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This is a necessarily incomplete list of significant feminist theorists and philosophers who have contributed to feminist theory. Any of these writers should have a little blurb explaining their contributions. Here, feminism includes the various historical and cultural strands of feminism and its related studies; see [[feminism]], [[feminisms]], [[queer theory]], and [[gender studies]].  
This is a necessarily incomplete list of significant feminist theorists and philosophers whose work has been significant in feminist theory. Any of these writers should have a little blurb explaining their contributions. Here, feminism includes the various historical and cultural strands of feminism and its related studies; see [[feminism]], [[feminisms]], [[queer theory]], and [[gender studies]].  


The emphasis here is on people who have made significant contributions to theory, scholarship and ideas about women, gender, and sexuality. (In other words, people who made significant contributions through writing and theory.  Activists and figures in the women's movement famous for being an early woman entrant in a particular profession should be listed only if they have also made, and are known in feminism for, a significant contribution to feminist thought and theory.  
The emphasis here is on people who have made significant contributions to theory, scholarship and ideas about women, gender, and sexuality. (In other words, people who made significant contributions through writing and theory.  Activists and figures in the women's movement famous for being an early woman entrant in a particular profession should be listed only if they have also made, and are known in feminism for, a significant contribution to feminist thought and theory.  


The purpose of this list is to provide an index to critical thinkers in the history of feminist thought.   
The purpose of this list is to provide an index to critical thinkers in the history of feminist thought.   
See also [[List of works of feminist theory]] which lists important works in chronological order.


==pre-19th century==
==pre-19th century==
* Christine de Pizan, 1365-1430 (City of Ladies; an argument that women had reason and virtue)
* [[Christine de Pizan]], 1365-1430 (''[[City of Ladies]]''; an argument that women had reason and virtue)
* Olympe de Gouges, 1748-1793 (political rights; ''Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen'' (1791)))
* [[Olympe de Gouges]], 1748-1793 (political rights; ''Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen'' (1791))
* Mary Wollstonecraft, 1759-1797 (''Vindication of the Rights of Woman''; an argument for spiritual equality and equal access to education)
* [[Mary Wollstonecraft]], 1759-1797 (''Vindication of the Rights of Woman''; an argument for spiritual equality and equal access to education)


==19th century==
==19th century==
* Sarah Moore Grimké, 1792-1873 ("Letters on the Equality of the Sexes and the Condition of Women", 1837)
* [[Friedrich Engels]], 1820-1895 ("The Origin of the Female, Private Property, and the State" (1884); early assessment of political economy of monogamy)
* Sojourner Truth, 1797-1883 ("Ain't I a Woman?" speech at 1851 Ohio Women's Rights Convention)
* [[Margaret Fuller]], 1810-1850 (''Woman in the Nineteenth Century'', 1845)
* John Stuart Mill, 1806-1873 (''The Subjection of Women'')  
* [[Sarah Moore Grimké]], 1792-1873 ("Letters on the Equality of the Sexes and the Condition of Women", 1837)
* Harriet Taylor Mill, 1807-1858 (''Enfranchisement of Women'')
* [[Sojourner Truth]], 1797-1883 ("Ain't I a Woman?" speech at 1851 Ohio Women's Rights Convention)
* Concepción Arenal, 1820-1893 (like Susan B. Anthony & Marguerite Durand, a popular activist whose popular writings pushed feminist theory)
* [[John Stuart Mill]], 1806-1873 (''The Subjection of Women'')  
* Susan B. Anthony, 1820-1906 (US feminist activist who did many writings)
* [[Harriet Taylor Mill]], 1807-1858 (''Enfranchisement of Women'')
* Matilda Joslyn Gage, 1826-1898 (women's rights activist, historian, and theorist; known for her history of women scientists and inventors; co-wrote ''History of Woman Suffrage'' and ''The Woman's Bible'' with Stanton; the [[Matilda effect]] named after her)
* [[Concepción Arenal]], 1820-1893 (like Susan B. Anthony & Marguerite Durand, a popular activist whose popular writings pushed feminist theory)
* Victoria Woodhull, 1838-1927 (famed for her advocacy of free love)  
* [[Susan B. Anthony]], 1820-1906 (US feminist activist who did many writings)
* Elizabeth Cady Stanton, 1815-1902 (Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiments (1848); ''History of Woman Suffrage''; ''The Woman's Bible'')
* [[Matilda Joslyn Gage]], 1826-1898 (women's rights activist, historian, and theorist; known for her history of women scientists and inventors; co-wrote ''History of Woman Suffrage'' and ''The Woman's Bible'' with Stanton; the [[Matilda effect]] named after her)
* [[Victoria Woodhull]], 1838-1927 (famed for her advocacy of free love)  
* [[Elizabeth Cady Stanton]], 1815-1902 (Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiments (1848); ''History of Woman Suffrage''; ''[[The Woman's Bible]]'')


