The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. (April 2018) |
This is a list of women military historians. Traditionally an overwhelmingly male-dominated discipline,[1] women began entering the field with the turn towards the 'new military history' of the 1960s. Pioneering women military historians included Joanna Bourke and Amanda Foreman, who contributed to re-orientating military history towards a "multidisciplinary approach that embeds war in its political, social, cultural and personal contexts".[2] However, women remain under-represented in academic military history.[3]
List
edit- Beth Bailey
- Joan Beaumont
- Evelyn Berckman
- Ruth Bettina Birn
- Joanna Bourke
- Anne Curry
- Shauna Devine
- Elisabeth Joan Doyle
- Gabriela Dudeková
- Lesley J. Gordon
- Heike B. Görtemaker
- Mercedes Graf
- Drew Gilpin Faust
- Amanda Foreman
- Karen Hagemann
- Ellen Hammer
- Beatrice Heuser
- Ruth E. Hodge
- Isabel V. Hull
- Ann Hyland
- Sheila Miyoshi Jager
- Kimberly Kagan
- Jennifer D. Keene
- Galina Kozhevnikova
- Elizabeth D. Leonard
- Lisa Lines
- Ella Lonn
- Lyn Macdonald
- Margaret MacMillan
- Chandra Manning
- Loretta Napoleoni
- Elizabeth Norman
- Sarah C. Paine
- Reina Pennington[4][5]
- Martha Settle Putney
- Carol Reardon
- Terese Pencak Schwartz
- Florence Warfield Sillers
- Rose Mary Sheldon
- Jean A. Stuntz
- Pamela D. Toler
- Barbara W. Tuchman
- Kerstin von Lingen
- Marilyn B. Young
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Lynn, John A. (1997). "The embattled future of academic military history". The Journal of Military History. 61 (4): 777–789. doi:10.2307/2954086. JSTOR 2954086. ProQuest 195642876.
Moreover, military history is a remarkably male field, both in that we study institutions that have been overwhelmingly male and in that women are underrepresented among military historians as a group. The uncharitable might claim that as opposed to women's history, military history is men's history par excellence.
- ^ Lovell, Julia (2011-09-30). "Military history: not just for men". The Guardian. Retrieved 2017-10-12.
- ^ "5x15 talks: Women in military history". National Army Museum. Retrieved 2017-10-12.
- ^ "Reina Pennington - C-SPAN.org". www.c-span.org.
- ^ "A Woman of Substance". 20 December 2013.