Department of Women and Gender Studies College of Arts and Humanities

Graphic: The College of Humanities collage

Women and Gender Studies: Celebrating 40 Years!

2012 Summer Courses Offered in WGS!
R1: WGS 150.1: Women, Gender in U.S. History
R1: WGS 514: Women and the Industrial Prison Complex
R3: WGS 150.2: Women, Gender in U.S. History
R3: WGS 200: Introduction to Women and Gender Studies

From Women Studies to Women and Gender Studies
at SFSU

The Women Studies Department at SFSU was founded in 1976 as part of a movement to bring feminism and studies of identity into the university. At that time, most similar programs were called “Women’s Studies.” The apostrophe can imply that the discipline belongs to women rather than has women as its object of study. The program at SFSU chose to identify women as our object of study, not as the owners of the field. The Women Studies Department at SFSU is unique in its use of the construction “women studies.”

Today, who and what constitute “women” is a complex topic. Since the 1970s, woman of color feminism, post-structuralism, transgender studies, and intersectional feminisms have transformed how, why, and who we study as “women.” An added emphasis on “gender” in the name of the department follows curricular, activist, and research changes to the field. “Women and Gender Studies” suggests that “women” is a contested category of identity, always subject to a multiplicity of determinants, including race, ethnicity, nation, class, sexuality, and ability.

The expansion of our name does not signal a shift in our departmental mission. The content of our courses will not change. They will continue to include identity-based studies of women and men in transnational and multicultural contexts alongside deconstructive approaches to the categories of analysis (gender, race, nation, sexuality, class, ethnicity, and able-bodiedness) that frame our teaching and scholarship.

SF State Home