1. deVaumorière, M. 1701.L'Art de Plaire dans la Conversation319–320. Paris This rare morsel (which was discovered by the late John K. Wright and relayed to me by Wilma B. Fairchild) is remarkable for its candor. Few writers have dared, or cared, to express so bluntly the antifemale attitude that has been so pervasive in the learned disciplines. The issue was made explicit during the rancorous controversy over the admissibility of women as Fellows in the Royal Geographical Society that divided its membership from 1892 to 1913, cf. Maj. William Cross, “Women as Fellows,”Journal of the Manchester Geographical Society, Vol. 47, (1936-37), pp. 52–53
2. Davis, Kingsley. 1959.Sociology Today, Edited by: Merton, Robert K, Brown, Leonard and Cottrell, Leonard. 328–329. New York: Basic Books.