This bibliography is number 34 of the series "WISCONSIN BIBLIOGRAPHIES IN WOMEN'S STUDIES" published by the University of Wisconsin System Women's Studies Librarian, 430 Memorial Library, 728 State Street, Madison, WI 53706; email WISWSL@MACC.WISC.EDU. It was originally compiled and updated by Susan E. Searing. Since 1992 it has been updated periodically by Phyllis Holman Weisbard. WOMEN AND SCIENCE: ISSUES AND RESOURCES Part I: A Selective Reading List This bibliography emphasizes books and special journal issues that present a feminist critique of scientific theory and practice in the past and present. Wherever possible, the contents of special issues and anthologies are listed. The bibliography also cites some key journal articles, several representative biographies, reports of model courses or curricula, and works about the lives and status of women scientists. Omitted are occupational guidance materials and curricula for the K-12 classroom. For further research guidance, consult the reference sources highlighted in Part II. Abir-Am, Penina G., and Dorinda Outram, eds. UNEASY CAREERS AND INTIMATE LIVES: WOMEN IN SCIENCE, 1787-1979. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1987. Contents: Before Objectivity: Wives, Patronage, and Cultural Reproduction in Early Nineteenth-Century French Science (Dorinda Outram); Botany in the Breakfast Room: Women and Early Nineteenth-Century British Plant Study (Ann B. Shteir); The Many Faces of Intimacy: Professional Options and Personal Choices Among Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Women Physicians (Regina M. Morantz-Sanchez); Field Work and Family: North American Women Ornithologists, 1900-1950 (Marianne Gosztonyi Ainley); Nineteenth-Century American Women Botanists: Wives, Widows, and Work (Nancy G. Slack); Marital Collaboration: An Approach to Science (Marilyn Bailey Ogilvie); Maria Mitchell and the Advancement of Women in Science (Sally Gregory Kohlstedt); "Strangers to Each Other": Male and Female Relationships in the Life and Work of Clemence Royer (Joy Harvey); Career and Home Life in the 1880s: The Choices of Mathematician Sofia Kovalevskaia (Ann Hibner Koblitz); Marie Curie's "Anti-natural Path": Time Only for Science and Family (Helena M. Pycior); Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin: Astronomy in the Family (Peggy A. Kidwell); Synergy or Clash: Disciplinary and Marital Strategies in the Career of Mathematical Biologist Dorothy Wrinch (Penina G. Abir-Am). Ainley, Marianne Gosztonyi, ed. DESPITE THE ODDS: ESSAYS ON CANADIAN WOMEN AND SCIENCE. Montreal: Vehicule Press, 1990. Contents: Last in the Field? Canadian Women Natural Scientists, 1815-1965 (Marianne Gosztonyi Ainley); The Public Record: An Analysis of Women's Contributions to Canadian Science and Technology Before the First World War (Clara M. Chu & Bertrum H. MacDonald); Carrie Derick (1862- 1941) and the Chair of Botany at McGill (Margaret Gillett); Women and Photography in Ontario, 1839-1929: A Case Study of the Interaction of Gender and Technology (Diana Pedersen & Martha Phemister); The Ontario Medical College for Women, 1883-1906: Lessons from Gender-Separatism in Medical Education (Lykke de la Cour & Rose Sheinin); Women in Ontario Pharmacy, 1867-1927 (E.W. Stieb, Gail C. Coulas & Joyce A. Ferguson); Women in Advertising: The Role of Canadian Women in the Promotion of Domestic Electrical Technology in the Interwar Period (Dianne Dodd); Women Sociologists in Canada: The Careers of Helen MacGill Hughes, Aileen Dansken Ross, and Jean Robertson Burnet (Susan Hoecker-Drysdale); The Heart of the Matter: Maude E. Abbott, M.D., 1869-1940 (Margaret Gillett); Harriet Brooks, 1876- 1933: Canada's First Woman Nuclear Physicist (M.F. Rayner- Canham & G.W. Rayner-Canham); Alice Wilson, 1881-1964: Explorer of the Earth Beneath Her Feet (Barbara Meadowcroft); Isabella Preston, 1881-1964: An Explorer of the Horticultural Frontier (Edwinna von Baeyer); Margaret Newton: Distinguished Canadian Scientist (Ralph H. Estey); Cypra Cecilia Krieger and the Human Side of Mathematics (Kailash K. Anand); Getting a Job Done and Doing It Well: Dr. Blossom Wigdor, Psychologist and Gerontologist (Janice Beaveridge); On Being a Woman and Studying Math (Louise LaFortune); Adolescent Females and Computers: Real and Perceived Barriers (Betty Collis); The Career Goals of Female Science Students in Canada (N. Nevitte, R. Gibbins & P.W. Codding); Women Inventors in Canada: Research and Intervention (Rachelle Sender Beauchamp & Susan A. McDaniel); Disadvantagement of Women by the Ordinary Processes of Science: The Case of Informal Collaborations (Joan Pinner Scott); Canadian Women and Careers in Chemistry (Margaret-Ann Armour); Women in Science--Are Conditions Improving? (Anne Innis Dagg); Feminist Research into Genetic Hazards in the Workplace (Karen Messing); Women and the Changing Faces of Science (Gillian Kranias); Selected Bibliography. Alic, Margaret. HYPATIA'S HERITAGE: A HISTORY OF WOMEN IN SCIENCE FROM ANTIQUITY TO THE LATE NINETEENTH CENTURY. Boston: Beacon Press, 1986. Allen, Nessy. "A Proposed Course on Women in Science in an Australian University." FEMINIST TEACHER 6, no.3 (Spring 1992): 40-44. Arditti, Rita, Pat Brennan, and Steve Cavrak, eds. SCIENCE AND LIBERATION. Boston: South End Press, 1980. Arditti, Rita, Renate Duelli-Klein, and Shelly Minden, eds. TEST-TUBE WOMEN: WHAT FUTURE FOR WOMANHOOD? London: Pandora Press, 1984. Arianrhod, Robyn. "Physics and Mathematics, Reality and Language: Dilemmas for Feminists." In THE KNOWLEDGE EXPLOSION: GENERATIONS OF FEMINIST SCHOLARSHIP, pp. 41-53. Ed. by Cheris Kramarae and Dale Spender. New York: Teachers College Press Athene Series, 1992. Arnold, Lois Barber. FOUR LIVES IN SCIENCE: WOMEN'S EDUCATION IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY. New York: Schocken Books, 1984. (Biographies of Maria Martin Bachman, Almira Hart Lincoln Phelps, Louisa C. Allen Gregory, and Florence Bascom.) Ayers-Nachamkin, Beverly. "A Feminist Approach to the Introductory Statistics Course." WOMEN'S STUDIES QUARTERLY 20 (Spring/Summer 1992): 86-94. Baldwin, Richard S. THE FUNGUS FIGHTERS: TWO WOMEN SCIENTISTS AND THEIR DISCOVERY. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1981. (Biographies of Elizabeth Hazen and Rachel Brown.) Barnes, Mary. "Mathematics: A Barrier for Women?" In CROSSING BOUNDARIES: FEMINISMS AND THE CRITIQUE OF KNOWLEDGES, pp. 28-42. Ed. by Barbara Caine, E.A. Grosz, and Marie de Lepervanche. Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 1988. Baum, Joan. THE CALCULATING PASSION OF ADA BYRON. Hamden, CT: Archon Books/Shoe String Press, 1986. Bazler, Judith A. "Gender Equity in Science Textbooks." PROTEUS 10, no.2 (Fall 1993): 39-42. Bell, Susan E. "Translating Science to the People: Updating THE NEW OUR BODIES, OURSELVES." WOMEN'S STUDIES INTERNATIONAL FORUM 17, no.1 (1994): 9-18. Benderly, Beryl Lieff. THE MYTH OF TWO MINDS: WHAT GENDERS MEANS AND DOESN'T MEAN. New York: Doubleday, 1987. Benjamin, Marina, ed. SCIENCE AND SENSIBILITY: GENDER AND SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY. Cambridge, MA: Basil Blackwell, 1991. Bentson, Margaret. "Feminism and the Critique of Scientific Method." In FEMINISM: FROM PRESSURE TO POLITICS. Ed. by Angela Miles and Geraldine Finn. Montreal: Black Rose Books, 1989. (First published under the title FEMINISM IN CANADA, 1982). Berryman, Sue. "Integrating the Sciences." NEW PERSPECTIVES 17 (Winter 1985): 16-22. Berryman, Sue E. WHO WILL DO SCIENCE? New York: Rockefeller Foundation, 1983. BIOLOGY AS DESTINY: SCIENTIFIC FACT OR SOCIAL BIAS? Cambridge, MA: Science for the People, 1984. Birke, Lynda. WOMEN, FEMINISM, AND BIOLOGY: THE FEMINIST CHALLENGE. New York: Methuen, 1986. Birke, Lynda, and Gail Vines. "Beyond Nature versus Nurture: Process and Biology in the Development of Gender." WOMEN'S STUDIES INTERNATIONAL FORUM 10 (1987): 555-570. Birke, Lynda. "Science, Feminism and Animal Natures I: Extending the Boundaries." WOMEN'S STUDIES INTERNATIONAL FORUM 14, no.5 (1991): 443-449. Birke, Lynda. "Science, Feminism and Animal Natures II: Feminist Critiques and the Place of Animals in Science." WOMEN'S STUDIES INTERNATIONAL FORUM 14, no.5 (1991): 451-458. Bleier, Ruth. "The Cultural Price of Social Exclusion: Gender and Science." NWSA JOURNAL 1 (Autumn 1988): 7-19. Bleier, Ruth. "A Decade of Feminist Critiques in the Natural Sciences." Ed. by Judith Walzer Leavitt and Linda Gordon. SIGNS 14 (Autumn 1988): 182-195. Bleier, Ruth, ed. FEMINIST APPROACHES TO SCIENCE. Elmsford, NY: Pergamon, 1986. Contents: Science Seen Through a Feminist Prism (Marion Namenwirth); Critiques of Modern Science: The Relationship of Feminism to Other Radical Epistemologies (Elizabeth Fee); Beyond Masculinist Realities: A Feminist Epistemology for the Sciences (Hilary Rose); Primatology is Politics by Other Means (Donna Haraway); Empathy, Polyandry, and the Myth of the Coy Female (Sarah Blaffer Hrdy); Sex Differences Research: Science or Belief? (Ruth Bleier); The Relationship Between Women's Studies and Women in Science (Sue V. Rosser); Taking Feminist Science to the Classroom: Where Do We Go From Here? (Mariamne H. Whatley); Further Readings on Feminism and Science [bibliography] (Susan E. Searing). Bleier, Ruth. "Science and Belief: A Polemic on Sex Differences Research." In THE IMPACT OF FEMINIST RESEARCH IN THE ACADEMY, pp. 111-130. Ed. by Christine Farnham. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1987. Bleier, Ruth. SCIENCE AND GENDER: A CRITIQUE OF BIOLOGY AND ITS THEORIES ON WOMEN. New York: Pergamon, 1984. Bleier, Ruth. "Social and Political Bias in Science: An Examination of Animal Studies and Their Generalizations to Human Behavior and Evolution." In GENES AND GENDER II, pp. 49-69. Ed. by Ruth Hubbard and Marian Lowe. New York: Gordian Press, 1979. Braidotti, Rosi, et al., eds. WOMEN, THE ENVIRONMENT AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: TOWARDS A THEORETICAL SYNTHESIS. London: Zed Books, in association with the United Nations International Research and Training Institute for the Admancement of Women, 1994. Especially chapter three "Feminist Critiques of Science": 29-58 and chapter four "The Relationship Between Women and Nature: Debates Within Feminism": 59-76. Brighton Women and Science Group. ALICE THROUGH THE MICROSCOPE: THE POWER OF SCIENCE OVER WOMEN'S LIVES. London: Virago, 1980. Briscoe, Anne M., and Sheila M. Pfafflin. "Expanding the Role of Women in the Sciences." ANNALS OF THE NEW YORK ACADEMY OF SCIENCES 323 (1979). Brush, Stephen G. "Women in Science and Engineering." AMERICAN SCIENTIST 79 (September/October 1991): 404-419. Burfoot, Annette. "Impediments to Feminist Acts in Science." RESOURCES FOR FEMINIST RESEARCH 16 (December 1987): 25-26. Byrne, Eileen M. WOMEN AND SCIENCE: THE SNARK SYNDROME. Washington, DC: The Falmer Press, 1993. Byrne, Eileen M., ed. WOMEN IN SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY IN AUSTRALIA. Philadelphia: Taylor & Francis, 1990. Byrne, Eileen M. WOMEN IN SCIENCE: THE SNARK SYNDROME. New York, London: Falmer Press, 1991. Cancian, Francesca M. "Feminist Science: Methodologies That Challenge Inequality." GENDER & SOCIETY 6, no.4 (December 1992): 623-642. Carter, Ruth, and Gill Kirkup. WOMEN IN ENGINEERING: A GOOD PLACE TO BE? London: Macmillan (distr. by New York University Press), 1990. "A Celebration of Women in Science" (cover story). DISCOVER 12 (December 1991): 8, 10-33+. Contents: From the Editor: Women in Science (Paul Hoffman); The Shape of Life [on Mimi Koehl] (Deborah Franklin); Intimate Enemies [on Flossie Wong-Staal] (Yvonne Baskin); Art for Science's Sake [on Donna Cox] (Tim Folger); The Forgotten Female [on Barbara Smuts] (Elisabeth Rosenthal); Star Spots [on Sallie Baliunas] (Sam Flamsteed); Flesh and Bone [on Adrienne Zihlman] (Ellen Ruppel Shell); Liberation Ecology [on Deborah Letourneau] (JoAnn C. Gutin); Striking a Nerve [on Avis Cohen] (Lori Oliwenstein); Wanted: Wayward Particles [on Helen Quinn] (Charles C. Mann); The Immune Challenge [on Philippa Marrack] (Mark Caldwell); Land of Bronze [on Aslihan Yener] (Thomas Bass). CHANGING AMERICA: THE NEW FACE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING. Washington: Task Force on Women, Minorities, and the Handicapped in Science and Technology, 1989. Chipman, Susan F., Lorelei R. Brush, and Donna M. Wilson. WOMEN AND MATHEMATICS: BALANCING THE EQUATION. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1985. CLIMBING THE LADDER: AN UPDATE ON THE STATUS OF DOCTORAL WOMEN SCIENTISTS AND ENGINEERS. By the Committee on the Education and Employment of Women in Science and Engineering, Office of Scientific and Engineering Personnel, National Research Council. Washington: National Academy Press, 1983. Cockburn, Cynthia. MACHINERY OF DOMINANCE: WOMEN, MEN, AND TECHNICAL KNOW-HOW. London: Pluto Press, 1985. Repr. Boston: Northeastern University Press, 1988. Cole, Jonathan R. FAIR SCIENCE: WOMEN IN THE SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY. New York: Free Press, 1979. Cole, Jonathan R., and H. Zuckerman. "Marriage, Motherhood, and Research Performance in Science." SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN 256 (February 1987): 119-125. Condron, Linda. "Women and Technology: Feminist Perspectives." BULLETIN OF SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, & SOCIETY 13, no.3 (1993): 139- 141. Contrucci, Joyce and Britta Fischer. "Women in a Technological World: An Interdisciplinary Course at Emmanuel College in Boston." BULLETIN OF SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY & SOCIETY 10, no.4 (1990): 191-195. Cowan, Ruth Schwartz. "From Virginia Dare to Virginia Slims: Women and Technology in American Life." TECHNOLOGY AND CULTURE 20 (1985): 51-63. Dagg, Anne Innis. HAREM AND OTHER HORRORS: SEXUAL BIAS IN BEHAVIOURAL BIOLOGY. Waterloo, Ontario: Otter Press, 1983. Dagg, Anne Innis and Rachelle Sender Beauchamp. "Is There a Feminist Science? Perceived Impact of Gender on Research by Women Scientists." ATLANTIS 16 (Spring 1991): 77-84. Davis, Barbara Gross. EVALUATING INTERVENTION PROGRAMS: APPLICATIONS FROM WOMEN'S PROGRAMS IN MATH AND SCIENCE. New York: Teachers College, Columbia University, 1985. Davis, Kathy. POWER UNDER THE MICROSCOPE. Dordrecht: Foris, 1988. De Marco, Rosanna, et al. "Feminist Critique: Searching for Meaning in Research." ANS, ADVANCES IN NURSING SCIENCE 16, no. 2 (1993): 26-38. Dix, Linda S., ed. WOMEN: THEIR UNDERREPRESENTATION AND CAREER DIFFERENTIALS IN SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING; PROCEEDINGS OF A WORKSHOP. Washington: National Research Council, Office of Scientific and Engineering Personnel, 1987. Donawerth, Jane. "Utopian Science: Contemporary Feminist Science Theory and Science Fiction by Women." NWSA JOURNAL 2 (Autumn 1990): 535-557. Dumais, Lucie. "Impact of the Participation of Women in Science: On Rethinking the Place of Women, Especially in Occupational Health." WOMEN & HEALTH 18, no.3 (1992): 11-25. Easlea, Brian. FATHERING THE UNTHINKABLE: MASCULINITY, SCIENTISTS, AND THE NUCLEAR ARMS RACE. London: Pluto Press, 1983. Easlea, Brian. SCIENCE AND SEXUAL OPPRESSION: PATRIARCHY'S CONFRONTATION WITH WOMAN AND NATURE. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1981. Eisenberg, Anne. "Women and the Discourse of Science." SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN 267 (July 1992): 122. Elia, Irene. THE FEMALE ANIMAL. New York: Holt, 1988. Faruqui, A.M., M.H.A. Hassan, and G. Sandri, eds. THE ROLE OF WOMEN IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY IN THE THIRD WORLD: Proceedings of the Conference Organized by the Canadian International Development Agency and the Third World Academy of Sciences, ICTP, held in Trieste, Italy, 3-7 October, 1988. Teaneck, NJ: World Scientific, 1991. Faulkner, Wendy, and Erik Arnold, eds. SMOTHERED BY INVENTION: TECHNOLOGY IN WOMEN'S LIVES. London: Pluto Press, 1985. Contents: Smothered by Invention: The Masculinity of Technology (Erik Arnold and Wendy Faulkner); The Exclusion of Women from Technology (Nuala Swords-Isherwood); Medical Technology and the Right to Heal (Wendy Faulkner); Managers and Labourers: Women's Attitudes to Reproductive Technology (Frances Evans); Who Controls Birth Control? (Elkie Newman); Housework and the Appliance of Science (Erik Arnold and Lesley Burr); Kitchen Technology and the Liberation of Women from Housework (Philip Bereano, Christine Bose, and Erik Arnold); The Green Revolution and Women's Work in the Third World (Ann Whitehead); Microelectronics and the Jobs Women Do (SPRU Women and Technology Studies); Word Processing: New Opportunities for Women Office Workers? (Elena Softley); Women and Computers (Anne Lloyd and Liz Newell). Fausto-Sterling, Anne. "Building Two-Way Streets: The Case of Feminism and Science." NWSA JOURNAL 4, no.3 (Fall 1992): 336-349. Responses: "Comments..." I. Ruth Hubbard. II. Sandra Harding. III. Nancy Tuana. IV. Sue V. Rosser and Response by A. F-S. NWSAJ 5, no.1 (Spring 1993): 45-81. "Fallible or Lovable: Response to..." by Lee Swedberg. NWSAJ 5, no.3 (Fall 1993): 389-391. Fausto-Sterling, Anne. "The Myth of Neutrality: Race, Sex, and Class in Science." RADICAL TEACHER 19 (1981): 21-25. Fausto-Sterling, Anne. MYTHS OF GENDER: BIOLOGICAL THEORIES ABOUT WOMEN AND MEN. New York: Basic Books, 1986. Fausto-Sterling, Anne. "The New Research on Women: How Does It Affect the Natural Sciences?" WOMEN'S STUDIES QUARTERLY 13 (Summer 1985): 30-32. Fausto-Sterling, Anne. "Society Writes Biology / Biology Constructs Gender." DAEDALUS 116 (Fall 1987): 61-76. Reprinted in LEARNING ABOUT WOMEN: GENDER, POLITICS, AND POWER. Ed. by Jill K. Conway, Susan C. Bourque, and Joan W. Scott. Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press, 1989. Fausto-Sterling, Anne. "Women and Minorities in Science: An Interdisciplinary Course." (Working paper no. 154). Wellesley, MA: Wellesley Collge, Center for Research on Women, 1985; updated 1990. Fausto-Sterling, Anne. "Women and Science." WOMEN'S STUDIES INTERNATIONAL QUARTERLY 4 (1981): 41-50. Reprinted in WOMEN IN FUTURES RESEARCH. Ed. by Margit Eichler and Hilda Scott. New York: Pergamon, 1982. Fee, Elizabeth. "A Feminist Critique of Scientific Objectivity." SCIENCE FOR THE PEOPLE 14 (July/August 1982): 5-8, 30-33. Fee, Elizabeth. "Science and the Woman Problem: Historical Perspectives." In SEX DIFFERENCES: SOCIAL AND BIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES, pp. 175-223. Ed. by Michael S. Teitelbaum. New York: Doubleday, 1976. Fee, Elizabeth. "Women's Nature and Scientific Objectivity." In WOMAN'S NATURE: RATIONALIZATIONS OF INEQUALITY, pp. 9-28. Ed. by Marian Lowe and Ruth Hubbard. New York: Pergamon, 1983. Feldman, Jacqueline. "Feminist Critiques of Science." PHILOSOPHY AND SOCIAL ACTION 14 (April-June 1988): 37-52. "Feminism and Science I" (thematic issue). HYPATIA 2 (Fall 1987). Ed. by Nancy Tuana. Contents: Feminist Scholarship in the Sciences: Where Are We Now and When Can We Expect a Theoretical Breakthrough? (Sue V. Rosser); The Method Question (Sandra Harding); The Gender/Science System: or Is Sex to Gender as Nature Is to Science? (Evelyn Fox Keller); Can There Be a Feminist Science? (Helen E. Longino); Le sujet de la science est-il sexue?