Sociólogas pioneiras e a sociedade sociológica americana: padrões de exclusão e de participação
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18046/recs.i10.1362Palavras-chave:
História da sociologia, Sociedade Sociológica Americana, Escola de Chicago, mulheres sociólogasResumo
A sociologia americana está em dívida com as primeiras mulheres profissionais. Embora discriminadas como colegas, elas contribuíram ao pensamento sociológico e fizeram parte de atividades profissionais. A evidência, tanto das limitações como das oportunidades que as primeiras mulheres líderes tiveram, jaz nos registros dos primeiros anos de fundação da Sociedade Sociológica Americana (ASA); por exemplo, entre 1906 e 1931. A análise desta informação, bem como de documentos pessoais de sociólogos que trabalharam durante este período, revela que as mulheres participaram em uma faixa restrita de especialidade, frequentemente associada a funções tradicionais de gênero. Jane Addams foi uma figura importante durante os primeiros anos, e uma líder dentro da separada, e mais institucionalmente limitada, rede de mulheres sociólogas.
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