Books:
1.
The Glassworkers
of Carmaux: French Craftsmen and Political Action in a Nineteenth Century City.
Harvard University Press, 1974; French translation, Flammarion, 1982.
2.
Women,
Work and Family (coauthored with Louise Tilly). New York: Holt, Rinehart and
Winston, 1978; Routledge, 1987; Italian translation, 1981; French translation,
Payot and Rivages, 1987 and 2002.
3.
Gender and
the Politics of History. New York: Columbia University Press, 1988; Revised
edition, 1999. Japanese translation, Heibonsha 1992; Spanish translation, Fondo
de Cultura Economica, 2008; Italian translation, Viella 2013.
4.
Only
Paradoxes to Offer: French Feminists and the Rights of Man. Harvard
University Press, 1996; French translation: Albin Michel, 1998; Portuguese
translation: Editora Mulheres 2002; Korean translation, Sang Sanchi 2006.
5.
Parité:
Sexual Equality and the Crisis of French Universalism. Chicago: University
of Chicago Press, 2005. French translation: Albin Michel 2005. Korean
translation: Ingansarang 2009.
6.
The
Politics of the Veil. Princeton University Press, 2007. Bulgarian
translation, Altera, 2008; Arabic translation, Toubkal, 2009; Turkish
translation, Bogazicic University Press, 2011; Albanian translation, Jehona
Study Center,2010; Swedish translation, TankeKraft Fo rlag, 2009; Japanese translation,
Misuzushobo, 2012; French translation, Editions Amsterdam, 2017.
7.
Théorie
Critique de l’Histoire: Identités, expériences, politiques. Fayard, 2009.
8.
The
Fantasy of Feminist History. Durham: Duke University Press, 2011.
9.
De l’utlité
du genre. Fayard, 2013.
10.
Feminist
Tarihin Pesinde. Istanbul: bgst YAYINLARI, 2013.
11.
Sex and
Secularism, Princeton University Press, 2017.
Edited :
1.
Western
Societies: A Documentary History (edited, with Brian Tierney), 2 vols. New York: Alfred Knopf,
1983; 2nd edition, 1999.
2.
Learning
about Women: Gender, Power and Politics, (edited with Jill Conway and Susan Bourque).
University of Michigan Press, 1987.
3.
Feminists
Theorize the Political (edited with Judith Butler). New York, Routledge, 1992.
4.
Alper, Benedict S. Love and Politics in Wartime: Letters to my Wife, 1943-5. University
of Illinois Press, 1992.
5.
The
Mythmaking Frame of Mind: Social Imagination and American Culture (edited with James Gilbert,
Amy Gilman, and Donald Scott). San Francisco, Wadsworth, 1992.
6.
Feminism
and History (A
volume in the Oxford series, Readings in Feminism). Oxford University Press,
1996.
7.
Transitions,
Environments, Translations: Feminisms in International Politics (edited with Cora Kaplan and
Debra Keates). Routledge, 1997.
8.
Schools of
Thought: Twenty-five Years of Interpretive Social Science (edited with Debra Keates).
Princeton University Press, 2001.
9.
Gender,
die Tûcken einer Kategorie. Edited
with Claudia Honegger and Caroline Arni.
10.
Going
Public: Feminism and the Shifting Boundaries of the Private Sphere (edited with Debra Keates).
Champaign IL: University of Illinois Press, 2004.
11.
Women’s
Studies on the Edge. Durham, Duke University Press, 2009. Les Défis de la République: Genre, Terrains,
Citoyenneté. Edited with Bruno Perreau. Paris: Sciences Po Les Presses,
2017.
II.
Articles :
1.
“The Glassworkers of Carmaux,” Nineteenth Century Cities: Essays in the New
Urban History, edited by S. Thernstrom and R. Sennett. (Yale University Press,
1969), pp. 3-48.
2.
“Les Verriers de Carmaux, 1865-1900,” Le Mouvement Social 76 (1971), pp. 67-93.
3.
“Women’s Work and the Family in 19th Century
Europe,” (coauthored
with Louise Tilly) The Family in
History, C. Rosenberg, ed. (University of Pennsylvania Press, 1975), pp.
145-178.
4.
“Labor History in the United States since the
1960’s,” Le Mouvement Social, No. 100
(July 1977), pp. 121-131.
