The first women's studies programs nationally were founded in 1969 at San Diego State and Cornell. Contrary to popular belief, such programs were founded neither to celebrate women nor to malign men nor to inject partisan politics into objective knowledge. Rather, the programs were founded to coordinate and facilitate feminist analysis across the disciplines, and to promote feminist advocacy for social justice. Women's studies is an interdisciplinary field that takes gender as its primary category of analysis. This research agenda has led to the rethinking of knowledge and methodologies in a wide range of fields.
The new language, definitions, concepts, and categories introduced by such scholarship have since been integrated into the disciplinary thinking of these and many other fields. This is why Marilyn Boxer, a scholar at Stanford University's Institute for Research on Women and Gender calls women's studies "the most expansive new field of knowledge in higher education of our era."
The women and men educated on the work of the second-wave feminists such as those cited above have now entered public life as wage-earners and social activists. In Manifesta: Young Women, Feminism, and the Future (2000), Jennifer Baumgardner and Amy Richards cite numerous examples of how exposure to women's studies scholarship has galvanized young people today to work for social justice. Becky Michaels works for the publisher Little, Brown, and Company and also runs a support group for battered women in New York. Farai Chideya, a syndicated political columnist and correspondent for such shows as Good Morning America, maintains her own web site called Pop and Politics. Tammy Rae teaches art at the University of North Carolina and has founded a record label, Mr. Lady, that produces women's music. Gita Drury co-founded the Active Element Foundation, which redirects money generated by hip-hop to under served communities. Naomi Wolf, author of The Beauty Myth (1991), co-founded the Woodhull Institute for Ethical Leadership. Through Third Wave Direct Action, 120 young people registered over 20,000 new voters across the U.S. in the summer of 1992. These and many other examples demonstrate the profound impact the women's studies movement has had on young people's lives.
And it's not just for women. Its commitment to social justice attracts many men to women's studies courses and degrees. As Susan Faludi, author of Stiffed, says: "One of the gross misconceptions about feminism is that it's only about women. But in order for a woman to live freely, men have to live freely, too." Too often women's studies is mistakenly associated with identity politics rather than with research identity. But the fact is that women's studies scholarship and feminist analysis offer a profoundly new way of interpreting human experience.