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Where
We Stand
Over
a two-day period, more than 300 women gathered to consider the role
of gender in scholarship, the arts, business, entrepreneurship --
and at Yale.
December
2001
by Bruce Fellman
When
Nancy Cott, Sterling Professor
of History, was reviewing the initial plans for Yale's Tercentennial
celebration, she was struck by what seemed to be more than a minor
oversight. "The University's 300th anniversary also marked 30 years
of coeducation," says Cott, "but in the list of proposed programs,
the role of women had been neglected."
Some
observers -- particularly alumnae with long memories of the less-than-halcyon
early days of coeducation at the College -- would see the omission
as a depressing sign of how little things had changed. But the official
response to the gap suggests that Yale is no longer a place whose
mission once was, said one alumna, "to produce 1,000 male leaders
-- and 250 bitchy wives."
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"We've
traveled a long distance, but there's still a lot of work
to be done."
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Cott,
a faculty member since 1975 (she is joining the Harvard faculty
next year), mentioned the oversight to University secretary and
vice president Linda Koch Lorimer,
who headed the Tercentennial planning committee, and the situation
was quickly rectified. Together with Dolores Hayden, professor of
architecture and urbanism, and Judith Resnik, the Arthur Liman Professor
of Law, Cott assembled a group known as the Women Faculty Forum.
The 23-member WFF developed several programs for the Tercentennial,
and as the year-long series of events neared its finale
in October, the group, despite the events of September 11, decided
to go ahead with its most ambitious effort, a symposium, September
20 to 21, called "Gender Matters."
The
two-day conference, attended by more than 300 women -- and a handful
of men -- celebrated the achievements of alumnae in academia, business,
the arts, leadership, and entrepreneurial activities. Speakers -- from university presidents to film producers -- and attendees also
considered the role that gender plays in changing the nature of
scholarship, activism, the judiciary, and numerous other endeavors
in which women are now increasingly important players.
In
his opening remarks to the group, President Levin admitted that
"Yale's history is one in which women have played a limited role."
But, said Levin, "we've made a lot of progress in the last tenth
of our history, and the numbers on Maya Lin's Women's Table
have become less and less embarrassing."
Statistics
bear out the President's optimistic assessment. Ever since the College
admitted the first 250 female students in 1969, the number of women
undergraduates has steadily increased to the point that in recent
years, each entering class has had close to a 50-50 male-female
ratio. The enrollments at the Graduate School and in many of Yale's
professional schools are also approaching parity.
Women
have made great strides in their representation on the faculty since
Bessy Lee Gambrill became a professor of education in 1923 -- the
first female to be appointed -- and was granted tenure
in the early 1950s, also a first. The professoriate is now 34 percent
female, and while that has increased in recent years, there is also
clearly room for improvement. As of this year, women made up only
17 percent of the tenured faculty. "We've traveled a long distance -- that
shouldn't be forgotten," says Cott, "but there's still a lot of
work to be done."
Academia
has become a leading laboratory for developing strategies to move
beyond merely assimilating women into the organizational ranks to
changing the institution to enable women to flourish. At the opening
panel discussion, "Women and Universities," Johnnetta Cole, president
emerita of Spelman College, Nannerl O. Keohane '67PhD, president
of Duke University, and Nancy J. Vickers '76PhD, president of Bryn
Mawr College, discussed how the schools they've led, worked for,
and attended have helped, and hindered, women.
Keohane
began her talk by taking the Yale Alumni Magazine's Tercentennial
issue (Mar. 2001) to task for what she perceived as its lack
of attention to female accomplishments. "Symbolism matters," said
Keohane, pointing to Wellesley, a single-sex college in which many
public spaces are filled with portraits that honor women. "Institutional
iconography slips into your psyche."
But
while Yale's founders, and many of its luminaries, are male, the
University's record in appointing women to the highest offices offers
plenty of female role models. In addition to the secretary of the
University, the positions of provost, dean of the Graduate School,
and University general counsel are all occupied by women.
They
are, however, all white women, and if females in general are still
"mis- and underrepresented," says Johnnetta Cole, who is also professor
emerita of anthopology at Emory University, the situation is worse
for minorities. "Women of color experience even greater inequalities,"
she notes. "A puzzle is not done when one large piece is in place."
Cole
cautioned her audience to avoid the assumption that there was a
"one-size-fits-all" solution to the problem of gender discrimination.