==early-mid 20th century==
==early-mid 20th century==
* Simone de Beauvoir, 1908-1986 (''[[Le Deuxième Sexe]]'' (1949))
* [[Simone de Beauvoir]], 1908-1986 (''[[Le Deuxième Sexe]]'' (1949))
* Marguerite Durand, 1864-1936 (founded ''La Fronde'' (1897); like Susan B. Anthony, primarily an activist, but explored feminism in her journalistic and popular writings)
* [[Marguerite Durand]], 1864-1936 (founded ''La Fronde'' (1897); like Susan B. Anthony, primarily an activist, but explored feminism in her journalistic and popular writings)
* Betty Friedan, 1921-2006 (''[[The Feminine Mystique]]'' (1963))
* [[Betty Friedan]], 1921-2006 (''[[The Feminine Mystique]]'' (1963))
* Virginia Woolf, 1882-1941 ("[[A Room of One's Own]]" (1929))
* [[Virginia Woolf]], 1882-1941 ("[[A Room of One's Own]]" (1929))


==1960s-70s==
==1960s-70s==
* Gloria Evangelina Anzaldúa, 1942-2004 (''This Bridge Called My Back'' (1981) with Cherríe Moraga)
* [[Gloria Evangelina Anzaldúa]], 1942-2004 (''This Bridge Called My Back'' (1981) with Cherríe Moraga)
* Susan Brownmiller, 1935 ("Against Our Will: Men, Women, and Rape" (1975); Take Back the Night]] movement theorist)
* [[Susan Brownmiller]], 1935 ("Against Our Will: Men, Women, and Rape" (1975); Take Back the Night" movement theorist)
* Nancy Chodorow, 1944- (feminist psychoanalytic theory)
* [[Nancy Chodorow]], 1944- (feminist psychoanalytic theory)
* Hélèe Cixous, 1937- (one of the three founding "[[French feminism|French feminist]]" theorists with Cristeva & Irigaray; particularly focused on psychoanalytic theory/deconstructionism; coined with Irigaray the term "[[phallogocentrism]]"; wrote "Le Rire de la Medusa" ("The Laugh of the Medusa" (1975)) which argued against phallogocentrism and called for [[polymorphous perversity]].
* [[Hélène Cixous]], 1937- (one of the three founding "[[French feminism|French feminist]]" theorists with Cristeva & Irigaray; particularly focused on psychoanalytic theory/deconstructionism; coined with Irigaray the term "[[phallogocentrism]]"; wrote "Le Rire de la Medusa" ("The Laugh of the Medusa" (1975)) which argued against phallogocentrism and called for [[polymorphous perversity]].
* Angela Davis, 1944- (''Women, Race and Class'' (1981))  
* [[Patricia Hill Collins]], 1948- (''Black Feminist Thought'' (1990); ''Fighting Words'' (1998))
* Mary Daly, 1928- (''Gyn/Ecology'' (1990))
* [[Julia Kristeva]], 1941-
* [[Angela Davis]], 1944- (''Women, Race and Class'' (1981))  
* [[Mary Daly]], 1928-2010 (''Gyn/Ecology'' (1990))
* [[Christine Delphy]], 1941- (materialist feminism)
* [[Christine Delphy]], 1941- (materialist feminism)
* Shulamith Firestone, 1945- (''[[The Dialectic of Sex]]'' (1970))
* [[Andrea Dworkin]], 1946-2005 (''Pornography: Men Possessing Women'' (1979); ''Woman Hating'' (1974; literary criticism); ''Right-Wing Women'' (1983); ''Intercourse'' (1987) (the source for people who like to claim that Dworkin said all heterosexual sex is rape))
* Michel Foucault, 1926-1984 (''The History of Sexuality'', 1976-84, particularly)
* [[Françoise d'Eaubonne]], 1920-2005 (inventor of term "ecofeminism")
* Jo Freeman, 1945- ("[[The Tyranny of Structurelessness]]")
* [[Anne Fausto-Sterling]], ''Myths of Gender'' (examined essentialist biological claims about sex and gender)
* Marilyn French, 1929- (''The War Against Women'' (1992))
* [[Shulamith Firestone]], 1945- (''[[The Dialectic of Sex]]'' (1970))
* Germaine Greer, 1939- (''The Female Eunuch'' (1970))
* [[Michel Foucault]], 1926-1984 (''The History of Sexuality'', 1976-84, particularly)
* Shere Hite, 1942- (female sexuality; ''The Hite Report on Female Sexuality'', 1976)
* [[Jo Freeman]], 1945- ("[[The Tyranny of Structurelessness]]")
* bell hooks (''Ain't I a Woman?: Black Women and Feminism'' (1981))
* [[Marilyn French]], 1929-2009 (''The War Against Women'' (1992))
* Andrea Dworkin, 1946-2005 (''Pornography: Men Possessing Women'' (1979); ''Woman Hating'' (1974; literary criticism); ''Right-Wing Women'' (1983); ''Intercourse'' (1987) (the source for people who like to claim that Dworkin said all heterosexual sex is rape))
* [[Germaine Greer]], 1939- (''The Female Eunuch'' (1970))
* Sheila Jeffreys, 1948- (''The Spinster and Her Enemies'' (1985))
* [[Shere Hite]], 1942- (female sexuality; ''The Hite Report on Female Sexuality'', 1976)
