‘This is education as
the practice of freedom’: Twenty Years of Women’s Studies at the University of
Oxford
Charlotte De Val*, Eleri
Anona Watson*
Address
*Correspondence:
charlotte.deval@wadh.oxfordalumni.org; eleri.watson@ell.ox.ac.uk
Abstract On 23 May 2015 students on the
Women’s Studies Masters (M.St course) at the University of Oxford
organised a conference to commemorate twenty years of Women’s Studies at
Oxford, entitled: ‘‘Teaching to Transgress’: Twenty Years of Women’s Studies at
Oxford’. The conference consisted of a mixture of papers from leading academics
in the field of Women’s Studies, as well as from postgraduate students
currently enrolled on the M.St programme at Oxford, with the intention of
giving young early career women the opportunity to present their research to a
broad interdisciplinary audience.
Since its foundation in
1995, the Women’s Studies course has strived to enact what the American
feminist and activist bell hooks terms ‘education as the practice of freedom’.[1]
Reflecting upon the discussions emerging from the conference, the conference
organisers Charlotte De Val and Eleri Anona Watson ask: ‘what are the new and
repeated challenges we face in fulfilling this practice of freedom?’ They also
consider the changing scope of Women’s Studies as an academic field alongside
present debates regarding its future in the UK and further afield. Examining
debates of ‘possibility’ and ‘impossibility’ within Women’s Studies—that is to
say, materialist versus post-structuralist critiques—in conjunction with
questions of accessibility and ‘intellectual gatekeeping’, this article
proposes that the future of Women's Studies is not the ‘apocalyptic’ vision
that its critics would often have us believe. Indeed, one of the themes
emerging from the conference was that as long as the field practices radical
self-questioning and self-critique, Women’s Studies will maintain its
academically and socially transformative potential.
Keywords: Women’s Studies; Gender Studies; Feminism;
University of Oxford; Education; Pedagogy
Introduction
For twenty years, the Women’s Studies
M.St programme at the University of Oxford has sought to challenge the academy,
its research, its praxis and its ethics. Bringing together women from across
the humanities, it was founded with the aim of ‘teaching to transgress’,
consistently nurturing women to challenge notions of knowledge-production in a
project of hermeneutic as well as social justice.[2] In May
2015, we—as students enrolled on the Women’s Studies programme—held a conference
to commemorate its anniversary year entitled ‘Teaching to Transgress’: Twenty Years of Women’s Studies at Oxford.
With the support of Oxford’s ‘Women in the Humanities’ network, the conference
presented the rich, interdisciplinary research that our discipline produces.
Student presentations examined a diversity of topics, from ‘fag hags’ to female
collaboration in rap, and from ‘fiction of development’ to women veterans and
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. Alongside student research, keynote lectures
were delivered by Patricia Hill Collins (Professor of Sociology, University of
Maryland), Laura Doan (Professor of Cultural History and Sexuality Studies,
University of Manchester), Jack Halberstam (Professor of American Studies and
Ethnicity, Gender Studies and Comparative Literature, University of Southern
California), Lucy Bolton (Senior Lecturer in Film Studies, Queen Mary,
University of London) and Ros Ballaster (Professor of 18th Century Studies,
Mansfield College, University of Oxford).
Yet anniversaries are a time for reflection
as well as celebration. Across varied disciplines and interdisciplines, the
keynote papers and the student organising committee sought to address the
changing scope of Women’s Studies over the last two decades as well as the
on-going debates that the field faces today. In this article, we would like to
take the opportunity to reflect on some of the discussions and ideas emerging
from the conference about the place of Women’s Studies within the academy: its
inclusivity of minority women’s groups and the future of Women’s Studies as a
discipline.
Women’s Studies, as we have
experienced it, is an educational practice possessing possibility—to labour for
freedom, to collectively imagine and to transgress traditional academic boundaries.