/Is the Subject of Science Sexed? (Luce Irigaray; trans. by Carol Mastrangelo Bove); Uncovering Gynocentric Science (Ruth Ginzberg); Justifying Feminist Social Science (Linda Alcoff); John Dewey and Evelyn Fox Keller: A Shared Epistemological Tradition (Lisa Heldke). "Feminism and Science II" (thematic issue). HYPATIA 3 (Spring 1988). Ed. by Nancy Tuana. Contents: Science, Facts, and Feminism (Ruth Hubbard); Modeling the Gender Politics in Science (Elizabeth Potter); The Weaker Seed: The Sexist Bias of Reproductive Theory (Nancy Tuana); The Importance of Feminist Critique for Contemporary Cell Biology (Biology and Gender Study Group); The Premenstrual Syndrome: Dis-easing the Female Cycle (Jacquelyn N. Zita); Women and the Mismeasure of Thought (Judith Genova); Dreaming the Future (Hilary Rose); Feminist Perspectives on Science (Barbara Imber and Nancy Tuana); Review Essay/A Critical Analysis of Sandra Harding's THE SCIENCE QUESTION IN FEMINISM (Jacquelyn N. Zita). "Feminism and Science: In Memory of Ruth Bleier" (thematic issue). WOMEN'S STUDIES INTERNATIONAL FORUM 12, no.3 (1989). Contents: Ruth Bleier: A Passionate Vision for Feminism and Science (Sue V. Rosser); The October 29th Group: Defining a Feminist Science (October 29th Group); Feminist Critiques of Rationality: Critiques of Science or Philosophy of Science? (Helen E. Longino); How the Women's Movement Benefits Science: Two Views (Sandra Harding); Scientific Objectivity and the Concept of "the Other" (Zuleyma Tang Halpin); Monkeys, Aliens, and Women: Love, Science, and Politics at the Intersection of Feminist Theory and Colonial Discourse (Donna Haraway); Holding the Center of Feminist Theory (Evelyn Fox Keller); Life in the XY Corral (Anne Fausto- Sterling); Hormonal Cocktails: Women as Test-Sites for Fertility Drugs (Renate Klein and Robyn Rowland); Women Biologists and the "Old Boy" Network (Suzanna Rose); A Feeling for Science: Female Students and Biology Texts (Mariamne H. Whatley); Teaching Techniques to Attract Women to Science: Applications of Feminist Theories and Methodologies (Sue V. Rosser); Feminist Critiques of Science: The Epistemological and Methodological Literature [bibliography] (Alison Wylie et al.); book reviews. "Feminism, Epistemology and Science" (special section). COMMUNICATION & COGNITION 21 (1988). Contents: Feminism, Epistemology and Science (Sandra Harding); Nature in Terms of Femininity: the Case of 19th Century Plant Geography (Chr. Brouwer); Reflections on the Debate within Feminist Epistemology (Hilary Rose); Some Remarks on the Need for Communication between Men's and Women's Ways of Cognition (K. Gorniak); Feminism, Sciences, Epistemology: Three Issues (Elzbieta Pakszys); Women Studies: Questions about This New Scientific Field (J. Klein); Feminism, Science, and Social Change (Elizabeth Gulbrandsen); Practical Consequences of Epistemological Choices (Sandra Harding); Do We Need Feminist Epistemologies? (K. Vintges). "Femmes et/Women and Sciences" (thematic issue). RESOURCES FOR FEMINIST RESEARCH 15 (November 1986). Thirty-one short articles in five sections: Women and Science: An Inside View; The Official View of Women: Its Impact; Women and Scientific Knowledge; Women's Practices: Another Science?; Feminism and Science: A New Approach; plus book reviews and abstracts. Fennema, Elizabeth, and Gilah C. Leder, eds. MATHEMATICS AND GENDER. New York: Teachers College Press, 1990. Fort, Deborah C., ed. A HAND UP: WOMEN MENTORING WOMEN IN SCIENCE. Washington, DC: Association for Women in Science, 1993. Fox, Lynn H., et al. WOMEN AND THE MATHEMATICAL MYSTIQUE. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1980. Friedrich-Cofer, Lynette, ed. HUMAN NATURE AND PUBLIC POLICY: SCIENTIFIC VIEWS OF WOMEN, CHILDREN, AND FAMILIES. New York; Praeger, 1987. Garry, Ann, and Marilyn Pearsall. WOMEN, KNOWLEDGE, AND REALITY: EXPLORATIONS IN FEMINIST PHILOSOPHY. Boston: Unwin Hyman, 1989. Contains a section headed "Philosophy of Science" with three essays: Feminism and Science (Evelyn Fox Keller); Feminist Justificatory Strategies (Sandra Harding); Can There Be a Feminist Science? (Helen E. Longino). "Gender and Science" (thematic section). WOMEN & THERAPY 12, no. 4 (1992):47-125. Contents: How Different? New Essays on Gender and Science (Georgina Feldberg); Does Gender Have an Impact on Excellence in Academic Medicine? (Rose Sheinin); Gender Bias in Medical Research (Margrit Eichler, Anna Lisa Reisman, Elaine Manace Borins); Gender Issues in the Diagnosis of Mental Disorder (Paula J. Caplan); Genes, Embryos and Public Policy: The Marketing of the New Reproductive Technologies (Patricia Kaufert); Biases in Women's Health Research (Jean A. Hamilton); Sexism in Research the Limits of Academic Freedom (Connie Stark-Adamec); From Anti-Feminine to Anti- Feminist: Students' Reflections on Women and Science (Georgina Feldberg). "Gender and Technology" (thematic issue). MEDIA, CULTURE AND SOCIETY 4, no.1 (January 1992). Guest editors: Colin Sparks and Liesbet van Zoonen. Contents: Feminist Theory and Information Technology (Liesbet van Zoonen); Trapped in Electronic Cages? Gender and New Information Technologies in the Public and Private Domain: an Overview of Research (Valerie Frissen); The Gendered Use of the Telephone: an Australian Case Study (Ann Moyal); The Case of Elletel (Chantal Rogerat). "Gender and the Culture of Science: Women in Science '93 (thematic issue.) SCIENCE 260 (April 16, 1993): 383-430. Ed. by John Benditt. Partial Contents: Is There a 'Female Style' in Science?, The Male Box: Male Researchers Respond, Feminists Find Gender Everywhere in Science (Marcia Barinaga); Women Struggle to Crack the Code of Corporate Culture, Work and Family: Still a Two-Way Stretch, Entrepreneurs Say: 'It's Better to Be the Boss' (Elizabeth Culotta); The Pipeline is Leaking Women All the Way Along (Joe Alper); Making Room for Women in the Culture of Science (John Travis); Called 'Trimates,' Three Bold Women Shaped Their Field, Seeing Nature Through the Lens of Gender (Virginia Morell). "Gender Equity in Math and Science (two-part thematic issues)." INITIATIVES 55, nos. 2-3 (1993). Special issue Co-Ed. Alice Miller. Contents Part One: Introduction (Alice Miller); Undergraduate Women in the Sciences: Removing the Barriers (Barbara F. Sloat); Diversity Among Scientists-Inclusive Curriculum-Improved Science: An Upward Spiral (Sue V. Rosser); The Limits of Intervention: Lessons From Eureka, A Program to Retain Students in Science and Math-Related Majors (Alice Miller and Catherine B. Silver); Empowering Women in Mathematics (Ann B. Oaks); Women and Computer Science (L. Anne Breene); Cultivating Scientists at Women's Colleges (Jadwiga S. Sebrechts); Females and Minorities in Science: The Role of Community and Collaboration (Robert C. Johnson and June Parrott); Women's Activities and Women Engineers: Expansions Over Time (Emily M. Wadsworth). Part Two: Introduction (Alice Miller); Retaining Women Science Students: A Mentoring Project of the Association for Women in Science (Stephanie J. Bird and Catherine J. Didion); Bifurcation of a Common Path: Gender Splitting on the Road to Engineering and Physical Science Careers (Hilary M. Lips); Student Ownership: The Key to Successful Intervention Programs (Suzanne G. Brainard); Minority Females in the Science Pipeline: Activities to Enhance Readiness, Recrutiment, and Retention (Bernice Taylor Anderson); The Women in Science Project at Dartmouth (Carol Blue Muller); Whose Math is It Anyway: Giving Girls a Chance to Take Charge of Their Math Learning (Charlene Morrow and James Morrow); Purdue's Commitment to Women in Engineering: Strategies That Work (Jane Zimmer Daniels); Elementary Science Education: Looking Through the Lens of Gender (Janice Koch). Gergen, Kenneth J. "Feminist Critique of Science and the Challenge of Social Epistemology." In FEMINIST THOUGHT AND THE STRUCTURE OF KNOWLEDGE, pp. 27-48. Ed. by Mary McCanney Gergen. New York: New York University Press, 1988. Gergen, Mary McCanney, ed. FEMINIST THOUGHT AND THE STRUCTURE OF KNOWLEDGE. New York: New York University Press, 1988. Partial Contents: Some Thoughts About the Masculinity of the Natural Sciences; A Feminist Perspective on Sexology and Sexuality; Feminist Critique of Science and the Challenge of Social Epistemology. Giroud, Francoise. MARIE CURIE, A LIFE. Translated by Lydia Davis. New York: Holmes and Meier, 1986. Glazer, Penina Migdal, and Miriam Slater. UNEQUAL COLLEAGUES: THE ENTRANCE OF WOMEN INTO THE PROFESSIONS, 1890-1940. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1987. Goddard, Nancy, and Mary Sue Henifin. "A Feminist Approach to the Biology of Women." WOMEN'S STUDIES QUARTERLY 12 (Winter 1984): 11-18. Goodfield, June. AN IMAGINED WORLD: A STORY OF SCIENTIFIC DISCOVERY. New York: Harper & Row, 1981. Reprinted with a new preface: Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1991. Gornick, Vivian. WOMEN IN SCIENCE: PORTRAITS FROM A WORLD IN TRANSITION. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1983. Grosz, E.A., and Marie de Lepervanche. "Feminism and Science." In CROSSING BOUNDARIES: FEMINISMS AND THE CRITIQUE OF KNOWLEDGES, pp. 5-27. Ed. by Barbara Caine, E.A. Grosz, and Marie de Lepervanche. Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 1988. Haack, Susan. "Science From a Feminist Perspective." PHILOSOPHY 67 (Juanuary 1992): 5-18. Haas, Violet B., and Carolyn C. Perrucci, eds. WOMEN IN SCIENTIFIC AND ENGINEERING PROFESSIONS. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1984. Contents: Central Issues Facing Women in the Science-Based Professions (Carolyn C. Perrucci); Professional Women in Developing Nations: The United States and the Third World Compared (Nancie L. Gonzalez); Professional Women in Transition (Lilli S. Hornig); Changing Patterns of Recruitment and Employment (Betty M. Vetter); Planning Strategies for Women in Scientific Professions (Jewel Plummer Cobb); Academic Career Mobility for Women and Men Psychologists (Rachel A. Rosenfeld); Responsibilities of Women Faculty in Engineering Schools (Mildred S. Dresselhaus); Alternative Development of a Scientific Career (Esther A. H. Hopkins); Scientific Sexism: The World of Chemistry (Anne M. Briscoe); You've Come a Long Way Baby: The Myth and the Reality (Naomi J. McAfee); Early Socialization: Causes and Cures of Mathematics Anxiety (Patricia F. Campbell and Susan C. Geller); Women Engineers in History: Profiles in Holism and Persistence (Martha M. Trescott); Should Professional Women Be Like Professional Men? (Ruth Hubbard); Class, Race, Sex, Scientific Objects of Knowledge: A Socialist-Feminist Perspective on the Social Construction of Productive Nature and Some Political Consequences (Donna Haraway); Evolving Views of Women's Professional Roles (Violet B. Haas). Hacker, Sally L. "The Culture of Engineering: Women, Workplace and Machine." WOMEN'S STUDIES INTERNATIONAL QUARTERLY 4, no.3 (1981): 341-353. Hacker, Sally L. "DOING IT THE HARD WAY": INVESTIGATIONS OF GENDER AND TECHNOLOGY. Boston: Unwin Hyman, 1990. Hacker, Sally L. PLEASURE, POWER, AND TECHNOLOGY: SOME TALES OF GENDER, ENGINEERING, AND THE COOPERATIVE WORKPLACE. Boston: Unwin Hyman, 1989. Hanen, Marsha, and Kai Nielsen, eds. SCIENCE, MORALITY, AND FEMINIST THEORY. Calgary: University of Calgary Press, 1987. Partial Contents: Two Aspects: Science and Morality: Sex Inequality and Bias in Sex Differences Research (Alison M. Jaggar); The Need for More Than Justice (Annette C. Baier); Critiques: Science, Ethics and Method: The Philosophy of Ambivalence; Sandra Harding on THE SCIENCE QUESTION IN FEMINISM (Alison Wylie); Ascetic Intellectual Opportunities: Reply to Alison Wylie (Sandra Harding). Haraway, Donna. "In the Beginning Was the Word: The Genesis of Biological Theory." SIGNS 6 (Spring 1981): 469-482. Haraway, Donna. "A Manifesto for Cyborgs: Science, Technology, and Socialist Feminism in the 1980s." In FEMINISM/POSTMODERNISM. Ed. by Linda J. Nicholson. New York: Routledge, 1990. Haraway, Donna. PRIMATE VISIONS: GENDER, RACE, AND NATURE IN THE WORLD OF MODERN SCIENCE. New York: Routledge, 1989. Haraway, Donna. SIMIANS, CYBORGS AND WOMEN: THE REINVENTION OF NATURE. New York: Routledge, 1991. Haraway, Donna. "Situated Knowledges: The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective." FEMINIST STUDIES 14 (Fall 1988): 575-599. Harding, Jan, ed. PERSPECTIVES ON GENDER AND SCIENCE. London: Falmer Press, 1986. Harding, Sandra. "Feminism and Theories of Scientific Knowledge." WOMEN: A CULTURAL REVIEW 1, no.1 (April 1990): 87- 98. (followed by "Women Look at Science: Man the Hunter, Why Science is a Woman, Discovering the Naked Truth," excerpts from books by Donna Haraway, Londo Schiebinger, and Ludmilla Jordonava.) Harding, Sandra. "Feminism, Science, and the Anti-Enlightenment Critiques." In FEMINISM/POSTMODERNISM, pp. 83-106. Ed. by Linda J. Nicholson. New York: Routledge, 1990. Harding, Sandra. "How the Women's Movement Benefits Science. Two Views." WOMEN'S STUDIES INTERNATIONAL FORUM 12 (1989):271-283. Harding, Sandra. THE SCIENCE QUESTION IN FEMINISM. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1986. Harding, Sandra. WHOSE SCIENCE: WHOSE KNOWLEDGE?: THINKING FROM WOMEN'S LIVES. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1991. Harding, Sandra, and Merrill B. Hintikka, eds. DISCOVERING REALITY: FEMINIST PERSPECTIVES ON EPISTEMOLOGY, METAPHYSICS, METHODOLOGY, AND PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE. Dordrecht, Holland: D. Reidel, 1983. Harding, Sandra, and Jean F. O'Barr, eds. SEX AND SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987. Articles reprinted from SIGNS. Contents: The History and Philosophy of Women in Science: A Review Essay (Londa Schiebinger); Sexual Segregation in the Sciences: Some Data and a Model (Margaret W. Rossiter); Images of Female Medical Students at the Turn of the Century (Sandra L. Chaff); Women and the History of American Technology (Judith A. McGaw); Outrunning Atalanta: Feminine Destiny in Alchemical Transmutation (Sally G. Allen and Joanna Hubbs); Science, Politics, and Race (Inez Smith Reid); Biology and Equality: A Perspective on Sex Differences (Helen H. Lambert); Social and Behavioral Constructions of Female Sexuality (Patricia Y. Miller and Martha R. Fowlkes); Body, Bias, and Behavior: A Comparative Analysis of Reasoning in Two Areas of Biological Science (Helen Longino and Ruth Doell); The Variability Hypotheses: The History of a Biological Model of Sex Differences in Intelligence (Stephanie A. Shields); Animal Sociology and a Natural Economy of the Body Politic, Part I: A Political Physiology of Dominance (Donna Haraway); Feminism and Science (Evelyn Fox Keller); The Cartesian Masculinization of Thought (Susan Bordo); Hand, Brain, and Heart: A Feminist Epistemology for the Natural Sciences (Hilary Rose); The Instability of Analytical Categories of Feminist Theory (Sandra Harding). Herschberger, Ruth. ADAM'S RIB. New York: Pellegrini & Cudahy, 1948; repr. New York: Harper & Row, 1970. Holloway, Marguerite. "A Lab of Her Own." SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN 269, no.6 (November 1993): 94-103. Horning, Beth. "The Controversial Career of Evelyn Fox Keller." TECHNOLOGY REVIEW 96 (Jan. 1993): 58-68. Hornig, Lilli S. "Women in Science and Engineering: Why So Few?" TECHNOLOGY REVIEW 87 (Nov/Dec. 1984): 31-41. Hrdy, Sarah Blaffer. THE WOMAN THAT NEVER EVOLVED. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1981. Hubbard, Ruth. "The Emperor Doesn't Wear Any Clothes: The Impact of Feminism on Biology." In MEN'S STUDIES MODIFIED, pp. 213-235. Ed. by Dale Spender. New York: Pergamon, 1981. Hubbard, Ruth. THE POLITICS OF WOMEN'S BIOLOGY. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1990. Hubbard, Ruth. "Some Thoughts about the Masculinity of the Natural Sciences." In FEMINIST THOUGHT AND THE STRUCTURE OF KNOWLEDGE, pp. 1-15. Ed. by Mary McCanney Gergen. New York: New York University Press, 1988. Hubbard, Ruth, and Marian Lowe, eds. GENES AND GENDER II: PITFALLS IN RESEARCH ON SEX AND GENDER. New York: Gordian Press, 1979. Contents: Introduction (Ruth Hubbard and Marian Lowe); "Universals" and Male Dominance among Primates: A Critical Examination (Lila Leibowitz); Social and Political Bias in Science: An Examination of Animal Studies and Their Generalizations to Human Behavior and Evolution (Ruth Bleier); Aggression and Gender: A Critique of the Nature- Nurture Question for Humans (Freda Salzman); Sociobiology and Biosociology: Can Science Prove the Biological Basis of Sex Differences in Behavior? (Marian Lowe and Ruth Hubbard); Sex Differences and the Dichotomization of the Brain: Methods, Limits and Problems in Research on Consciousness (Susan Leigh Star); Transsexualism: An Issue of Sex-Role Stereotyping (Janice G. Raymond); Conclusions (Marian Lowe and Ruth Hubbard). Hubbard, Ruth, Mary Sue Henifin, and Barbara Fried, eds. BIOLOGICAL WOMAN - THE CONVENIENT MYTH. Cambridge: Schenkman, 1982. Contents: Have Only Men Evolved? (Ruth Hubbard); Boys Will Be Boys Will Be Boys: The Language of Sex and Gender (Barbara Fried); From Sin to Sickness: Hormonal Theories of Lesbianism (Lynda I.A. Birke); Social Bodies: The Interaction of Culture and Women's Biology (Marian Lowe); No Fertile Women Need Apply: Employment Discrimination and Reproductive Hazards in the Workplace (Jeanne M. Stellman and Mary Sue Henifin); Sterilization Abuse (Helen Rodriguez- Trias); Changing Minds: Women, Biology, and the Menstrual Cycle (Lynda I.A. Birke, with Sandy Best); Taking the Men Out of Menopause (Marlyn Grossman and Pauline Bart); Displaced--The Midwife by the Male Physician (Datha Clapper Brack); Black Women's Health: Notes for a Course (Beverly Smith); The Quirls of a Woman's Brain (Mary Roth Walsh); Adventures of a Woman in Science (Naomi Weisstein); Bibliography: Women, Science, and Health (Mary Sue Henifin and Joan Cindy Amatniek). Hubbard, Ruth, Mary Sue Henifin, and Barbara Fried, eds. WOMEN LOOK AT BIOLOGY LOOKING AT WOMEN. Cambridge: Schenkman, 1979. Contents: Have Only Men Evolved? (Ruth Hubbard); Boys Will Be Boys Will Be Boys: The Language of Sex and Gender (Barbara Fried); The Politics of Right and Left: Sex Differences in Hemispheric Brain Asymmetry (Susan Leigh Star); Displaced--The Midwife by the Male Physician (Datha Clapper Brack); The Quirls of a Woman's Brain (Mary Roth Walsh); Why Are So Many Anorexics Women? (Vicki Druss and Mary Sue Henifin); Exploring Menstrual Attitudes (Emily E. Culpepper); Taking the Men Out of Menopause (Marlyn Grossman and Pauline