* Julia Kristeva, 1941- (cultural theory/semiotics/deconstructionism; one of the major "[[French feminism|French feminists]]"; "Women's Time" in ''New Maladies of the Soul'' (1993); theory of "[[abjection]]" in ''Powers of Horror: An Essay in Abjection''; [[intertextuality]] theory of literary criticism coined in 1966)
* [[bell hooks]] (''Ain't I a Woman?: Black Women and Feminism'' (1981))
* Audre Lorde, 1934-1992 (''Zami: A New Spelling of My Name'' (1983) (a "[[biomythography]]); ''Sister Outsider: Essays and Speeches'' (1984))
* [[Sarah Blaffer Hrdy]] (feminist critiques of science & sexism within scientific literature)
* Luce Irigaray, 1930- (French feminism; ''Speculum of the Other Woman'' (1974); ''This Sex Which Is Not One'' (1977))
* [[Luce Irigaray]], 1930- (French feminism; ''Speculum of the Other Woman'' (1974); ''This Sex Which Is Not One'' (1977))
* Catherine MacKinnon, 1946- (legal theorist; anti-pornography & anti-sex discrimination; ''Feminism Unmodified'' (1987))
* [[Sheila Jeffreys]], 1948- (''The Spinster and Her Enemies'' (1985))
* Kate Millett, 1934- (''Sexual Politics'' (1970), significant text in feminist literary criticism)
* [[Evelyn Fox Keller]] (feminist critiques of science)
* Cherríe Moraga, 1952- (''This Bridge Called My Back'' with Gloria Anzaldúa)
* [[Anne Koedt]], "The Myth of the Vaginal Orgasm"
* Robin Morgan, 1941- (''Sisterhood Is Powerful'' anthology; "Goodbye To All That" (1970) essay critiquing sexism of 1960s/70s American Left movement)
* [[Julia Kristeva]], 1941- (cultural theory/semiotics/deconstructionism; one of the major "[[French feminism|French feminists]]"; "Women's Time" in ''New Maladies of the Soul'' (1993); theory of "[[abjection]]" in ''Powers of Horror: An Essay in Abjection''; [[intertextuality]] theory of literary criticism coined in 1966)
* Adrienne Rich, 1929- (''Of Woman Born: Motherhood as Experience and Institution'' (1976); "Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence")
* [[Audre Lorde]], 1934-1992 (''Zami: A New Spelling of My Name'' (1983) (a "[[biomythography]]); ''Sister Outsider: Essays and Speeches'' (1984))
* Valerie Solanas, ''SCUM Manifesto''
* [[Catherine MacKinnon]], 1946- (legal theorist; anti-pornography & anti-sex discrimination; ''Feminism Unmodified'' (1987))
* Dale Spender, 1943- (feminist literary critic; ''[[Women of Ideas and What Men Have Done to Them]]'')
* [[Kate Millett]], 1934- (''Sexual Politics'' (1970), significant text in feminist literary criticism)
* Alice Walker, 1944- ("womanism", e.g., ''In Search of Our Mothers' Gardens'' (1983); largely responsible for modern reclamation of [[Zora Neale Hurston]])  
* [[Cherríe Moraga]], 1952- (''This Bridge Called My Back'' with Gloria Anzaldúa)
* Monique Wittig, 1935-2003 ([[materialist feminism]]; ''Corps Lesbien'' (The lesbian body) (1973))
* [[Robin Morgan]], 1941- (''Sisterhood Is Powerful'' anthology; "Goodbye To All That" (1970) essay critiquing sexism of 1960s/70s American Left movement; ''[[The Burning Time]]'', a historically inaccurate story of [[Lady Alyce Kyteler]], an Irish noblewoman who fights back against the Inquisition)
* [[Adrienne Rich]], 1929- (''Of Woman Born: Motherhood as Experience and Institution'' (1976); "Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence")
* [[Sheila Rowbotham]], 1943- (socialist feminism; ''Hidden from History: 300 Years of Women's Oppression and the Fight Against It'' (1973); ''Woman, Resistance and Revolution'' (1973))
* [[Barbara Smith]], 1946- (African American lesbian feminism; "Toward a Black Feminist Consciousness" (1982) in ''All the Women Are White, All the Blacks Are Men, But Some of Us Are Brave: Black Women's Studies'' (ed. with Gloria T. Hull & Patricia Bell Scott, 1982); ''Home Girls: A Black Feminist Anthology'' (1983, ed.))
* [[Valerie Solanas]], ''SCUM Manifesto''
* [[Dale Spender]], 1943- (feminist literary critic; ''[[Women of Ideas and What Men Have Done to Them]]'')
* [[Alice Walker]], 1944- ("womanism", e.g., ''In Search of Our Mothers' Gardens'' (1983); largely responsible for modern reclamation of [[Zora Neale Hurston]])  
* [[Monique Wittig]], 1935-2003 ([[materialist feminism]]; ''Corps Lesbien'' (The lesbian body) (1973))
* [[Michele Wallace]], 1952- (''[[Black Macho and the Myth of the Superwoman]]'' (1979))