"Though we don't want to ignore our common experiences, if you have
seen one woman, you have not seen us all," she says.
Universities,
often ahead of society, have come to see diversity as a strength.
"The more eyes there are, the more complete our collective vision,"
notes Cole.
Nowhere
has this been more true than in scholarship,
where the influx of female teachers and researchers has changed
many disciplines in fundamental ways. In a panel discussion called
"Invention: New Research Questions," Seyla Benhabib '77PhD, the
Eugene Meyer Professor of Political Science and Philosophy, Maxine
F. Singer '57PhD, biochemist and president of the Carnegie Institution
of Washington, and Alice Eagly, professor of psychology at Northwestern,
noted how both questions and answers can differ, depending on the
gender of the scholar.
One
of the best examples of this situation, said Eagly, who studies
the role of gender in attitudes and leadership, comes from UCLA
psychologist Shelley Taylor '72PhD, who offers a new way of looking
at how people react to stressful situations. "The 'fight or flight'
model is the traditional way of describing our response to danger,"
said Eagly, "but Taylor has found that among women, the response
is better described as 'tend and befriend.' Women, because they
bear and nurture children, typically turn to others, particularly
other women, to help them survive."
As
researchers from anthopology to medicine have discovered, seeing
the world through male eyes alone can provide an incomplete picture
of reality. But while the questions women will pose may be quite
different from those of men, "gender doesn't matter in terms of
answers, if the answer's going to hold up scientifically," noted
biochemist and science administrator Maxine Singer.
But
gender continues to matter in terms of what questions get funded.
"This ultimately involves issues of critical mass and the governance
of science," said Singer. "How do you get more women to go into
and stay in scientific careers and move up the ranks into decision-making
positions?"
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"I
heard that women could never be directors because they'd never
been captains of ships."
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It is
a question that can be asked of almost any endeavor. In "Imagination:
Center of the Arts," panelist Sarah Pillsbury '74, a film producer
whose credits include Desperately Seeking Susan, How to
Make an American Quilt, and Eight Men Out, explained
that she got into the production track "because of gender -- I heard
that women could never be directors because they'd never been captains
of ships. Producing came naturally, since I had all these den mothers
as role models."
For
novelist Gloria Naylor '83MA, the African-American author of The
Women of Brewster Place and other novels, the impetus to write
came from reading. "I had an intellectual and spiritual hunger for
books about people who looked like me by people who looked like
me," said Naylor. "Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye gave me
the courage to try to tell my story."
In
discussions on "Leadership: Reinventing the Local and the Global,"
and "Founders, Entrepreneurs, and Activists," panelists noted the
challenges they'd overcome, and those that remained. There was talk
about acquiring venture capital, and succeeding in various endeavors.
And there was the enduring question of children and child care.
Marian
Wright Edelman '63LLB, president and founder of the Washington,
D.C.-based Children's Defense Fund, urged her audience to lobby
for passage of a federal bill called the Act to Leave No Child Behind.
"Sojourner Truth declared that enough fleas biting strategically
can make even the biggest dogs move," said Edelman. "To change things,
we need a massive flea corps."
Linda
Mason '80MBA, chairman and founder of Bright Horizons Family Solutions,
explained how she'd turned the traditional childcare role of women
into a national business that provides daycare for corporations.
"Our corporate culture draws on the best of women's distinctly collaborative
leadership and management style, " said Mason.
However
family friendly Mason's organization makes life at some companies,
most
women are still left with the difficult task of balancing home and
career. "I was helping my daughters get ready to go apple picking
when the phone rang and it was a colleague asking me to go to a
meeting," said Elizabeth Dillon, assistant professor of English
and a member of the Women's Faculty Forum. In an ensuing commotion,
both the phone and Dillon tumbled down the stairs. "I'm often in
danger of dropping balls -- or phones -- and I'd like to think that
children and an academic career are not mutually exclusive," said
Dillon.
"It
needs to be possible," responded President Levin, outlining Yale's
efforts, which include extending the tenure clock, expanding parental
leave to care for children and elderly parents, and offering subsidized
daycare. "There's been a profound demographic shift toward the two-career
family, and the University must take the lead in effecting social
change."
The
Women Faculty Forum would seem an ideal organization to examine
these issues, and Yale has recently provided the WFF with funding
for three years to continue its work beyond the Tercentennial. Says
Nancy Cott: "We've become the seedbed for thinking about what we
can do to move the University towards gender parity."
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