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Women's Place on the American Frontier
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 January 2009
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Women's traditional place on the American frontier has been as invisible helpmate or at best as some shadowy figure who appeared occasionally when describing pioneer homes and lifestyles. Until recently, historians followed the individualistic and linear progression of Frederick Jackson Turner westward across the continent and found no need to discuss the activities of both sexes. Euro-American men were fully capable of explaining the frontier, both as authors and as subjects. But the American frontier is no longer one-dimensional. Increasing numbers of female historians have insisted on not only placing women in the midst of established pioneering ventures, but have widened western horizons to discuss different pioneers and new economic and social roles for women of all ethnic and racial groups. Women's place on the frontier has now become so central that it is impossible to make any sense of new settlement patterns without examining the experiences of both men and women and their relationships to each other.
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References
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7 Most Western State and regional historical journals such as Ohio History, Minnesota History, Annals of Iowa, Kansas Historical Quarterly, Montana, the Magazine of History, Great Plains Quarterly, Journal of the West and Western Historical Quarterly, have published increasing numbers of pieces on or by pioneering women in the past twenty-five years.
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