Wonder women: Seminar focuses on female leadership, rights

March 14, 2016

History Professor Georgina Hickey and her students examine women鈥檚 leadership in movements of social change in WST/HST: 3651.

Professor Georgina Hickey stands in front of a blue-gray chalkboard with her hands out in mid-explanation. Written on the chalkboard: 鈥淨uestion to Ponder鈥, 鈥淐RM, Women鈥檚 Roles, Theory鈥, 鈥淎nnouncements鈥 Georgina is a middle-aged white woman with straight, dirty blonde hair laying past her shoulders. She is wearing a black, square neck long sleeve shirt tucked into a pair of plaid trousers.
Professor Georgina Hickey stands in front of a blue-gray chalkboard with her hands out in mid-explanation. Written on the chalkboard: 鈥淨uestion to Ponder鈥, 鈥淐RM, Women鈥檚 Roles, Theory鈥, 鈥淎nnouncements鈥 Georgina is a middle-aged white woman with straight, dirty blonde hair laying past her shoulders. She is wearing a black, square neck long sleeve shirt tucked into a pair of plaid trousers.
History Professor Georgina Hickey examines women鈥檚 leadership in movements of social change in WST/HST: 3651

Standing in front of the class, Professor Georgina Hickey asks her students to list civil rights activists who were women.

The class started loud and strong. 鈥淓lla Baker.鈥 鈥淔annie Lou Hamer.鈥 鈥淩osa Parks.鈥

But after a few names, the class trailed off.

鈥淲e all know they were there, but they weren鈥檛 front and center,鈥 Hickey said. 鈥淎s retired Professor Gloria House, who taught on this campus and was a civil rights activist explained, 鈥榃e were changing the world. Arguing about who got the credit was wrong.鈥

鈥淚 can definitely understand that. But there are more reasons for women鈥檚 invisibility we should explore.鈥

The seminar course鈥擶GST/HIST:3651 Women, Leadership and Social Change鈥 examines women鈥檚 leadership in movements for social change through case studies from 19th and 20th century U.S. history. The class, which was created in 2004 to support the Women in Learning and Leadership Program, highlights activists from a variety of movements surrounding economic justice, race relations and gender equality.

Hickey said women have always had significant leadership roles in movements.

But, for various reasons, most have been overlooked. Some weren鈥檛 vocal about it. Others had the credit taken by someone else. Or historians omitted them. Sometimes the women themselves found it advantageous to 鈥渇ly under the radar鈥 and organize outside of the spotlight.

鈥淲omen鈥檚 leadership has traditionally been undervalued or gone unrecognized altogether by contemporaries and historians alike. This course demonstrates that women have left an inspiring and instructional legacy of leadership,鈥 she said.

Senior Danielle Warren said she鈥檚 aware that females do not get noted the way their male counterparts do, and she took the class to learn more.

鈥淚 wanted a well-rounded sociological framework about the contributions women have made in history,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he class gives you information that seems to have been erased in the popular media. And it gives a more intersectional perspective than you get in history or even in women鈥檚 history.鈥

Hickey said it鈥檚 important to understand the experiences of women and the unique challenges and rewards they encountered as leaders.

鈥淚t is more than just adding women to the historical record, though that is important. It is about understanding the ways in which race, class and gender intersected in real people鈥檚 lives and what happens when people start to look critically at their place in society,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t is about understanding the process by which individuals come to understand and challenge structural inequality through collective movements for social change.鈥