Feminist Studies (FS)
Journal Descriptions
Feminist Studies first appeared in 1972, after more than three years of discussion and planning. At that time, women from Columbia University’s women’s liberation group, students in a women’s studies course at Sarah Lawrence College, and feminist activists from New York City brought together a wide network of feminists committed to creating a scholarly journal with high scholarly standards and community relevance. This feminist network believed that the women’s movement needed an analytic forum to engage the issues raised by the movement and to bring together the contributions of feminist activists and scholars. The title, Feminist Studies, was chosen to indicate that the content of the journal would be both scholarly and political and would foreground women as a social group and gender as a category of analysis. Over the years, Feminist Studies has been a reliable source of significant writings on issues that are important to all classes and races of women. Those familiar with the literature on women’s studies are well aware of the importance and vitality of the journal and the frequency with which articles first published in Feminist Studies are cited and/or reprinted elsewhere. Indeed, no less than four anthologies have been created from articles originally published in Feminist Studies: Clio’s Consciousness Raised: New Perspectives on the History of Women; Sex and Class in Women’s History; U.S. Women in Struggle: A Feminist Studies Anthology; and Lesbian Subjects: A Feminist Studies Reader.
Feminist Studies (FS) is :-
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International, Peer-Reviewed, Open Access, Refereed, Feminist Studies, Gender Studies, Women’s Studies, Social Sciences, Cultural Studies, Interdisciplinary Humanities, queer, trans, anti-LGBTQ, Language & Literature, Feminist & Women's Studies, Humanities , Online or Print , Monthly Journal
- UGC Approved, ISSN Approved: P-ISSN P-ISSN: 0046-3663, E-ISSN: 2153-3873, Established: 1972,
- Provides Crossref DOI
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Not indexed in Scopus, WoS, DOAJ, PubMed, UGC CARE