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One of the major areas of growth in women's studies is the history of women that is part of these rich resources. These books are attempts to rewrite the history of women and bring new ways of approaching the subject. They include histories of women as subjects and not just as specimens; histories of the situating of women in specific occupations, professions, and levels of society; histories of the life of women; histories of women writers and artists; and much more. But the impulse to write such a book derives in part from the sense, and apprehension, that history has been written from a male perspective, that much of the focus has been on certain aspects of history in order to omit or minimize other important aspects of social life. Until recently, most historians and even some feminist historians have assumed that men and women formed a dichotomy. Women were victimized or oppressed by men and struggled to gain equality or parity. Academic women's studies programs, however, have long taught that women were not victims but that they were active agents in their own history.
Such thinking takes one step further by adding to that dichotomy a third class: men of color. However, as historians gradually began to study these issues, they came to realize that the traditional definitions of the roles of men or white men and women or white women were too simplistic to study the various ways in which persons of color have shaped both the history of white women and white men. Consequently, we now ask who is included in the category of women? Who has been left out? Why women? What are the issues of the other group? What are the different roles and experiences of white and nonwhite women? What are the processes of change in the history of white and nonwhite women? Why have Nellie Bly and Virginia Woolf shattered stereotypes? Are books? What has yet to be written about the second wave of feminism? Are books? Why do some women focus on how men dominated the relationships between the sexes while other women study men's exploitation of women? What other factors are shaping the women's history movement? Many of these questions have been raised by the new scholarship about women. d2c66b5586