1. Marilyn J. Boxer,“Women's Studies as Women's History,”Women's Studies Quarterly,30/3–4(Fall/Winter2002), a special double issue on “Women's Studies Then and Now.”
2. Ibid., p.90. Freidenreich quotes noted literary scholar Carolyn Heilbrun making this point inReinventing Womanhood(New York:Norton,1979), pp.20–21; nearly two decades later, Ann Pellegrini made essentially the same point in “Interarticulations,” her contribution toMiriam PeskowitzandLaura Levitt(eds.),Judaism Since Gender(New York:Routledge,1997).