Bart); Adventures of a Woman in Science (Naomi Weisstein); Bibliography: Women, Science, and Health (Mary Sue Henifin). Hughes, Donna M. "Transforming Science and Technology: Has the Elephant Yet Flicked its Trunk?" NWSA JOURNAL 3 (August 1991):382-401. Humphreys, Sheila, ed. WOMEN AND MINORITIES IN SCIENCE: STRATEGIES FOR INCREASING PARTICIPATION. Boulder: Westview, 1982. (AAAS Selected Symposium no. 66.) Contents: Leverage for Equal Opportunity Through Mastery of Mathematics (Lucy W. Sells); Labor Force Participation of Women Baccalaureates in Science (Betty M. Vetter); EQUALS: Working with Educators (Nancy Kreinberg); Improving Minority Preparation for Math-Based Disciplines (Robert A. Finnell); A Short-Term Intervention Program: Math-Science Conferences (Ruth C. Cronkite & Teri Hoch Perl); Affirmative Action Programs That Work (Yolanda Scott George); Career Paths for Women in Physics (Claire Ellen Max); Increasing the Participation of College Women in Mathematics-Related Fields (Lenore Blum & Steven Givant); Women in Engineering: A Dynamic Approach (Jane Z. Daniels & William K. LeBold); Effectiveness of Science Career Conferences (Sheila M. Humphreys); Strategies to Increase Participation of Minorities in Medicine (A. Cherrie Epps, Joseph C. Pisano, & Jeanne G. Allender); An Evaluation of Programs for Reentry Women Scientists (Alma E. Lantz & Linda J. Ingison). Hunter, Anne. E., ed. GENES AND GENDER VI: ON PEACE, WAR, AND GENDER: A CHALLENGE TO GENETIC EXPLANATIONS. New York: Feminist Press, 1991. Hynes, H. Patricia. "Feminism and Engineering: the Inroads." In THE KNOWLEDGE EXPLOSION: GENERATIONS OF FEMINIST SCHOLARSHIP, pp.133-140. Ed. by Cheris Kramarae and Dale Spender. New York: Teachers College Press Athene Series, 1992. Hynes, H. Patricia, ed. RECONSTRUCTING BABYLON: ESSAYS ON WOMEN AND TECHNOLOGY. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1991. Contents: Lead Contamination: a Case of "Protectionism" and the Neglect of Women (H. Patricia Hynes); Lesotho and Nepal: the Failure of Western "Family Planning" (Nellie Kanno); How the New Reproductive Technologies Will Affect Women (Gena Corea); Of Eggs, Embryos, and Altruism (Janice G. Raymond); Who May Have Children and Who May Not (Gena Corea); In the Matter of Baby M: Judged and Rejudged (Raymond); The International Traffic in Women: Women Used in Systems of Surrogacy and Reproduction (Raymond); Biotechnology in Agriculture and Reproduction: the Parallels in Public Policy (Hynes); Industrial Experimentation on "Surrogate" Mothers (Corea); Testimony Before the House Judiciary Committee, State of Michigan (Raymond); Junk Liberty (Corea); Depo- Provera and the Politics of Knowledge (Corea); Maud Matthews and the Philisiwe Clinic (Hynes). Hynes, H. Patricia. THE RECURRING SILENT SPRING. New York: Pergamon, 1989. Jackson, Allyn. "Feminist Critiques of Science." NOTICES OF THE AMERICAN MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY 36, no.6 (1989): 669-672. Jacobus, Mary, Evelyn Fox Keller, and Sally Shuttleworth, eds. BODY/POLITICS: WOMEN AND THE DISCOURSES OF SCIENCE. Boston: Routledge, 1989. Contents: In Parenthesis: Immaculate Conceptions and Feminine Desire (Mary Jacobus); Speaking of the Body: Mid- Victorian Constructions of Female Desire (Mary Poovey); Female Circulation: Medical Discourse and Popular Advertising in the Mid-Victorian Era (Sally Shuttleworth); Science and Women's Bodies: Forms of Anthropological Knowledge (Emily Martin); Reading the Slender Body (Susan Bordo); Feminism, Medicine, and the Meaning of Childbirth (Paula A. Treichler); Investment Strategies for the Evolving Portfolio of Primate Females (Donna Haraway); Technophilia: Technology, Representation, and the Feminine (Mary Ann Doane); From Secrets of Life to Secrets of Death (Evelyn Fox Keller). Jansen, Sue Curry. "Gender and the Information Society: A Socially Structured Silence." JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION 39 (Summer 1989):196-215. Jones, M. Gail, and Jack Wheatley. "Factors Influencing the Entry of Women Into Science and Related Fields." SCIENCE EDUCATION 72 (1988): 127-142. Jordanova, Ludmilla. "Gender and the Historiography of Science." THE BRITISH JOURNAL FOR THE HISTORY OF SCIENCE 26, no.91 (1993): 469-483. Kahle, Jane Butler. DOUBLE DILEMMA: MINORITIES AND WOMEN IN SCIENCE EDUCATION. West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University, 1982. (ERIC document ED 220 278) Kahle, Jane Butler, ed. WOMEN IN SCIENCE: A REPORT FROM THE FIELD. Philadelphia: Falmer Press, 1985. Contents: Women's Role and Status in the Sciences: An Historical Perspective (Marjorie Perrin Behringer); Factors Affecting Female Achievement and Interest in Science and Scientific Careers (Marsha Lakes Matyas); Retention of Girls in Science: Case Studies of Secondary Teachers (Jane Butler Kahle); Obstacles and Constraints on Women in Science: Preparation and Participation in the Scientific Community (Marsha Lakes Matyas); Minority Women: Conquering Both Sexism and Racism (Mildred Collins and Marsha Lakes Matyas); Women's Role in Professional Scientific Organizations: Participation and Recognition (Frances S. Vandervoort); Discrepancies Between Men and Women in Science: Results of a National Survey of Science Educators (Claudia B. Douglass); International Perspectives on the Status and Role of Women in Science (Ann E. Haley-Oliphant); A View and a Vision: Women in Science Today and Tomorrow (Jane Butler Kahle). Kass-Simon, G., and Patricia Farnes, eds. WOMEN OF SCIENCE: RIGHTING THE RECORD. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1990. Chapters on women in archaeology, geology, astronomy, mathematics, engineering, physics, biology, medical science, chemistry, and crystallography. Keith, Sandra Z., and Philip Keith, eds. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL CONFERENCE ON WOMEN IN MATHEMATICS AND THE SCIENCES, ST. CLOUD STATE UNIVERSITY, ST. CLOUD, MN, NOVEMBER 10-11, 1989. St. Cloud, MN: St. Cloud State University, Dept. of Mathematics and Statistics, 1989. Keller, Evelyn Fox. A FEELING FOR THE ORGANISM: THE LIFE AND WORK OF BARBARA MCCLINTOCK. San Francisco: W.H. Freeman, 1983. Keller, Evelyn Fox. 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Keller, Evelyn Fox. SECRETS OF LIFE, SECRETS OF DEATH: ESSAYS ON LANGUAGE, GENDER, AND SCIENCE. New York: Routledge, 1992. Keller, Evelyn Fox. "Women Scientists and Feminist Critiques of Science." DAEDALUS 116 (Fall 1987): 77-91. Reprinted in LEARNING ABOUT WOMEN: GENDER, POLITICS, AND POWER. Ed. by Jill K. Conway, Susan C. Bourque, and Joan W. Scott. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1989. Kelly, Alison. "The Construction of Masculine Science." BRITISH JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY OF EDUCATION 6 (1985): 133-154. Kelly, Farley. ON THE EDGE OF DISCOVERY: AUSTRALIAN WOMEN IN SCIENCE. Melbourne, Aust.: The Text Publishing Company, 1993. Kirkup, Gill and Laurie Smith Keller, eds. INVENTING WOMEN: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, AND GENDER. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press; Cambridge, MA: B. Blackwell, 1992. Klein, Renate. "Reproductive Technology, Genetic Engineering, and Woman Hating." In THE KNOWLEDGE EXPLOSION: GENERATIONS OF FEMINIST SCHOLARSHIP, pp. 386-396. Ed. by Cheris Kramarae and Dale Spender. 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WOMEN'S STUDIES INTERNATIONAL FORUM 16, no.6 (1993): 605-613. Levin, Margarita. "Caring New World: Feminism and Science." AMERICAN SCHOLAR 57 (1988): 100-105. Levi-Montalcini, Rita. IN PRAISE OF IMPERFECTION: MY LIFE AND WORK. New York: Basic Books, 1988. Lewontin, R. C., Steven Rose, and Leon J. Kamin. NOT IN OUR GENES: BIOLOGY, IDEOLOGY, AND HUMAN NATURE. New York: Pantheon, 1984. Lippitt, Jill. "The Feminist Face of Computer Technology." WOMEN OF POWER 11 (1988): 56-57. Longino, Helen E. "Can There Be a Feminist Science?" (Working Paper no. 163) Wellesley, MA: Wellesley College Center for Research on Women, 1986. Longino, Helen E. SCIENCE AS SOCIAL KNOWLEDGE: VALUES AND OBJECTIVITY IN SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1990. Longino, Helen E. "Science, Objectivity, and Feminist Values." FEMINIST STUDIES 14 (Fall 1988): 561-574. Longino, Helen E. "Scientific Objectivity and Feminist Theorizing." LIBERAL EDUCATION 67 (Fall 1981): 187-195. 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Reprint ed: Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 1991, with a Preface by Cynthia Russett and an Introduction by Thomas P. Gariepy. Mura, Roberta. "Searching for Subjectivity in the World of the Sciences: Feminist Viewpoints." CRIAW PAPERS, no. 25. Ottawa: Canadian Research Institute for the Advancement of Women, 1991. Translated and adapted from the French original (Les documents de l'ICREF, no. 21). See also her "Les Critiques Fministes de la Science: Une Menace Aux Femmes et  la Science: Analyse de Deux Ractions du Milieu Mathmatique." ATLANTIS 18, no.1/2 (Fall- Summer 1992-1993): 3-24 Nelson, Lynn Hankinson. "Feminist Science Criticism and Critical Thinking." TRANSFORMATIONS 2 (Winter 1991):26-36. Nelson, Lynn Hankinson. WHO KNOWS: FROM QUINE TO A FEMINIST EMPIRICISM. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1990. Newman, Louise Michele, ed. MEN'S IDEAS/WOMEN'S REALITIES: POPULAR SCIENCE, 1870-1915. New York: Pergamon, 1984. Noble, David F. A WORLD WITHOUT WOMEN: THE CLERICAL CULTURE OF WESTERN SCIENCE. New York: A.A. Knopf, 1992. Nowotny, Helga. "Women Interacting With the Institution of Science." In SOCIAL ROLES AND SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS: ESSAYS IN HONOR OF ROSE LAUB COSER, pp. 149-165. Edited by Judith R. Blau and Norman Goodman. Boulder: Westview Press, 1991. Nuyen, A.T. "Sociobiology, Morality, and Feminism." HUMAN STUDIES 8 (1985): 169-181. ON CAMPUS WITH WOMEN Volume 23, no. 3 (Winter 1994) and forthcoming three issues will have clusters of articles and resources on women and science. O'Rand, Angela M. "Scientific Thought Style and the Construction of Gender Inequality." In WOMEN AND A NEW ACADEMY: GENDER AND CULTURAL CONTEXTS, pp. 103-121. Ed. by Jean F. O'Barr. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1989. Osen, Lynne M. WOMEN IN MATHEMATICS. Cambridge: M.I.T. Press, 1974. Overfield, Kathy. "Dirty Fingers, Grime, and Slag Heaps: Purity and the Scientific Ethic." In MEN'S STUDIES MODIFIED, pp. 237-248. 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Bechtereva, USSR); Women in Cambridge Biochemistry (Dorothy Needham, UK); The Progress of Science in Africa (W. Muta Maathai, Kenya); Autobiography of an Unknown Woman (R. Rajalakshmi, India); Conclusion (Nancy Sear, UK). Riger, Stephanie. "Epistemological Debates, Feminist Voices: Science, Social Values, and the Study of Woman." AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGIST 47, no.6 (June 1992): 730-740. Riska, Elianne and Katarina Wegar. GENDER, WORK, AND MEDICINE. Newbury Park, CA.: Sage, 1993. Rogers, Lesley J. "Biology, the Popular Weapon: Sex Differences in Cognitive Function." In CROSSING BOUNDARIES: FEMINISMS AND THE CRITIQUE OF KNOWLEDGES, pp. 43-51. Ed. by Barbara Caine, E.A. Grosz, and Marie de Lepervanche. Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 1988. Rose, Hilary. "Hand, Brain, and Heart: A Feminist Epistemology for the Natural Sciences." SIGNS 9 (Autumn 1983): 73-90. Rosser, Sue V. "Androgyny and Sociobiology." INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WOMEN'S STUDIES 5 (1982): 435-444. Rosser, Sue V. "A Call for Feminist Science." INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WOMEN'S STUDIES 7 (January/February 1984): 3-9. Rosser, Sue V. "Are There Feminist Methodologies Appropriate for the Natural Sciences and Do They Make a Difference?" WOMEN'S STUDIES INTERNATIONAL FORUM 15 (1992): 535-550. Rosser, Sue V. BIOLOGY & FEMINISM: A DYNAMIC INTERACTION. New York: Twayne, 1992. Rosser, Sue V. FEMALE-FRIENDLY SCIENCE: APPLYING WOMEN'S STUDIES METHODS AND THEORIES TO ATTRACT STUDENTS. Elmsford, NY: Pergamon, 1990. Rosser, Sue V., ed. FEMINISM WITHIN THE SCIENCE AND HEALTH CARE PROFESSIONS: OVERCOMING RESISTANCE. New York: Pergamon, 1988. Contents: Where Are the Women in the Physical Sciences? (Betty M. Vetter); Gender Bias in Archeology: Here, Then and Now (Joan M. Gero); Women in Public Health: Changes in a Profession (Jennie J. Kronenfeld); Contemporary Concerns of Women in Medicine (Joan M. Alterkruse and Suzanne W. McDermott); SCIENCE and the Construction of Meanings in the Neurosciences (Ruth Bleier); The Impact of Feminism on the AAAS Meetings: From Nonexistent to Negligible (Sue V. Rosser); The Response of the Health Care System to the Women's Health Movement: The Selling of Women's Health Centers (Nancy Worcester and Mariamne H. Whatley); Beyond Compliance: Towards a Feminist Health Education (Mariamne H. Whatley); The Need for Women and Feminism to Overcome Resistance in Science and Health Care (Sue V. Rosser). Rosser, Sue V. "The Feminist Perspective on Science: Is Reconceptualization Possible?" JOURNAL OF NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF WOMEN DEANS, ADMINISTRATORS, AND COUNSELORS 49 (Fall 1985): 29-36. Rosser, Sue V. "Good Science: Can It Ever Be Gender Free?" WOMEN'S STUDIES INTERNATIONAL FORUM 11 (1988): 13-19. Rosser, Sue V. "Integrating the Feminist Perspective Into Courses in Introductory Biology." In WOMEN'S PLACE IN THE ACADEMY: TRANSFORMING THE LIBERAL ARTS CURRICULUM, pp. 258-276. Ed. by Marilyn R. Schuster and Susan R. Van Dyne. Totowa, NJ: Rowman and Allanheld, 1985. Rosser, Sue V. TEACHING SCIENCE AND HEALTH FROM A FEMINIST PERSPECTIVE: A PRACTICAL GUIDE. Elmsford, NY: Pergamon, 1986. Rosser, Sue V. and Bonnie Kelly. "From Hostile Exclusion to Friendly Inclusion: University of South Carolina System Model Project for the Transformation of Science and Math Teaching to Reach Women in Varied Campus Settings." JOURNAL OF WOMEN AND MINORITIES IN SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING 1, no.1 (1994). Rossiter, Margaret W. WOMEN SCIENTISTS IN AMERICA: STRUGGLES AND STRATEGIES TO 1940. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1982. Rossiter, Margaret W. "Women Scientists in America Before 1920." AMERICAN SCIENTIST 62 (1974): 312-323. Rossiter, Margaret W. "'Women's Work' in Science, 1880-1910." ISIS 71 (1980): 381-398. Rothschild, Joan, ed. MACHINA EX DEA: FEMINIST PERSPECTIVES ON TECHNOLOGY. New York: Pergamon, 1983. Contents: Women Hold Up Two-thirds of the Sky: Notes for a Revised History of Technology (Autumn Stanley); Lillian Moller Gilbreth and the Founding of Modern Industrial Engineering (Martha Moore Trescott); Mathematization of Engineering: Limits on Women and the Field (Sally L. Hacker); Technology and Work Degradation: Effects of Office Automation on Women Clerical Workers (Roslyn L. Feldberg and Evelyn Nakano Glenn); Technology, Housework, and Women's Liberation: A Theoretical Analysis (Joan Rothschild); Mining the Earth's Womb (Carolyn Merchant); Toward an Ecological Feminism and a Feminist Ecology (Ynestra King); Women, Science, and Popular Mythology (Evelyn Fox Keller); Women and the Assessment of Technology: To Think, To Be, To Unthink, To Free (Corlann Gee Bush); An End to Technology: A Modest Proposal (Sally M. Gearhart); Reproductive Technology: The Future for Women? (Jalna Hanmer); What If...Science and Technology in Feminist Utopias (Patrocinio Schweickart); Machina Ex Dea and Future Research (Joan Rothschild). Rothschild, Joan. TEACHING TECHNOLOGY FROM A FEMINIST PERSPECTIVE: A PRACTICAL GUIDE. Elmsford, NY: Pergamon, 1987. Rubin, Vera. "Women's Work." SCIENCE 86 7 (July-August 1986): 58-65. (On discrimination against women in astronomy.) Ruse, Michael. IS SCIENCE SEXIST? AND OTHER PROBLEMS IN THE BIOMEDICAL SCIENCES. Dordrecht, Holland: D. Reidel, 1981. Russo, Nancy Felipe, and Marie M. Cassidy. "Women in Science and Technology." In WOMEN IN WASHINGTON: ADVOCATES FOR PUBLIC POLICY, pp. 250-262. Ed. by Irene Tinker. Beverly Hills: Sage, 1983. Sapiro, Virginia, ed. WOMEN, BIOLOGY, AND PUBLIC POLICY. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage, 1985. Sayers, Janet. BIOLOGICAL POLITICS: FEMINIST AND ANTI-FEMINIST PERSPECTIVES. New York: Methuen, 1982. Sayers, Janet. "Feminism and Science -- Reason and Passion." WOMEN'S STUDIES INTERNATIONAL FORUM 10 (1987): 171-179. Sayers, Janet. "Science, Sex Differences, and Feminism." In ANALYZING GENDER: A HANDBOOK OF SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 1987. Sayre, Anne. ROSALIND FRANKLIN AND DNA: A VIVID VIEW OF WHAT IT IS LIKE TO BE A GIFTED WOMAN IN AN ESPECIALLY MALE PROFESSION. New York: Norton, 1975. Schiebinger, Londa. NATURE'S BODY: GENDER IN THE MAKING OF MODERN SCIENCE. Boston: Beacon Press, 1993. "Science and Technology" (thematic issue). CANADIAN WOMAN STUDIES/LES CAHIERS DE LA FEMME 5 (Summer 1984). Contents: Who Does Science Serve? (Beth Savan); Science, Technology, and Progress: Lessons from the History of the Typewriter (Elaine Bernard); An Interview with Janet Rossant (Beverly Pearl); Vive la fuss (Judith Finlayson); The Myth of Computer Literacy (Margaret Lowe Benston); The Equation Doesn't Balance (Janice Ferguson); Annie's Own Community (Dorothy Inglis); The Citizen Scientist: What She Didn't Learn in School (Donna Smyth); Office Automation: Where Will Change Really Occur? (Lorna R. Marsden); Observations from Secondary-School Science Classes (Frances Witte Allderdice); Jobs for the Future: Women, Training, and Technology (Alison Roberts); Career Day C.P.H.S.: Women Should Opt Out, Not Cop Out (Wendy Helfenbaum); Climbing Up Ladders: Some Questions of Balance (Naomi Black); Back to Grandma's Place: Democratizing Science and Technology (Heather Menzies); Integrating Art and Science (Terri Gray); Women in Science: Issues and Actions (Rose Sheinin); plus thirteen articles in French, a short story, book reviews, poetry. "Science and Technology" (thematic issue). SAGE: A SCHOLARLY JOURNAL ON BLACK WOMEN 6, no.2 (Fall 1989). Contents: Roger Arliner Young (Kenneth Manning); Black Women in the Biological Sciences (Rosalyn Patterson); Increasing the Participation of Black Women in Science and Technology (Shirley Malcolm); Black Women Mathematicians: In Short Supply (Sylvia T. Bozeman); Black Women Engineers and Technologists (Valerie L. Thomas); Black Women and Inventions (Patricia Carter Sluby); A Story of Success: The Sciences at Spelman College (Etta Z. Falconer); A Life in Science: Research and Service (Jewel Plummer Cobb); My Life as a Mathematician (Evelyn Boyd Granville); Becoming a Scientist: An Important Career Decision (Reatha Clark King); Trials, Tribulations, Triumphs (Jennie R. Patrick); "Black Women in Science and Technology: A Selected Bibliography" (Ronald Mickens); book reviews. "Science and Technology" (thematic issue). WOMAN OF POWER: A MAGAZINE OF FEMINISM, SPIRITUALITY, AND POLITICS no. 11 (Fall 1988). Contents: Technology at the Turning Point: The Chalice or the Blade (Riane Eisler); Thinking Globally, Acting Locally (Hazel Henderson); The Science of Nature as Sacred (Vandana Shiva); Guatemala's Medicinal Plant Project (Lidia M. Giron); From Healing Herbs to Deadly Drugs (Marti Kheel); The Femininization of Farming in Nicaragua (Sieglinde S. Snapp); Apollo's Eye View (Chellis Glendinning); Women, Technology and the Global Economy (Mimi Maduro); The Feminist Face of Computer Technology (Jill Lippitt); Medical Science Without Cruelty to Animals (Dona Spring); What the King Can Not See (Gena Corea); Power and Choice (Raquel Bauman); Women's Hunger and Feeding Ourselves (Becky Thompson); plus six profiles, artwork, photography, resource lists. SCIENCE, SEX AND SOCIETY. Washington: Women's Educational Equity Act Program, U.S. Dept. of Health, Education and Welfare, 1979. Shade, Leslie Regan. "Gender Issues in Computer Networking." Talk given at Community Networking: the International Free-Net Conference, Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, August 17-19, 1993. Retrievable in the Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility (CPSR) Internet Library's "Gender" directory. Shaw, Evelyn, and Joan Darling. FEMALE STRATEGIES. New York: Walker, 1984. Shepherd, Linda Jean. LIFTING THE VEIL: THE FEMININE FACE OF SCIENCE. 