5.
Recent U.S. Scholarship on the History of Women (co-authored
with B. Sicherman, W. Monter, K. Sklar). American Historical Association, 1980.
6.
“Social History and the History of Socialism:
French Socialist Municipalities in the 1890’s,” Le Mouvement Social 111 (Spring 1980), pp. 145-153.
7.
“Political Shoemakers,” (coauthored with Eric Hobsbawm)
Past and Present 89 (November 1980),
pp. 86-114.
8.
“Dix Ans de l’histoire des femmes aux états-unis,”
Le Débat 19 (1981), pp. 127-132
(translated into Spanish for publication in Débat, 1984).
9.
“Politics and the Profession: Women Historians
in the 1980’s,” Women’s Studies Quarterly
9:3 (Fall 1981).
10.
“Mayors versus Police Chiefs: Socialist
Municipalities Confront the French State,” in John Merriman, ed., French Cities in the Nineteenth Century.
(London, Hutchinson 1982), pp. 230-45. “Popular Theater and Socialism in Late
Nineteenth Century France,” in Seymour Drescher, David Sabean, and Allen
Sharlin, eds., Political Symbolism in
Modern Europe: Essays in Honor of George L. Mosse. (New Brunswick,
Transaction Books 1982), pp. 197-215.
11.
“The Mechanization of Women’s Work,” Scientific American 247:3 (September
1982), pp. 166-87.
12.
“Women’s History: The Modern Period,” Past and Present 101 (November 1983),
pp. 141-57.
13.
“Men and Women in the
Parisian Garment Trades: Discussions of Family and Work in the 1830’s and 40’s,”
R. Floud, G. Crossick and P. Thane, eds., The
Power of the Past: Essays in Honor of Eric Hobsbawm. (Cambridge University
Press, 1984), pp. 67-94.
14.
“Statistical Representations of Work: The
Chamber of Commerce’s Statistique de l’Industrie à Paris, 1847-48,” in Stephen
Kaplan, ed., Work in 18th and 19th Century
France. (Cornell University Press, 1986), pp. 335-363.
15.
“Women’s History as Women’s Education:
Representations of Sexuality and Women’s Colleges in America,” (Smith College,
Northampton, Mass., 1986).
16.
“Gender: A Useful Category of Historical
Analysis,” American Historical Review
91, No. 5 (December 1986), pp. 1053-75. (French, Italian, German, Spanish,
Portuguese, Bulgarian, Estonian, and Polish translations). The top down-loaded
article in the AHR.
17.
“On Language, Gender, and Working Class History,”
International Labor and Working Class History
31 (Spring 1987), pp. 1-13 and “Reply to Critics of This Piece,” 32 (Fall
1987), pp. 39-45. (Spanish and Swedish translations).
18.
“‘L’Ouvrière! Mot Impie, Sordide...’ Women
Workers in the Discourse of French Political Economy (1840-1860),” in Patrick
Joyce, ed., The Historical Meanings of
Work. (Cambridge University Press, 1987), pp. 119-42. French translation in
Actes de la Recherche en Sciences Sociales
83 (June 1990), pp. 2-15.
19.
“Rewriting History,” in Margaret Higonnet, et al.,
eds., Behind the Lines: Gender and the
Two World Wars. (Yale University Press, 1987), pp. 19-30.
20.
“History and Difference,” Daedalus (Fall 1987), pp. 93-118.
21.
“Deconstructing Equality versus Difference, or,
The Uses of Poststructuralist Theory for Feminism,” Feminist Studies (Spring 1988), pp. 33-50.
22.
“The Problem of Invisibility,” in S. Jay
Kleinberg, ed., Retrieving Women’s
History: Changing Perceptions of the Role of Women in Politics and Society.
(London and Paris, Berg/Unesco 1988), pp. 5-29.
23.
“History in Crisis? The Others’ Side of the
Story,” American Historical Review 94
(June 1989), pp. 680-692. “In terview with Joan Scott,” Radical History Review 45 (1989), pp. 41-59.
24.
“French Feminists and the Rights of ‘Man’:
Olympe de Gouges’ Declarations,” History
Workshop No. 28 (Autumn 1989), pp. 1-21.
25.
