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boydston_gender_as_a_question_of_historical_analysis [2026/01/16 00:05] jjardineboydston_gender_as_a_question_of_historical_analysis [2026/01/17 00:44] (current) – [Explorations of Gendered History] nrutkows
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 Boydston encourages scholars and individuals alike to see that looking at gender strictly as an analytical category could lead to misunderstanding and that only by understanding the factors of the time and how the concept of gender has changed and flowed can one better grasp the history of the time.(Jonathan Jardines) Boydston encourages scholars and individuals alike to see that looking at gender strictly as an analytical category could lead to misunderstanding and that only by understanding the factors of the time and how the concept of gender has changed and flowed can one better grasp the history of the time.(Jonathan Jardines)
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 +Boydson posits that gender as a category of analysis has taken on a mishapen character and needs to be changed to create more accurate versions of history. Gender has been treated with such high priority that it has taken on a life of its own, becoming as important as other historical actors. By putting gender in such a high priority, and framing it as a difference of power, it goes to reinforce the gender binary and oversimplifies the practice. (Tanner Gillikin)
  
  
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 “The primaryness of gender in a given situation should be one of our questions, rather than one of our assumptions” — I wonder if there is a possibility to use this argument as an extension to potentially deconstruct other “categories of analysis” such as class, race, ethnicity, etc. Obviously, these categories are not strictly binary, but it is also possible that they are used with some preconceived assumptions about power dynamics (rich vs. poor and so on). - Nikolai Kotkov “The primaryness of gender in a given situation should be one of our questions, rather than one of our assumptions” — I wonder if there is a possibility to use this argument as an extension to potentially deconstruct other “categories of analysis” such as class, race, ethnicity, etc. Obviously, these categories are not strictly binary, but it is also possible that they are used with some preconceived assumptions about power dynamics (rich vs. poor and so on). - Nikolai Kotkov
  
 +Looking at both the historiography of Gender and it's relation to specific geographic views on gender allows theorists and scholars alike to identify potential restrictions in their thinking on the dynamics of power. (Jonathan Jardines)
  
 In Boydston's piece, it is argued that we should think of gender, not as a binary or set thing, but instead as a historical process. It is also argued that historians should treat gender as a question-- instead of determining that gender differences cause power differences, determine how gender can be used as a source of power. -Caroline Cochran  In Boydston's piece, it is argued that we should think of gender, not as a binary or set thing, but instead as a historical process. It is also argued that historians should treat gender as a question-- instead of determining that gender differences cause power differences, determine how gender can be used as a source of power. -Caroline Cochran 
  
 +Boydston challenged historians to interrogate the cultural and historical specificity of gender itself, rather than projecting modern understandings onto past societies, making the case that careful, context-specific analysis enriches gender history. (Caitlyn Edwards)
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 +Many historians like Nan Enstad argue that, when studying gender in history, an emphasis must be placed on subjectivity. Rather than assuming that gender is a rigid, fixed concept that has remained the same across all time and space, Enstad encourages a much more fluid view of gender that takes into account how identity is not an inherent, unchanging fact. (Noah Rutkowski)
  
  
  
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