Feminist academics have long addressed the practice
of education. The feminist public intellectual bell hooks, for example,
famously described education as the ‘practice of freedom’. The ‘possibility’ of
the classroom, she argues, offers an opportunity ‘to labour for freedom, to
demand of ourselves and our comrades, an openness of mind and heart that allows
us to face reality even as we collectively imagine ways to move beyond
boundaries, to transgress’ (hooks, 1994:
207). The processes and consequences of institutionalisation have been
debated time and again and are perhaps best-captured in the
‘impossibility/possibility’ debate led by leading figures in the field of
Women’s Studies, Wendy Brown and Robyn Wiegman respectively (Brown, 1997; Wiegman, 2005). Today, we
may ask ourselves, ‘what are the new and repeated challenges we face in
fulfilling this practice of freedom?’ Yet, as we seek to fulfil our practice of
freedom, the field remains plagued by questions about the role and aims of
Women's Studies today. Rife with such debates, questions of accessibility and
applicability, of theory and practice, and of ‘possibility’ and ‘impossibility’
were raised as key concerns by the keynote speakers of this event as they
considered ‘where next for Women’s Studies?’
The ‘habitus’ of
Women’s Studies in the academy
In her opening address, Ros Ballaster (University of Oxford), a
member of the original organising committee for the M.St in Women’s Studies,
discussed the origins of the course, the experience of institutionalisation and
the place of Women’s Studies in the ‘field’ of the academy.[3]
Attesting to the transgressive origins of the programme, Ballaster discussed
the aims of pedagogic innovation and the concerns, felt by many feminists,
about teaching in a top-down way (Ballaster,
2015). Students on the M.St course have seen this innovation play out
through interdisciplinarity, as it does not have an institutionalised
department and has some element of ‘freedom’ in being able to operate across
departments, including English Literature, Modern Languages, History and
Philosophy.
Drawing attention to the inherent structures and ideas that
inform behaviours, Ballaster employed the notion of ‘habitus’, as coined by the French
sociologist Pierre Bourdieu, and suggested that the
institutionalisation of Women’s Studies should be regarded as a work of social practice and not just an ‘act
of ideas’. As students on the course, we also experienced the attempts to
challenge the ‘top-down’ student-teacher hierarchies. Our feminist theory and
methodology seminars, for example, were collaborative and offered time to
discuss our own experiences and knowledges outside of and in relation to the
set texts.
As Ballaster went onto explain, an
interdisciplinary seminar series preceded the establishment of the degree
programme, which was principally a network that sought to foster ‘private,
capillary interactions’ across disciplines (Ballaster, 2015). This group, Ballaster recalled with amusement,
called themselves the ‘Committee of Women’s Studies’, a self-designated
identity not recognised or constituted by the university. In addition to
identity-building, the institutionalisation of Women’s Studies had
administrative and more practical consequences. Indeed, the driving force behind
the Women’s Studies course was the aim to form a ‘visible’ and recognised structure that would enhance existing
interactions between staff at Oxford. The institution of the course was, therefore,
an aspiration based upon both identity and practicality. As Ballaster reflects,
it was designed to provide a ‘habitus’
for researchers working on Women’s Studies, ‘a space to live, behave and
interact within the field of the institution we were all employed by, within
our own disciplines’ (Ballaster, 2015).
Women’s Studies at Oxford was thus
poised to act differently to
other disciplines from its inception. Through institutionalisation, Women’s
Studies is positioned among the hierarchies and politics of the academy that
often act counter to the field’s vision of education. In confronting the
multiple epistemological and pedagogical challenges Women’s Studies faces as a
‘discipline’, Ballaster also addressed the ‘productive tension’ between
teaching and learning in Women’s Studies that is ‘always under investigation in
a politically self-conscious programme of study’ (Ballaster, 2015). This political self-consciousness has been used
by those both ‘inside’ and ‘outside’ the field of Women’s Studies to question
its longevity, its relevance and ‘possibility’ as both an academic and activist
project.
Women’s Studies as an
inclusive practice
‘It is easier to fight in the terrain
of theory because it’s never tested in the crucible of practice’. (Collins, 2015)[4]
Patricia Hill Collins (University of Maryland), in another keynote address at ‘Teaching to Transgress’, challenged the
disconnect between the study of women’s lived experience and the study of
feminist theory. With reference to her field of Black Feminism in the US, she
drew attention to the removal of women’s lived experience and the tendency of
scholars to retreat into the arguably ‘safe’ terrain of feminist theory. By
reminding us of the very real, and even ‘potential’ implications and
applications of our work in Women’s Studies, including everyday priorities of work,
family, education and health, Hill Collins encouraged the participants to
readdress the relationship between the academic and the activist, the theorist
and the practician, the political and the intellectual (Hill Collins, 2015). This includes showing an awareness about how
our academic practice can be exclusive.
