by Margot Heffernan

โOnly men could oppress women for thousands of years, then turn around, put on a dress, and complain that they are the most marginalized group in society.โ — Kara Dansky
Remember the Seven Sisters โ the original prestigious and renowned womenโs colleges that dot the Northeast? Mount Holyoke College, Vassar College, Wellesley College, Smith College, Radcliffe College, Bryn Mawr College, and Barnard College were designed to replicate the elite educational experience that the Ivies provided for men. By the 1960โs there were 200 all-womenโs colleges, many having evolved out of the abolitionist cause.
Womenโs colleges have, in fact, shaped generations of females, including Katherine Hepburn, Emily Dickinson, Sylvia Plath, Martha Stewart, Joan Rivers and Meryl Streep.
Over time, the number of womenโs colleges dwindled – there are fewer than 40 in the US now โ and the concept seems quaint; antiquated. An anachronism, some say, or an unnecessary hold-off from a bygone era. Fewer and fewer of these colleges are now dedicated solely to the education of women.
But the major assault on historically womenโs colleges was yet to come with the seeming arrival of another species of woman, one so put upon and marginalized by a cruel society that an entire civil rights movement was required to level the playing field for โher.โ
(more…)















