"Barnard had taken the lead in offering some of the first women's
studies courses: ten courses, offered between 1971-72, were listed
in the first Women's Center brochure, and, over the next few
years, this number would grow.
But, even with the success of these early courses, gaining acceptance
of a program with a full-fledged major proved to be incredibly
difficult. It took an inordinate amount of time and commitment
on the part of a very small and devoted, but also overextended,
group of faculty. Over a period
of four years-under the leadership of Domna Stanton, a faculty
member of our executive committee-a program was developed that, by
1977, was approved by the Barnard faculty. It took until 1981 to
gain approval for a full-time tenured faculty member to head the
program. Nancy Miller, a Barnard alumna and former executive
committee member who had been teaching at Columbia, was selected
for the job.
Jane S. Gould. Juggling: A Memoir of Work,
Family, and Feminism (The Feminist Press, 1997), pp. 180