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Contact:
Jeffrey Masten
Director of Gender studies, Associate Professor of English
1880 Campus Dr., Room 2-360
Evanston, IL 60208-2211
e-mail: j-masten@northwestern.edu
phone: 847-491-5871
Program Description
The Interdisciplinary Program in Gender Studies at Northwestern brings together a dynamic cluster of faculty and graduate students conducting research in the history and theory of gender, in feminism, and in sexuality studies, from a variety of disciplinary and interdisciplinary perspectives—including but not limited to anthropology, African American studies, art history, history, law, linguistics, literatures and languages, music, radio/television/film, performance studies, philosophy, political science, and sociology. Seeking students with strong credentials and exceptional scholarly promise from any of these related areas of study, the Program trains doctoral students in core concepts of gender and sexuality studies, while also guiding students to develop strong individual programs that situate gender and sexuality at the center of their interdisciplinary scholarship.
Scholarly work in the history, literature, performance, psychology, sociology, and theory of gender and sexuality (to name a few of the central areas) is now an integral part of most humanities and social science disciplines. In addition, new interdisciplinary exchange has been made possible by the focus on gender and sexuality and the emergence of a body of feminist, gender, and queer theory linking and bridging work in the disciplines (some examples would be work that moves across history and various literatures, between anthropology and performance studies, or between political theory and philosophy). Students trained in Northwestern’s doctoral cluster program are uniquely qualified for positions in women’s studies, gender studies, and sexuality studies departments and programs, as well as in the growing number of traditional disciplines and departments seeking candidates whose research engages with questions of gender and/or sexuality and who have the ability to teach courses in these areas
Over the past several decades, the study of gender and, more recently, sexuality has grown to engage with and encompass work in an increasingly wide range of fields in the humanities and social sciences. Built on the strong foundations of over twenty years of Women’s Studies scholarship, this work has raised crucial questions about the ways in which perceived differences between the sexes manifest themselves in the differential status of women and men, and has initiated path-breaking inquiries into our understanding of gender as socially and culturally constituted knowledge about sexual difference. Further, this scholarly work has expanded more recently to include the study of masculinities, the history and theory of sexuality (as a category intersecting with but distinct from “gender”), the intersections with racial, ethnic, and national identities, and the exploration of issues of identity and sexual politics in ways that do not assume categories largely taken for granted in the modern Western world.
Students interested in pursuing a PhD in African-American Studies, Art History, Communication Studies, Comparative Literary Studies, English, French and Italian, German Literature and Critical Thought, History, Music, Performance Studies, Philosophy, Political Science, Religion, Slavic Languages and Literatures, Sociology, and Theatre and Drama are encouraged to find a second intellectual “home” in this interdisciplinary cluster.
Program Faculty
| Administration: |
Jeffrey Masten (Director) |
| Participating Faculty: |
Linda Austern (Music), Nicola Beisel (Sociology), Martha Biondi (African-American Studies), Cynthia Bowman (Gender Studies; Law School), Jennifer Brody (English; Performance Studies), Peter Carroll (History), Clare Cavanaugh (Gender Studies; Slavic Languages and Literatures); Michelle Citron (Radio/Television/Film), S. Hollis Clayson (Art History), Penelope Deutscher (Philosophy), Micaela di Leonardo (Gender Studies; Anthropology), Andrea Dunaif (Feinberg School of Medicine), Alice Eagly (Psychology), Jillana Enteen (English; Gender Studies), Lane Fenrich (History), Bernadette Fort (French and Italian), Christine Froula (English; Comparative Literary Studies), Karen Hansen (Anthropology), Laura Hein (History), Bonnie Honig (Political Science), E. Patrick Johnson (Performance Studies), Laura Kipnis (Radio/Television/Film), Charles Kleinhans (Radio/Television/Film), Christopher Lane (English), Phyllis Lassner (Writing Program), Jules Law (English), Susan A.Lee (Dance; Performance Studies), Hilarie Lieb (Economics), Marika Lindholm (Sociology), Tessie P. Liu (Gender Studies; History), Dwight McBride (African-American Studies; English), Nancy MacLean (History), Susan A. Manning (English; Theatre), Jeffrey Masten (Gender Studies; English), Sarah C. Maza (History), Barbara Newman (English), Ann Orloff (Sociology), Alexandra Owen (Gender Studies; History), Frances Freeman Paden (Gender Studies; Writing Program), Renee Redd (Women’s Center), Sandra L. Richards (Theatre;African-American Studies), Mireille Rosello (French and Italian), Monica Russel y Rodriguez (Anthropology), Helen Schwartzman (Anthropology), Michael Sherry (History), Carol Simpson Stern (Performance Studies), Kearsley Stewart (Anthropology), Helen Thompson (English), Wendy Wall (English), Gregory Ward (Linguistics), Mary Weismantel (Anthropology; Latin American and Caribbean Studies), Mimi White (Radio/Television/Film), Jane Winston (French and Italian), Ellen Wright (Writing Program), Ji-Yeon Yuh (History), Fariba Zarinebaf (History), Linda Zerilli (Political Science) |
Last updated: Jul 10 2007 9:31AM
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