==late 20th century==
==late 20th century==
* Kate Bornstein, 1948- (''Gender Outlaw'' (1997); ''My Gender Workbook'' (1994))
* [[Leslie Bender]], "From Gender Difference to Feminist Solidarity: Using Carol Gilligan and an Ethic of Care in the Law," 15 Vt. L. Rev. 1 (1990)
* Judith Butler, 1956-  (''Gender Trouble'', 1990)  
* [[Kate Bornstein]], 1948- (''Gender Outlaw'' (1997); ''My Gender Workbook'' (1994))
* Lillian Faderman (lesbian history; ''Surpassing the Love of Men'' (1981); ''Chloe Plus Olivia: An Anthology of Lesbian Literature from the 17th Century to the Present'' (1994))
* [[Judith Butler]], 1956-  (''[[Gender Trouble]]'', 1990)  
* Carol Gilligan, (difference feminism; "You Just Don't Understand" on gender & linguistics)
* [[Pat Califia]] (presently [[Patrick Califia]]) (lesbian/queer sexuality; SM)
* [[Lillian Faderman]], 1940- (lesbian history; ''Surpassing the Love of Men'' (1981); ''Chloe Plus Olivia: An Anthology of Lesbian Literature from the 17th Century to the Present'' (1994))
* [[Anne Fausto-Sterling]], 1944- (''Myths of Gender'' (2d Ed 1992); "The Five Sexes" (1993, a tongue-in-cheek exposition of serious distinction between gender and sex); ''Sexing the Body: Gender Politics and the Construction of Sexuality'' (2000)
* [[Carol Gilligan]], 1936- (''In a Different Voice: Psychological Theory and Women's Development'' (1982) (critique of models of ethics and sociology based on studies of boys and men)
* [[Deborah Tannen]], 1945- ([[difference feminism]]; "You Just Don't Understand" (1990), an argument that inherent gender distinctions in communication patterns exist)
* [[Judith Halberstam]], 1961- (''Female Masculinity'' (1998))
* [[Donna Haraway]], 1944- (''[[A Cyborg Manifesto]]'')
* [[Donna Haraway]], 1944- (''[[A Cyborg Manifesto]]'')
* [[Peggy McIntosh]] ("[[White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack]]")
* [[Joanna Russ]], 1937- ''[[How To Suppress Women's Writing]]'')
* [[Joanna Russ]], 1937- ''[[How To Suppress Women's Writing]]'')
* Gayle Rubin, 1949- ("The Traffic in Women: Notes on the 'Political Economy' of Sex" (1975); "Thinking Sex:  Notes for a Radical Theory of the Politics of Sexuality" (1982))
* [[Gayle Rubin]], 1949- ("The Traffic in Women: Notes on the 'Political Economy' of Sex" (1975); "Thinking Sex:  Notes for a Radical Theory of the Politics of Sexuality" (1982))
* Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, 1950- (''Epistemology of the Closet'' (1990); ''Between Men: English Literature and Male Homosocial Desire'' (1985))
* [[Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick]], 1950- (''Epistemology of the Closet'' (1990); ''Between Men: English Literature and Male Homosocial Desire'' (1985))
* Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, 1942 ("Can the Subaltern Speak?"; founding text of [[postcolonialism]])
* [[Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak]], 1942 ("[[Can the Subaltern Speak?]]"; founding text of [[postcolonialism]])
* [[Carol Tavris]], 1944- ''Mismeasure of Woman: Why Women Are Not the Better Sex, the Inferior Sex, or the Opposite Sex'' (1992)
* [[Robin West]], "Jurisprudence and Gender," 55 U. Chi. L. Rev. 1 91988)