Writing of concerns surrounding
‘exclusive knowledge’ in Women’s Studies, Eloise Buker claims that there is a
‘structural contradiction between our claim to expertise and our vision of
inclusion’ (Buker, 2003: 87).
If this is the case, it is important for us, as students and practitioners of
Women’s Studies, to question how we might resist traditional academic
hierarchies, elitism and exclusivity in feminist knowledge-building, whilst
also ensuring that the academy respects and values our scholarship. As Hill
Collins argued in her paper, we must ask ourselves how contemporary feminist
academia ‘speaks’ to contemporary women and, perhaps more importantly, how they
may also ‘speak to it’. While we can maintain inclusion and interdisciplinarity
within the academy, fostering a relationship with feminist knowledge outside
the academy is just as, if not more, important. She concludes that this
involves ‘reflexivities on our truths that we often carry through uncritically’
(Hill Collins, 2015). Feminist
scholars, in other words, must resist the belief that we are holders of
‘superior’ knowledge because we claim the feminist canon. We must not be
complacent; we consider ourselves self-critical and socially conscious, but
resting on the radical roots of the field can contribute to exclusivity.
This is particularly true when
feminism, both academically and politically, is so often dominated by
privileged women who even co-opt theories developed by marginalised women. The
work of Women of Colour (WoC)[5], working-class
women, as well as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and other women with
marginalised gender identities and sexual orientations, underpins much of the
radical scholarship by which we, as Women’s Studies scholars, are influenced
and seek to advance.[6]
Recognising, valuing and supporting work by marginalised and underrepresented
women is critical for progressive, radical and critical academic practice.
In her conference paper on the current
position of Black Feminism in the US, Hill Collins warned against the
‘symbolic’ inclusion of a field of study made ‘respectable’. This
‘respectability’, which is often a product of institutionalisation, she argued,
often comes at the expense of the inclusion of ‘real people’; it ‘disappears
the group’ behind the field, placing it at the service of other paradigms (Hill Collins, 2015). This is a concern
similarly expressed by Robyn Wiegman (Professor Literature and Women’s Studies
at Duke University) in her work on the possibility of Women’s Studies. She
argues that the move away from community-based knowledges to academic
institutionalisation poses a challenge for feminist theory, as it becomes
‘hegemonic’ at the expense of embracing their varieties (Wiegman 2001: 514–518). If practitioners of Women’s Studies do not
address the production and gatekeeping of a kind of ‘exclusive’ feminist
knowledge, we ourselves run the risk of ‘disappearing the group’ (already a
danger, as Hill Collins warned, in institutionalisation) and, therefore,
‘disappearing’ the politics underpinning Women’s Studies’ social relevance.
Women’s Studies is political and
intellectual, theoretical and practical, and this is not something from which we
should seek to distance ourselves. One practical purpose of the discipline is
to inform and interact with mass ‘popular’ feminism. In recent years, Sheryl
Sandberg’s book Lean In (2013) has
received much public attention for its promotion of women in work and
leadership, propagating what could be identified as ‘trickle-down’ feminist
politics, rooted in a discourse of ‘equality’ (Sandberg, 2013). Critiquing Lean
In’s neoliberal or ‘faux’ feminist stance, the feminist intellectual and
activist hooks identifies ‘an academic sub-culture’—perhaps something of an
‘echo chamber’—as the ‘primary audience’ for the work of those ‘who have
devoted lifetimes to teaching and writing theory’ (hooks, 2013).
