21 May 2009.

--. “Vesey, Elizabeth (c. 1715–1791).” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Ed. Sir David Cannadine.
Oxford University Press, 23 Sept. 2004.

Scott, Sarah [as “A Gentleman on his Travels.”]. A Description of Millenium Hall, and the Country
Adjacent. J. Newbery, 1762.

Smith, Sydney. “Female Education: Edinburgh Review, 1810.” The Works of Rev. Sydney Smith, Three
Volumes, Complete in One. D. Appleton & Co., 1873. 79-85.

“The 1750s.” History Magazine, 1999. www.history-magazine.com/1750s.html

Salome Ureña and The Instituto de Señoritas

Coats, Victor. “Manual de Historia de la Educación Universal y Dominicana.” Monografias, 2012. 5.


www.monografias.com/trabajos91/manual-historia-educacion/manual-historia-
educacion5.shtml

Durán, Carmen. Historia e ideología: mujeres dominicanas, 1880-1950, vol. 117. Archivo General de la
Nacíon, 2010.

Méndez- Méndez, Serafín, and Gail A. Cueto. “The Henríquez Ureña Family.” Notable Caribbeans and
Caribbean Americans: A Biographical Dictionary. Greenwood Press, 2003. 200-205.

“Muere la maestra Mercedes Laura Aguiar Mendoza.” Diario Dominicano, 1 Jan. 2017.
www.diariodominicano.com/cultura/2017/01/01/235202/muere-la-maestra-mercedes-laura-
aguiar-mendoza
O’Connor, Erin E. Mothers Making Latin America: Gender, Households. And Politics Since 1825. Wiley
Blackwell, 2014.

Paravisini-Gebert, Lizabeth. “Salomé Ureña de Henríquez (1850-1897) Dominican Republic.” Spanish


American Women Writers: A Bio-Bibliographical Source Book. Ed. Diane E. Marting. Greenwood
Press, 1990.

Peńa, Angela. “Calles y avenidas: Prof. Mercedes Laura Aguiar.” Hoy, 29 June 2013. hoy.com.do/calles-y-
avenidasprof-mercedes-laura-aguiar/

--. “Ana Josefa Puello.” Identidad sanjuanera, 17 Dec. 2009.


identidadsanjuanera.blogspot.ca/2009/12/ana-josefa-puello.html

Ramírez, Dixa. “Salomé Ureña’s Blurred Edges: Race, Gender, and Commemoration in the Dominican
Republic.” The Black Scholar, 45.2, 2015. 45-56.

Valle, Enid. "Salome Ureña de Henríquez." Modern Spanish American Poets: First Series, from the
Dictionary of Literary Biography, vol. 283. Ed. Maria Antonia Salgado. Gale, 2003.

Zohra Orchestra
Adiba, Zarifa. “From Bombs To The Only All-Female Zohra Orchestra In Afghanistan.” Pavlovic Today, 15
May 2017.

“Afghanistan 2016/2017.” Amnesty International. www.amnesty.org/en/countries/asia-and-the-


pacific/afghanistan/report-afghanistan/

“Afghanistan women's orchestra closes global forum.” BBC.com, 24 Jan. 2017.


www.bbc.com/news/av/world-asia-38736429/afghanistan-women-s-orchestra-closes-global-
forum/

Agence France-Presse. “Amid threats, Afghanistan’s first female orchestra Zohra ready to perform at
WEF in Davos.” Indian Express, 18 Jan. 2017.

Associated Press. “First Afghan Women's Orchestra Tries to Change Attitudes.” VOA News, 30 Mar.
2017.

Bailey, John. “British Ethnomusicologist: 'It Isn't Actually Correct To Say Taliban Have Banned Music'.”
RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty, 22 June 2009.

--. “The censorship of music in Afghanistan.” Freemuse, 24 Apr. 2001. www.rawa.org/music.htm

--. War, Exile, and the Music of Afghanistan: The Ethnographer’s Tale. Ashgate, 2017.

Brodsky, Anne E. With All Our Strength: The Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan.
Routledge, 2004.

Emadi, Hafizullah. Repression, Resistance, and Women in Afghanistan. Praeger, 2002.

“Ensemble Zohra Afghan Women’s Orchestra.” Afghanistan National Institute of Music. Afghanistan
Ministry of Education. www.anim-music.org/girls-ensemble/
Garrison, Cassandra. “Afghan orchestra puts women's rights center stage at Davos.” Reuters, 19 Jan.
2017.

Harooni, Mirwais. “Afghan teenager braves threats, family pressure to lead women's orchestra.”
Reuters, 17 Apr. 2016.

Kargar, Zarghuna. Dear Zari: Stories From Women in Afghanistan. Chatto & Windus, 2011.

Karimi, Hassan. “The Zohra Orchestra: teaching young girls to play the music of their dreams in
Afghanistan.” Hindu, 24 June 2017.

Lister, Kat. “The Afghan girls defying death threats to pursue their passion.” Huck Magazine, 26 Sept.
2017.

Mukhtar, Ahmad and Haley Joelle Ott. “All-female Afghan orchestra plays on despite death threats.” CBS
News, 20 Apr. 2017.

Roche, Elizabeth. “Zohra: Inspiring sounds of music in war-torn Afghanistan.” LiveMint, 11 Dec. 2017.

Sarhaddi Nelson, Soraya. “All-Female Orchestra From Afghanistan Is A Force For Change.” NPR, 31 Jan.
2017.

Skaine, Rosemarie. Women of Afghanistan in the Post-Taliban Era; How Lives Have Changed and Where
They Stand Today. MacFarland & Co., 2008.

Sounart, Christine. “Girl Power.” Coloradan Alumni Magazine, 1 June 2017.

“The Story of Zohra.” Zohra Music. World Economic Forum and the Afghanistan National Institute of
Music. www.zohra-music.org/

Wroe, Nicholas. “A culture muted.” Guardian, 13 Oct. 2001.

También podría gustarte