Publication | Closed Access
Psychology Reconstructs The Female: 1968–1988
185
Citations
58
References
1989
Year
EducationQueer TheoryFeminist InquiryPsychologySocial SciencesExceptional WomenGender IdentityGender StudiesFeminist KnowledgeSeveral Intellectual FrameworksWomen StudiesHistory Of PsychologyFeminist ScholarshipGendered ContextFeminist ScienceFeminist TheoryFeminist MethodologiesFeminist PhilosophyMasculinity StudiesCo-existing FrameworksSexuality StudiesGender DevelopmentSociologySystems Of PsychologyFeminist MethodWomen's Health
Recent work on the psychology of gender is pluralistic, stemming from varied specialty areas within psychology, grounded in several intellectual frameworks, and reflecting a spectrum of feminist perspectives. This article is a critical appraisal of diverse approaches to the study of women and gender. It first describes prefeminist or “womanless” psychology, then analyzes four co-existing frameworks that have generated recent research. The four frameworks are: Exceptional Women, in which empirical research focuses on the correlates of high achievement for women, and women's history in the discipline is re-evaluated; Women as Problem (or Anomaly), in which research emphasizes explanations for female “deficiencies” (e.g., fear of success); the Psychology of Gender, in which the focus of inquiry shifts from women to gender, conceived as a principle of social organization that structures relations between women and men; and a (currently relatively undeveloped) Transformation framework that reflexively challenges the values, assumptions, and normative practices of the discipline. Examples of research programs within each approach are described, and the strengths and limitations of each approach are critically examined.
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