In this vein, Women’s Studies faces a
challenge in responding to what Angela McRobbie (Professor of Communications,
Goldsmiths, University of London) calls the ‘instrumentalising of feminism’:
elements of feminism have been […]
absolutely incorporated into political and institutional life. Drawing on a
vocabulary that includes words like ‘empowerment’ and ‘choice,’ these elements
are then converted into a much more individualistic discourse and they are
deployed in this new guise […] as a kind of substitute for feminism. (McRobbie 2009: 1)
In the context of Sandberg’s success,
hooks identifies the concern that campaigns and ‘movements’, such as Lean In, do not turn to ‘primary
sources’ (i.e. feminist theorists) to broaden understanding. The result of this
missed resource for Lean In includes
a simplistic notion that feminism is about gaining ‘equal’ rights with men,
simple categories (men and women) that have long been challenged by feminist
thinkers. This is particularly relevant for black women and WoC who pioneer the
study of intersectional identities and oppression structures (hooks, 2013). Instead of distancing
ourselves from public discourse and practices of feminism, feminist scholars
must engage more openly and more critically with diverse platforms,
particularly social media, and in language that invites inclusion. As
researchers, we have far more to gain by reaching across the perceived divide
between academic and ‘popular’ feminism than we do by raising ourselves up as
‘superior’ holders of feminist knowledge, hiding in the academy or shying away
in fear of being deemed ‘irrelevant’.
In Oxford, the relationship between
activism and academia is explored by students and staff.[7] Passing
on her own experience of academia and activism, Dr Dana Mills (Women’s Studies
2014/15 mentor, Lecturer in Politics, Hertford College, University of Oxford)
dedicated time to organising seminars with activists. This included a session
with Ghada Rasheed from Women for Refugee Women, who encouraged participants to
join in the ‘Shut Down Yarls Wood’ anti-detention action this year.[8] Members
of the cohort were also involved in extracurricular welfare and activist roles,
including taking on positions as college Women’s Officers and participating in
university liberation campaigns including the LGBT (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and
Transgender) and Women’s Campaign. Further examples include a student’s
participation in the research panel organised by the Female Genital Mutilation
NGO ‘28 Too Many’ with Oxford Lawyers without Borders, and others organising,
directing and acting in the documentary play Seven at Mansfield College, which tells the true stories of seven
activist women.[9]
Bridging the gap between feminist
academia and activism, a chasm that many academics and students already
traverse, needs to be a priority for Women’s Studies in Oxford and beyond. In
the 1980s, hooks called for Women’s Studies students to ‘go into communities
and discuss feminist issues door-to-door’ to ‘[bridge] the gap between their
educational experiences and the educational experiences of masses of women’.
The principle of seeking out the
‘group’ in unconventional and proactive ways can help the activist/academic
relationship, assist feminist movements and help Women’s Studies students to
grapple with the continued ‘issue of whether or not their intellectual and
scholarly pursuits are relevant to women as a collective group’ (hooks 1984: 109).
An impossible discipline?: the future of Women’s Studies
‘... and we enter a politics without
guarantees.’ (Stuart Hall, 1997: 4)
Writing about Women’s Studies at the
turn of the twenty-first century, Wiegman declared that ‘academic feminism had
gone apocalyptic’. Yet this plaguing fear about the ‘failure of the future’ of
the discipline was not a sudden manifestation (Wiegman, 2005: 40). Indeed, from its fledgling years in the late
1960s, Women’s Studies has been hounded by a constant and anxious interrogation
of its purpose, relevancy and even the very ‘possibility’ of its study. Despite
the growth, however slow, of Women’s Studies programmes, networks and journals
in Europe, feminist academics such as Tania
Modleski (1991) amongst numerous
others, have persistently hailed the approaching worldwide demise of the
discipline.
As the bells of academia’s ivory
towers toll the death of Women’s Studies, our own anniversary celebrations did
not shun the difficult self-questioning that has dominated our discipline.
Indeed, questioning the need to ‘Call the whole thing off’, Laura Doan (University of Manchester) opened her keynote by declaring that an
anniversary offers us an important opportunity to critically reflect on our shortcomings.
