According to the Lerner article, what time period did women’s history emerge as a professional field of study? According to the study of the Lerner article 1975 to 1980 is when women’s history emerged as a professional field of study. The second wave from 1981 to 1987 truly pushed the women’s movement to what it has become today. What are some specific reasons for this emergence? The emergence happened first 1970 to 1975 but only by those who did not actually specialized in women’s studies. Only 21 books were published then and none of the authors were in the field of women’s study. In 1975 to 1980 thirty-six books were published but not even those books were not published by actual women with facts because the women were still mentored by men. This circumstance brought …show more content…
That truly brought the attention to this subject which it so deserved. As the community started asking more questions the second wave of books grew tremendously since many questions were broken down and answered in many different books. This domino effect truly helped kick start the curiosity in everyone to continue to research on women’s history. What are some reasons women’s history was under-examined to this point? Do not limit yourself just to what you read in the article - your own thoughts on this are welcome! I think that women’s history was under-examined to this point because women were just not seen the same as men. Men were the head of the household and basically treated women like they just belonged to them. I know I am generalizing but women did not get their rights until much later in life. Men were able to do whatever they wanted or pleased, while women were held to a