“A Woman Who Has Only Paradoxes to Offer: Olympe
de Gouges Claims Rights for Women,” in Sara E. Melzer and Leslie W. Rabine,
eds., Rebel Daughters: Women and the
French Revolution. (New York, Oxford University Press, 1992), pp. 102-20.
26.
“Women’s History,” in New Perspectives on Historical Writing, Peter Burke, ed. (London,
Polity Press, 1991), pp. 42-66.
27.
“Rethinking the History of Women’s Work,”
chapter for Vol. IV of Storia della Donne,
edited by Michelle Perrot and Georges Duby (Rome, Laterza, 1990; Paris, Plon,
1991; Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press, 1993), pp. 773-797.
28.
“The Evidence of Experience,” Critical Inquiry (Summer
1991); reprinted in various collections of essays, and in Questions of Evidence: Proof, Practice, and Persuasion across the
Disciplines, edited by James Chandler, Arnold I. Davids on, and Harry
Harootunian (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994), pp. 363-387. Spanish
translation 2001, German translation 2013. (Among the top 10 donw-loaded
articles in Critical Inquiry.)
29.
“Liberal Historians: A Unitary Vision,” Chronicle of Higher Education, September
11, 1991, pp. B1-2.
30.
“The Campaign Against Political Correctness:
What’s Really at Stake?” Change (November/December 1991), pp. 30-43; reprinted
in Radical History Review, 1992, pp.
59-79; also in various collections of essays.
31.
“Multiculturalism and the Politics of Identity,”
October 61 (Summer 1992), pp. 12-19; reprinted in The Identity in Question, John Rajchman, ed. (New York: Routledge,
1995), pp. 3-12.
32.
“The New University: Beyond Political
Correctness,” Boston Review,
(March/April 1992), pp. 29-31.
33.
“The Rhetoric of Crisis in Higher Education,” in
Higher Education Under Fire: Politics,
Economics, and the Crisis of the Humanities, edited by Michael Bérubé and
Cary Nelson. (Routledge, 1995), pp. 293-334.
34.
“Academic Freedom as an Ethical Practice,” in The Future of Academic Freedom, edited
by Louis Menand. (University of Chicago Press, 1996), pp. 163-180.
35.
“Forum: Raymond Martin, Joan W. Scott, and
Cushing Strout on ‘Telling the Truth About History,’” History and Theory, Vol. 34 (1995), pp. 329-334.
36.
“Vive la différence!” Le Débat, November-December 1995, pp. 134-139.
37.
“After History?”, Common Knowledge, Vol. 5, No. 3 (Winter, 1996), pp. 9-26. “‘La
Querelle des Femmes’ in Late Twentieth Century France,” New Left Review Nov./Dec. 1997, pp. 3-19 (French translation: Parité-infos,
#19, Sept. 1997).
38.
“Border Patrol,” contribution to “Forum” A
Crisis in History? On Gérard Noiriel’s Sur la Crise de l’Histoire,” French Historical Studies 21:3 (Summer
1998) pp. 383-397.
39.
“Some Reflections on Gender and Politics,” in Revisioning Gender, Myra Marx Ferree,
Judith Lorber, and Beth B. Hess, ed. (Sage Publications, 1999), pp. 70-96.
40.
“Entretien avec Joan Scott,” Mouvements: Sociétés, politique, culture
no. 2 (Jan-Fev 1999), pp. 101-112.
41.
“La Traduction Infidèle,” Vacarme, No. 19 (1999).
42.
“Feminist Family Politics,” French Politics, Culture and Society 17:3-4 (Summer/Fall 1999) pp.
20-30.
43.
“The ‘Class’ We Have Lost,” International Labor & Working Class History, no. 57 (Spring
2000) pp. 69-75.
44.
“Fantasy Echo: History and the Construction of
Identity,” Critical Inquiry 27
(Winter 2001) pp. 284-304. (German translation: “Phantasie und Erfahrung,” Feministische
Studien Vol. 2, 2001.)
45.
“Les ‘guerres académiques’ aux Etats-Unis,” in L’Université en questions: marché des
saviors, nouvelle agora, tour d’ivoire?, edited by Julie Allard, Guy
Haarscher, and Maria Puig de la Bellacasa (Brussels: Editions Labor, 2001 ).
46.
“Faculty Governance,” Academe July-August 2002, pp. 41-48.
47.