They allow us ‘to pause,’ to contemplate and ‘to decide where the field will go
next’ (Doan, 2015).[10]
Twenty years of Women’s Studies
scholars at Oxford did not prevent us querying the sheer existence and
‘possibility’ of our subject. Might we follow Wendy Brown’s poststructuralist
critique of Women’s Studies as a ‘border control’ of gender? (Brown, 1997: 79–101) Does its
constitution of ‘the discursively-produced and ‘uncircumscribable “women”’ as
our object of study render our topic an incoherent ‘impossibility’? (Brown, 1997: 83) Or, as Bonnie
Zimmerman has suggested, might we champion the ‘possibility’ of Women’s Studies
to reassert the material reality of women’s lives and institutionalised
oppression, however diverse or ‘incoherent’? (Zimmerman, 2005:31–39)
These debates of possibility and
impossibility, of dualisms dividing our field, have troubled the global academy
to crisis point. This can largely be attributed to the fear of Women’s Studies’
‘relevancy’ when rooted within our discipline’s very nomenclature. Widespread
post-structuralist object-knowledge critiques, for example, have called for a
non-unified, non-object-based discipline. Academic perceptions of Women’s
Studies have stayed true to this and remain largely embedded in the monolithic
essentialisms and whitewashing of its radical feminist beginnings. However, in
the process, Women’s Studies, has undergone a profound mutation, often becoming
a tacked-on suffix or superseded altogether—‘Women’s Studies’ has become
‘Gender Studies’.[11]
Yet one might ask, ‘what’s in a
name?’ And indeed, for many, Gender Studies has largely represented Women’s
Studies by any other name. While the monetary resources for feminist
scholarship and networks remain scarce and largely un-institutionalised, the
broader scope of Gender Studies (perceived as ‘non-restricted’ and less of a
‘minority group interest’) has constituted a practical means of securing the
financial future of Women’s Studies within the academy. However, in expanding
its purview, Gender Studies vitally represents the displacement of feminism and
women from the core of our work.[12] In this
fundamental sense, the material reasoning governing the explicit engagement
with women, whose omission from scholarship and teaching prompted the formation
of Women's Studies, is ignored. Overlooking the totalising nature of patriarchy
and the constraints placed upon women’s collective academic as well as social
action, the turn to Gender Studies risks the loss of women once more as ‘a
contested, visible and complex category of analysis’ (Yee, 1997: 56). This turn omits a study that strives to validate
the existence of women as a group within a patriarchal society and guarantees
their presence within the academy as staff, student and subject.
Christina Crosby is apt to suggest
that ‘dealing with the fact of difference is the project of Women’s Studies today’ (Crosby, 1992: 131). The likes of Wendy Brown may critique Women’s
Studies as a striving for ‘coherence’, hailing the need for Gender Studies.
Yet, as we have seen, it is a field that has consistently been one of
contestation: of possibility and impossibility, of fluidity, instability and
diversity. Despite the essentialist theories of our history, Women’s Studies,
like feminist thought, is one in which the mutating multiplicity of
designations of ‘woman’, ‘femininity’ and ‘gender’ are interrogated in tandem
with the multifarious oppressions which constitute the female experience. As
Zimmerman aptly notes, the ‘woman’ for whom Women’s Studies presumes to study
‘has always been conjectural, unfixed, slippery and contested’ (Zimmerman, 2005: 34). Thus, what is
ultimately at stake is the loss of the specific consideration of the lived
category of ‘woman’ in all her contradictions and incompleteness.
Writing on the institutionalisation
of deconstructive ideologies, Barbara Johnson notes that ‘any discourse that is
based on the questioning of boundary lines must never stop questioning its own’
(Johnson, 1989: 13). Seeking to understand
and ultimately deconstruct the boundary walls of the male/female hierarchy and,
in turn, the institution of new fields of knowledge, Women’s Studies is not
immune to the need for such self-questioning. The debates of possibility versus
impossibility, of materialist versus discursive and of Women’s Studies versus
Gender Studies that have hounded our discipline from its very outset have
persistently constructed, deconstructed, debated, challenged and revised its
very underpinnings. At once possible and impossible, Women’s Studies has never
represented a stable or fixed location.
Opening the M.St core course with a
consideration of the debates of possibility and impossibility, it is clear that
Women’s Studies as we know it, has embraced its polarisation. We have not been
debilitated by division, as debate has brought with it strength and relevance.
