1. Anderson, B. S., & Zinsser, J. P. (1988). A history of their own: Women in Europe from prehistory to the present (Vol. II). New York: Harper and Row.
2. Babits, L. (1994, January 5–9). Will the real housewife please stand up: Feminists, camp followers and housewives on military sites. Paper presented at the Society for Historical Archaeology 27th Annual Conference on Historical and Underwater Archaeology, Vancouver.
3. Baenninger, M. A., & Newcombe, N. (2002). Environmental input to the development of sex-related differences in spatial and mathematical ability. In E. L. Paul (Ed.), Taking sides: Clashing views on controversial issues in sex and gender (2nd ed., pp. 97–100). Guilford, CT: McGraw-Hill/Dushkin.
4. Camp, S. L. (Forthcoming). From reform to repatriation: Gendering an Americanization movement in early twentieth century California. In S. M. Spencer-Wood (Ed.), Historical and archaeological perspectives on gender transformations: From private to public.
5. Cantwell, A.-M., & Wall, D. D. Z. (2011). Engendering New Netherland: Implications for interpreting early colonial societies. In S. M. Spencer-Wood, L. Smith (Eds.), Archaeologies (special issue: the impact of feminist theories on archaeology), 7(1), 121–154.