[[Category:Feminist theorists| ]]
[[Category:Feminist theorists| ]]
[[category:Feminism| ]]
[[Category:Feminism and critical theory| ]]
[[category:Indexes]]

Latest revision as of 13:56, 15 December 2010

This is a necessarily incomplete list of significant feminist theorists and philosophers whose work has been significant in feminist theory. Any of these writers should have a little blurb explaining their contributions. Here, feminism includes the various historical and cultural strands of feminism and its related studies; see feminism, feminisms, queer theory, and gender studies.

The emphasis here is on people who have made significant contributions to theory, scholarship and ideas about women, gender, and sexuality. (In other words, people who made significant contributions through writing and theory. Activists and figures in the women's movement famous for being an early woman entrant in a particular profession should be listed only if they have also made, and are known in feminism for, a significant contribution to feminist thought and theory.

The purpose of this list is to provide an index to critical thinkers in the history of feminist thought.

See also List of works of feminist theory which lists important works in chronological order.

pre-19th century

  • Christine de Pizan, 1365-1430 (City of Ladies; an argument that women had reason and virtue)
  • Olympe de Gouges, 1748-1793 (political rights; Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen (1791))
  • Mary Wollstonecraft, 1759-1797 (Vindication of the Rights of Woman; an argument for spiritual equality and equal access to education)

19th century

  • Friedrich Engels, 1820-1895 ("The Origin of the Female, Private Property, and the State" (1884); early assessment of political economy of monogamy)
  • Margaret Fuller, 1810-1850 (Woman in the Nineteenth Century, 1845)
  • Sarah Moore Grimké, 1792-1873 ("Letters on the Equality of the Sexes and the Condition of Women", 1837)
  • Sojourner Truth, 1797-1883 ("Ain't I a Woman?" speech at 1851 Ohio Women's Rights Convention)
  • John Stuart Mill, 1806-1873 (The Subjection of Women)
  • Harriet Taylor Mill, 1807-1858 (Enfranchisement of Women)
  • Concepción Arenal, 1820-1893 (like Susan B. Anthony & Marguerite Durand, a popular activist whose popular writings pushed feminist theory)
  • Susan B. Anthony, 1820-1906 (US feminist activist who did many writings)
  • Matilda Joslyn Gage, 1826-1898 (women's rights activist, historian, and theorist; known for her history of women scientists and inventors; co-wrote History of Woman Suffrage and The Woman's Bible with Stanton; the Matilda effect named after her)
  • Victoria Woodhull, 1838-1927 (famed for her advocacy of free love)
  • Elizabeth Cady Stanton, 1815-1902 (Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiments (1848); History of Woman Suffrage; The Woman's Bible)

early-mid 20th century

1960s-70s

late 20th century