This is not limited to America and Europe, but is experienced in the
development of Women’s Studies globally. From their survey of Women’s
institutions, courses and academics across Tamil Nadu in India, Anandhi S and
Padmini Swaminathan observe a ‘palpable anxiety to be “relevant”’, which they
claim is partially responsible for the shift from ‘Women’ to ‘Gender’ Studies
particularly at the postgraduate level. In 2006, they noted the ‘failure’ of the
founders of the discipline to ‘achieve the kinds of intellectual and political
changes promised’. Further linking the field to social development and justice,
the Mother Teresa Women’s University specifically states the necessity for
research projects to be ‘relevant to the needs of the times and [to] respond
meaningfully to the demands of national development’ (Anandhi S and Swaminathan, 2006: 4450).
Conclusion
We can see that Women’s Studies is considered, often even by those who
practice it, as different from other ‘disciplines’ or modes of inquiry.
Researchers expect our work to contribute towards social change and frequently
question why we are studying Women’s Studies. This, however, is not a sign of
instability, decline or failure. In fact, considering Women’s Studies’
commitment to challenging modes of knowing and valuing ‘reflexivities on our
truths’, such critique and self-critique is a sign of success, of evolution and
of growth.
Women’s Studies has the potential to
be transformative in academia and beyond. This potential, however, is defused
when we try to ‘assimilate Women’s Studies to conventional academic parameters’
(May, 2002: 144). Our
relationship with the political, with activism, with feminism, cannot be
compromised and certainly requires greater attention. One thing we may ask
ourselves is what activism and social justice movements need from Women’s
Studies and other emancipatory fields of inquiry. What do they need from us
and, crucially, can we provide it?
The feminist knowledge that we use,
build and analyse must not be exclusive; it is based on the experience and
contribution of women across history, races, ethnicities, nationalities,
cultures, sexualities, abilities, complex gender identities, class and
religions. These are the experiences with which we are aspiring to talk:
complex, experiential knowledge that must be prioritised and amplified. In an
age when some of the most radical, progressive and powerful feminist theory is
being constructed and disseminated online and ‘outside’ institutionalised
Women’s Studies, we must listen.
We need not be threatened by the
possible/impossible, theory/practice, intellectual/political dichotomies that
have emerged over the past twenty years and been given so much attention.
Indeed, they have necessarily challenged the field and brought about productive
discussions as to how it can continue to develop and evolve. As Doan argued at
the ‘Teaching to Transgress’
conference, ‘we are a field posed to ‘exploit rather than succumb to the
edgy-ness of the impossibility and possibility debate’ (Doan, 2015). As the discussions emerging from the conference
showed, such a mantra can serve us well in an evolving field of study and aid
us in resisting complacency.
Acknowledgements
‘Teaching to Transgress’: Twenty Years of Women’s Studies at
Oxford was
generously sponsored by ‘Women in the Humanities’ (WiH), a programme for
interdisciplinary humanities scholarship on women, within The Oxford Research
Centre in the Humanities (TORCH). In addition to financial assistance, WiH also
provided us with guidance and support. We are also grateful for the
contributions made by Mansfield College, Kellogg College, the Philosophy
Faculty, the Board for the M.St in Women’s Studies, Rhodes Project, Oxford University
Students Union (OUSU), Somerville College, St Peter’s College and Wadham
College, as well as our keynote and student speakers. Whilst organising a
conference alongside our master’s studies was a challenge, the interest
garnered during this experience demonstrated how relevant the field remains and
the varied scope of engagement across disciplines and the activist/academic
divide. We are especially thankful for the immense support of Dr Dana Mills,
the mentor for the M.St Women’s Studies 2014/15 and to the whole of the M.St
Women’s Studies 2014/15 cohort for a year of friendship, feminism, solidarity
and intellectual growth.
Links to further
resources from the event
About Women in the Humanities (WiH)
Women in the Humanities (WiH) is the
UK’s major forum for interdisciplinary humanities scholarship on women.
Established in 2013, and supported by The Oxford Research Centre in the
Humanities (TORCH), WiH is bringing together scholars from across humanities
disciplines to develop new approaches to women’s equality. It has four aims:
Since 2013, WiH has inaugurated and
supported cross-disciplinary research into all aspects of women’s lives,
identities and representations through a programme of events open to academics,
students and the public. Thanks to the generosity of an external donor, WiH has
also been able to offer a number of funding opportunities for women in the
humanities at Oxford to develop research ideas, write up research, hold events
and conferences and develop teaching on women in the humanities.