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Contents: The Emergence of Women Into Research and Development in the Austrian Context (Dorothea Gaudart); Handmaidens of the 'Knowledge Class': Women in Science in Finland (Veronica Stolte-Heiskanen); Women in Science Careers in the German Democratic Republic (Heidrun Radtke); Double-faced Marginalisation: Women in Science in Yugoslavia (Marina Blagojevic); Women and Science in Bulgaria: the Long-Hurdle-Race (Nora Ananieva); Soviet Women in Science (Vitalina Koval); Women, Science and Politics in Greece: Three is a Crowd (Ann R. Cacoullos); Women in Academic Science Careers in Turkey (Feride Acar); Women at the Top in Science and Technology Fields: Profile of Women Academics at Dutch Universities (Esther R. Hicks); Equal Opportunity for Women? Women in Science in Hungary (Agnes Haraszthy); Stubbornness, Drudgery, Scientific Interests and Profound Commitment (Janni Nielsen and Bente Elkjaer); Is To Be an Engineer Still a Masculine Career in Spain?: Notes on an Ambiguous Change in University Technical Education (Maria Carme Alemany); Recommendations (Dorothea Gaudart); Select Bibliography: Women in Scientific and Technical Careers (Ruza Furst-Dilic). Sunday, Suzanne R., and Ethel Tobach, eds. VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN: A CRITIQUE OF THE SOCIOBIOLOGY OF RAPE. New York: Gordian, 1985. Swedberg, Lee. "Fallible or Lovable: Response to Anne Fausto- Sterling's 'Building Two-Way Streets'." NWSA JOURNAL 5, no.3 (Fall 1993): 389-391. (Fausto-Sterling's article appeared in NWSAJ 4, no. 3 (Fall 1992). Taylor, H. Jeanie, Cheris Kramarae, and Maureen Ebben, eds. WOMEN, INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, AND SCHOLARSHIP. Urbana, IL: Women, Information Technology and Scholarship Colloquium, Center for Advanced Study, 1993. 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Trescott, Martha Moore, ed. DYNAMOS AND VIRGINS REVISITED: WOMEN AND TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE IN HISTORY. Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow, 1979. Tripp-Knowles, Peggy. "Androcentric Bias in Science? An Exploration of the Discipline of Forest Genetics." WOMEN'S STUDIES INTERNATIONAL FORUM 17, no.1 (1994): 1-8. Tuana, Nancy, ed. FEMINISM AND SCIENCE. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1989. (Reprints fourteen articles from two special issues of HYPATIA: A JOURNAL OF FEMINIST PHILOSOPHY -- vol. 2, no. 3, 1987, and vol. 3, no. 1, 1988.) Contents: see above under "Feminism and Science." Vare, Ethlie Ann, and Greg Ptacek. MOTHERS OF INVENTION: FROM THE BRA TO THE BOMB: FORGOTTEN WOMEN AND THEIR UNFORGETTABLE IDEAS. New York: Morrow, 1988. Vetter, Betty M. "Participation of Women and Minorities in Science on Decline." SCIENCE 239 (February 5, 1988): 653-654. Vetter, Betty M. "Women in the Natural Sciences." SIGNS 1 (1976): 713-720. Wajcman, Judy. FEMINISM CONFRONTS TECHNOLOGY. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1991. Warner, Deborah Jean. GRACEANNA LEWIS, SCIENTIST AND HUMANITARIAN. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1979. Warner, Deborah. "Science Education for Women in Nineteenth- Century America." ISIS 69 (1978): 58-67. Watts, Meredith W., ed. BIOPOLITICS AND GENDER. New York: Haworth Press, 1984. (Also published as WOMEN & POLITICS 3, no. 2/3, Summer/Fall 1983.) Contents: Introduction: Biopolitics and Gender (Meredith W. Watts); Biology, Gender, and Politics: An Assessment and Critique (Denise L. Baer & David A. Bositis); Political Ideology, Sociobiology, and the U.S. Women's Rights Movement (Susan Ann Kay & Douglas B. Meikle); The Biopolitics of Sex: Gender, Genetics, and Epigenetics (Glendon Schubert); Sex, Endocrines, and Political Behavior (Dean Jaros & Elizabeth S. White); Power Structures and Perceptions of Power Holders in Same-sex Groups of Young Children (Diane Carlson Jones); Explaining "Male Chauvinism" and "Feminism": Cultural Differences in Male and Female Reproductive Strategies (Roger D. Masters). Weaver, Mark, Claudia Thompson and Susan Newton. "Gender Constructions in Science." In TRANSCENDING BOUNDARIES: MULTI- DISCIPLINARY APPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF GENDER, pp. 1-28. ed. by Pamela R. Freese and John M. Coggeshall. New York: Bergin and Garvey, 1991. Whyte, Karen. "'Can We Learn This? We're Just Girls!': Feminists and Science--Visions and Strategy." RESOURCES FOR FEMINIST RESEARCH 17 (June 1988): 6-9. Widnall, Sheila E. "AAAS Presidential Lecture: Voices from the Pipeline." SCIENCE 241 (September 30, 1988): 1740-1745. "Women and Science" (thematic issue). INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WOMEN'S STUDIES 4 (September-October 1981). Ed. by Connie Stark-Adamec. Contents: Women and Science (Connie Stark-Adamec); Women and Science: A Critique of Biological Theories (Meredith M. Kimball); The Rearing of Women for Science, Engineering, and Technology (Rose Sheinin); Science Subject Choice and Achievement of Females in Canadian High Schools (Joan Pinner Scott); Cooperation and Competition in Science (Marian Lowe); Women and Science: Fitting Men to Think About Nature (Hilde Hein); Is Feminism a Threat to Scientific Objectivity? (Elizabeth Fee); Is There a Feminist Biology? (Madeleine J. Goodman and Lenn Evan Goodman); Women and Science: Two Cultures or One? Commentary on Hein, Lowe, Fee, and Goodman and Goodman (Evelyn Fox Keller); Diary of a Mad Feminist Chemist (Anne M. Briscoe); The Status of Women in Canadian Psychology: A Case Study of Women in Science (Elinor W. Ames); Practical Tips for Coping with the Problems of Being a Seventeen-Career Person (Connie Stark- Adamec). "Women and Science" (thematic issue). JOURNAL OF COLLEGE SCIENCE TEACHING 21, no. 5 (March/April 1992). Ed. by Helen Koritz. Women in Science--Women and Science (Sheila Tobias); Women- in-the-Science Program at Marietta College--Focusing on Math to Keep Women in Science (George Banziger); Undergraduate Problems With Teaching and Advising in SME Majors-- Explaining Gender Differences in Attrition Rates (Elaine Seymour); Strategies for Improving the Representation of Women in the Medical Sciences (Merle Waxman); An Outsider's Insights on Neglected Issues in Science Education--An Interview With Sheila Tobias (Rita A. Hoots); The "Women-in- Science" Day at Alverno College--Collaboration That Leads to Success (Debra Chomicka, Leona Truchan, and George Gurria). "Women in Science" (thematic issue). PHILOSOPHY AND SOCIAL ACTION 14 (April-June 1988). Ed. by Brian Martin and Evelleen Richards. Contents: Introducing Women and Science (Brian Martin and Evelleen Richards); On What is Known: a Personal Viewpoint (B.S. Niven); Feminist Science and Participatory Democracy (Thomas W. Simon); A Feminized Science: From Theory to Practice (Merrelyn Emery); Feminist Critiques of Science (Jacqueline Feldman); A Feminist Critique of the Masculinity of Scientific Knowledge (Ann Dugdale). "Women in Science" (thematic issue). RADICAL TEACHER 30 (January 1986). Contents: Reflections on My Life as a Scientist (Ruth Hubbard); Never Meant to Survive: A Black Woman's Journey: An Interview with Evelyn Hammonds (Aimee Sands); Women and Minorities in Science: An Interdisciplinary Course (Anne Fausto-Sterling and Lydia L. English); Maria Mitchell (Pamela Annas); Study with Professor Mitchell and Maria and Students Observe the Total Eclipse of the Sun (Carole Oles); Gender and Mathematics (Joan Countryman); Shared Meanings in Mathematics: An Approach for Teachers (Dorothy Buerk). "Women in Science" (thematic issue). SCIENCE 255 (March 13 1992): 1333, 1365-1386. Ed. by John Benditt. Contents: Women in Science: From Panes to Ceilings (Editorial, Bernadine Healy); Women in Science--Pieces of a Puzzle (John Benditt); Profile of a Field, Neuroscience: The Pipeline is Leaking (Marcia Barinaga); Key Issue: Mentoring (Ann Gibbons); Creative Solutions: Electronic Mentoring (Ann Gibbons); Profile of a Field, Chemistry: Women Have Extra Hoops to Jump Through (Ivan Amato); Profile of a Field, Mathematics: Heroism is Still the Norm (Paul Selvin); Key Issue: Two-Career Science Marriage (Ann Gibbons); Speaking Out: Shirley Tilghman, Barbara Simons, Joyce Poole, Anna K. Behrensmeyer, Leigh Handy Royden Susan Solomon (Virgina Morell); Creative Solutions: Foundations Lend a Hand (Ann Gibbons); Key Issue: Tenure (Ann Gibbons). "Women in Science: A Man's World" (thematic issue). IMPACT OF SCIENCE ON SOCIETY 25 (April-June 1975). Contents: Comment (Dolly Ghosh); Woman's Scientific Creativity (Lucia Tosi); Obstacles to Women in Science (Deborah Shapley); The Savant and the Midwife (Jacqueline Feldman); Women in the Workforce--The General Picture (International Labour Office); How a Woman Scientist Deals Professionally with Men (Monique de Meuron-Landolt); Women Academics "Publish Less than Men" (Annabel Ferriman); The Professional Woman in Modern Poland (Halina Lewicka); The Popularization of Science: A New Profession Being Developed by Both Men and Women (Jacqueline Juillard); Women in Science and the Technical Fields: Some Further Source Material [bibliography]. "Women in Science '94: Comparisons Across Cultures" (thematic issue). SCIENCE 263 (March 11, 1994): 1355, 1389-93, 1458-1459, 1467-1496. Ed. John Benditt. Contents: Women in Science (Editorial, Daniel J. Koshland, Jr.); Overview: Surprises Across the Cultural Divide (Marcia Barinaga); Germany: The Backbreaking Work of Scientist- Homemakers (Peter Aldhous); Italy: Warm Climate for Women on the Mediterranean (Faye Flam); Sweden: Leveling the Playing Field in Stockholm (Peter Aldhous); Turkey: A Prominent Role on a Stage Set by History (Patricia Kahn); The Philippines: Fighting the Patriarchy in Growing Numbers (Marites D. Vitug); India: Is Overcoming 'Diffidence' the Route to Success? (Kalpana Sharma); Policy Forum: Status and Prospects of Women in Science in Europe (Mary Osborn); Policy Forum: Interventions to Increase the Participation of Women in Physics (Mildred S. Dresselhaus, Judith R. Franz, and Bunny C. Clark); Women in Science: Some Books of the Year (Katherine Livingston). "Women in Science and Technology: The Legacy of Margaret Benston" (thematic issue). CANADIAN WOMAN STUDIES\LES CAHIERS DE LA FEMME 13, no. 2 (Winter 1993). Guest Editorial Board: Ursula Franklin, Hannah Gay and Angela Miles. Partial Contents: Margaret Benston: A Tribute: (seven contributions including Margaret Benston's Feminist Science Critique: A Review and Tribute, by Peggy Tripp-Knowles); Women in Science and Technology: The Issues: Saving the Phenomena and Saving Conventions: A Contribution to the Debate Over Feminist Epistemology (Hannah Gay); 'Women's Work' in Canadian Chemistry (Marianne Gosztonyi Ainley); Voices of Women on Science (Valerie Oglov and Hilda Ching); Science Through Her Looking Glass (Heather Menzies); Women and Indigenous Technology (Anoja Wickramasinghe); Cappuccino, Community and Technology: Technology in the Everyday Life of Margaret Benston (Ellen Balka); 'Complexity and Management' (an interview by Ursula Franklin and Maggie Benston); A New Technology But the Same Old Story (Margaret Benston); Strategies for the Future: Of Genies and Bottles: Technology, Values, and Choices (Ruth Hubbard); Strategies for the Present, Strategies for the Future: Feminist Resistance to New Reproductive Technologies (Sue Cox); Reconstructing Girlhood: Putting 'Clever' Girls in Science (Linda Mahood); Toward Feminist Science Teaching (Irene Lanzinger); Participatory Design by Non-Profit Groups (Margaret Benston and Ellen Balka); Epilogue: A Biography of Rachel Carson (Marilyn MacDonald); and a review essay on A WORLD WITHOUT WOMEN: THE CHRISTIAN CLERICAL CULTURE OF WESTERN SCIENCE , by David F. Noble; FEMINISM CONFRONTS TECHNOLOGY, by Judy Wacjman; INVENTING WOMEN: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, AND GENDER , by Gill Kirkup and Laurie Smith Keller; and FEMININE INGENUITY: WOMEN AND INVENTION IN AMERICA, by Anne Macdonald (Leslie Regan Shade). "Women in Science: Options and Intolerance" (thematic issue). WOMEN'S EDUCATION DES FEMMES 9, no.2 (Fall 1991). Guest editor: Rachelle Sender Beauchamp. Contents: Editorial: Transforming the Science Curriculum (Rachelle Sender Beauchamp and Lisa Avedon); Women Scientists: Contradictions and Connections (Hilda Ching); Are Women Excluded From Careers in Science? (Barbara Sherriff and J.P. Svenne); The Strange History of a Good Idea (Kathryn Bindon); AfriCan Training and Employment Center (Margaret Anderson-Clarke); Listening to the Women's Voices (Fran Davis and Arlene Steiger); The University of Saskatchewan: a Portrait (Lillian E. Dyck); Pedagogie Feministe en Mathematiques, with short summary in English (Helene Kayler and Louise Lafortune); Science Through Her Looking Glass (Heather Menzies); At Odds With Science? (Gina Feldberg); Transforming Mathematics Pedagogy (Pat Rogers); BRIDGES to Equity (Elizabeth Bohnen and Judy Klie); Sois Male et Tais-Toi!, with short summary in English (Karen Messing); Foreigners to the Culture: Women in Trades and Technologies (Kate Braid); Jane Deer in Science: a Sample Case (Anne Innis Dagg); In Their Own Words: Stories By Women Engineers About Themselves (Jeanne Inch and Monique Frize). "Women Physicists: Observations on the Changing Milieu." Excerpts from panel chaired by Mildred Dresselhaus at the March 1992 American Physical Society meeting, Indianapolis. CSWP GAZETTE 12 (October 1992): 1-9. Contents: The Origins of the Committee on Women in Physics: How Much Has Changed and How Little (Vera Kistiakowsky); Contemporary Vignettes: Women Physicists. Where Are We? What Is Our Collective Goal? What is Our Direction? And How Fast Are We Moving? (Irene Engle); Women in Physics: Where Are We Now? Where Do We Go From Here? (Patricia Cladis). "Women, Science, and Society" (thematic issue). SIGNS 4 (Autumn 1978). Contents: Women and Evolution, Part II: Subsistence and Social Organization among Early Hominids (Adrienne L. Zihlman); Animal Sociology and a Natural Economy of the Body Politic, Part I: A Political Physiology of Dominance, Part II: The Past Is the Contested Zone: Human Nature and Theories of Production and Reproduction in Primate Behavior Studies (Donna Haraway); Women and the Scientific Idiom: Textual Episodes from Wollstonecraft, Fuller, Gilman, and Firestone (Lois N. Magner); In from the Periphery: American Women in Science, 1830-1880 (Sally Gregory Kohlstedt); Biology and Equality: A Perspective on Sex Differences (Helen H. Lambert); Sociobiology and Sex Differences (Marian Lowe); Review Essay/Women in Science (Michele L. Aldrich); Review Essay/Women in Medicine (Dorothy Rosenthal Mandelbaum); Sexual Segregation in the Sciences: Some Data and a Model (Margaret W. Rossiter); Phenomenon of the Seventies: The Women's Caucuses (Anne M. Briscoe); Bias in Biological and Human Sciences: Some Comments (Ruth Bleier); book reviews. WOMEN, TECHNOLOGY, AND ETHICS: DEFINING THE ISSUES OF THE 21ST CENTURY, PROCEEDINGS OF THE WILMA E. GROTE SYMPOSIUM FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF WOMEN. Morehead, KY: Morehead State University Office of Regional Development Services, 1991. Sixteen papers presented at a symposium held at Morehead State University in November, 1991. Partial Contents: Of Genies and Bottles: Technology, Values and Choices (Ruth Hubbard); Women, Technology and Ethics in the 21st Century: an Ecofeminist Perspective (Karen J. Warren). "Women, Technology and Innovation" (thematic issue). WOMEN'S STUDIES INTERNATIONAL QUARTERLY 4 (1981). Ed. by Joan Rothschild. Contents: Daughters of Isis, Daughters of Demeter: When Women Sowed and Reaped (Autumn Stanley); Women and Technology in Ancient Alexandria: Maria and Hypatia (Margaret Alic); The Machine in Utopia: Shaker Women and Technology (Helen Deiss Irvin); Women and Microelectronics: The Case of Word Processors (Erik Arnold, Lynda Birke, and Wendy Faulkner); The Culture of Engineering: Women, Workplace and Machine (Sally L. Hacker); Technology and the Future of Women: Haven't We Met Somewhere Before? (Jan Zimmerman); Teaching and Learning About Women and Technology (Joan Rothschild); Feminist Pedagogy and Technology: Reflections on the Goddard Feminism and Ecology Summer Program (Ynestra King); A Preview of AAUW's Biennial Study/Action Topic "Taking Hold of Technology" (Corlann Gee Bush); Teaching Women and Technology at the University of Washington (Christine Bose); Women and Technology Project, Missoula, Montana; book reviews. Wylie, Alison, and Kathleen Okruhlik. "Philosophical Feminism: Challenges to Science." RESOURCES FOR FEMINIST RESEARCH 16 (September 1987): 12-15. Wylie, Alison, Kathleen Okruhlik, Sandra Morton, and Leslie Thielen-Wilson. "Philosophical Feminism: A Bibliographic Guide to Critiques of Science." RESOURCES FOR FEMINIST RESEARCH 19 (June 1990): 2-36. Yee, Carole Zonis. "Do Women in Science and Technology Need the Women's Movement?" FRONTIERS 2 (Fall 1977): 125-128. Zimmerman, Jan. ONCE UPON THE FUTURE: A WOMAN'S GUIDE TO TOMORROW'S TECHNOLOGY. London: Pandora, 1986. Zimmerman, Jan, ed. THE TECHNOLOGICAL WOMAN: INTERFACING WITH TOMORROW. New York: Praeger, 1983. Contents: thirty-one articles in four sections: New Technology, Old Values; Ladies' Home Technology; A Living Wage; The Politics of Tomorrow. Zuckerman, Harriet, Jonathan R. Cole, and John T. Bruer, eds. THE OUTER CIRCLE: WOMEN IN THE SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY. New York: Norton, 1991. Zuk, Marlene. "Feminism and the Study of Animal Behavior." BIOSCIENCE 43 (December 1993): 774-8.