WiH is co-directed by Professor Senia
Paseta (History) and Professor Selina Todd (History). They are assisted by an
advisory board and steering committee comprised of members in a range of
disciplines at the University.
Further details and information about
the work of WiH can be found on The Oxford Research Centre for the Humanities
(TORCH) website: http://torch.ox.ac.uk/womenandhumanities
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Dualisms: Some Thoughts about the Future of Women’s Studies’ in Kennedy, E. and
Beins, A., Women's Studies for the
Future: Foundations, Interrogations, Politics, Piscataway, NJ: Rutgers
University Press, 31–39
To cite this article:
De Val & Watson (2015). ‘This is education as the
practice of freedom’: Twenty Years of Women’s Studies at the University of
Oxford, Exchanges: the Warwick Research
Journal, 3(1), 112–127. Retrieved from: http://exchanges.warwick.ac.uk/index.php/exchanges/article/view/81
[1] bell hooks’s
writings cover gender, race, teaching, education and media, emphasising the
connections with systems of oppression. hooks is the author of pioneering works
such as Ain’t I a Woman?: Black Women and
Feminism (1981), Feminist Theory: From Margin to Centre
(1984) and Writing Beyond Race: Living
Theory and Practice (2013), and
remains a leading public intellectual in feminist and educational studies.
[2] The M.St in Women’s Studies was founded in 1995 by an
interdisciplinary group of Oxford academics.
[3] R. Ballaster (2015), ‘Mastering Women’s Studies?
Habitus and Hazards’, paper presented at ‘Teaching
to Transgress’: Twenty Years of Women’s Studies at Oxford conference,
Oxford, 23 May 2015. Cited as (Ballaster,
2015).
[4] P. Hill Collins (2015), ‘Still Brave? U.S. Black
Feminism as a Social Justice Project’, paper presented at ‘Teaching to Transgress’: Twenty Years of Women’s Studies at Oxford
conference, Oxford, 23 May 2015. Cited as (Hill
Collins, 2015).
[5] WoC was coined in 1977 by the Black Women’s Agenda at
the National Women’s Conference, Houston, Texas. The term is one of solidarity
in the USA and other nations with a dominating white population.
[6] A key example of this, is black legal scholar Kimberlé Crenshaw’s (1993) analytical
concept of ‘intersectionality’ in ‘Mapping the Margins’. Intersectionality is a
feminist sociological theory that centres on analysing how oppressions
intersect and has become the cornerstone for contemporary feminism. Crenshaw’s
role in advancing this theory, however, is often forgotten, misrepresented or
undermined.
[7] The ‘Rhodes Must Fall in Oxford’ movement (co-founded
by law student Ntokozo Qwabe), for example, began this year to decolonise the
space, the curriculum, and the institutional memory within Oxford in connection
with fighting intersectional oppression (A.
Rhoden-Paul, 2015).
[8] See Guardian article
‘Hundreds protest to demand closure of Yarl’s Wood immigration centre’ (M. Townsend, 2015).
[9] See Seven: A
Documentary Play: http://seventheplay.com/.
[10] L. Doan (2015), ‘The Impossibility/Possibility Debate:
Let’s Call the Whole Thing Off’, paper presented at ‘Teaching to Transgress’: Twenty Years of Women’s Studies at Oxford
conference, Oxford, 23 May 2015. Cited as (Doan,
2015).
[11] Examples of this name change are legion, particularly
in the USA. Equally, colleges such as Amherst (Massachusetts) have, in recent
years, affixed ‘Sexuality’ and ‘Gender Studies’ to their Women’s Studies
programmes. Established in the 1970s, Amherst’s Women’s Studies programme is
one of the oldest in the USA.
[12] As Zimmerman writes: ‘There is no Women’s Studies
without feminism […] Feminism is what turns the study of women into Women’s
Studies. Gender studies might or might not be feminist […] but Women’s Studies
must be feminist or it is not Women’s Studies’ (Zimmerman, 2005: 37).