“French Universalism in the 90’s,” differences 15.2 (2004) pp. 32-53. 7
48.
“Feminism’s History,” Journal of Women’s History 16.2 (2004), pp. 10-29.
49.
“Symptomatic Politics: The Banning of Islamic
Head Scarves in French Public Schools,” French
Politics, Culture and Society 23:3 (Fall 2005), pp. 106-27.
50.
“Against Eclecticism,” differences 16.3 (Fall 2005), pp. 114-37.
51.
“History-writing as Critique”, Keith Jenkins, et
al., eds., Manifestos for History (London:
Routledge, 2007), 19-38.
52.
“Back to the Future,” History and Theory 47:2 (2008) pp. 279-84.
53.
“Unanswered Questions,” contribution to AHR
Forum, “Revisiting ‘Gender: A Useful Category of Historical Analysis’,” American Historical Review 113:5 (Dec.
2008), pp. 1422-30.
54.
“Finding Critical History,” in James Banner and
John Gillis, eds. Becoming Historians (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 2009), pp. 26-53.
55.
“Knowledge, Power, and Academic Freedom,” Social Research (Summer 2009).
56.
“Gender: Still a Useful Category of Analysis?” Diogenes 57:225 (2010).
57.
“Story telling,” History and Theory 50 (May 2011), pp. 202-208.
58.
“The Interlocutors,” in A Community of Scholars: Impressions of the Institute for Advanced Study (Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 2011).
59.
“The Incommensurability of Psychoanalysis and
History,” History and Theory, 51:1
(Feb. 2012), pp. 63-83.
60.
“The Vexed Relationship of Emancipation and
Equality,” History of the Present 2.2
(Fall 2012).
61.
“The Provocations of Enduring Friendship,” Columbia Journal of Gender and Law 21
(2012).
62.
“The Limits of Academic Freedom” in James L.
Turk, ed., Academic Freedom in Conflict:
The Struggle Over Free Speech Rights in the University (Toronto: Lorimer
& Co.), pp. 110-126.
63.
“The Incommensurability of Psychoanalysis and
History,” in Christian Tileagă and Jovan Byford, eds., Psychology and History: Interdisciplinary Explorations (Cambridge,
UK: Cambridge University Press 2014), pp. 40-63.
64.
“Feminism’s Difference Problem,” in Jean Said
Makdisi, et al., Arab Feminisms: Gender
and Equality in the Middle East (London: I. B. Tauris & Co. 2014), pp.
157-163.
65.
“History Trouble: Entretien avec Joan W. Scott,”
Vacarme (Hiver 2014), pp. 219-249.
66.
“Writing Women, Work and Family: The Tilly Scott
Collaboration,” Social Science History
38:1-2, 2014.
67.
“Knowledge, Power, and Academic Freedom,” in
Akeel Bilgrami and Jonathan Cole, eds., Who’s
Afraid of Academic Freedom? (New York: Columbia University Press 2015), pp.
57-80.
68.
“Afterword: Common Ground, Contested Terrain,”
in Firoozeh Kashani-Sabet and Beth S. Wenger, Gender in Judaism and Islam: Common Lives, Uncommon Heritage (New York: New York University
Press 2015) pp. 341-348.
69.
“The New Thought Police: Why are campus
administrators invoking civility to silence critical speech?” The Nation, May 4, 2015.
70.
“Gender Studies and Translation Studies: ‘Entre
braguette’ – connecting the transdisciplines,” (with Luise von Flotow) in Yves
Gambier and Luc van Doorslaer, eds., Border
Crossings: Translations Studies and Other Disciplines. (Amsterdam: John
Benjamins Pub lishing Co. 2016).
71.
“Laïcité et égalité des sexes,” in Valentine
Zuber, Patrick Cabanel, Raphaël Liogier (eds), Croire, s’engager, chercher. Autour de Jean Baubérot, du
protestantisme à la laïcité, Turnhout, Brepols, collection de l’Ecole des
Hautes Etud es, 2017.
72.
“Histoire et psychanalyse,” Cliniques méditerranéennes 1:95 (2017).
73.
“Pour la liberté acad émique,” Esprit, No. 434 (Mai 2017). “Academic
Freedom: The Tension between the University and the State, “ in Michael
Ignatieff, ed. Academic Freedom, Budapest: Central European University, 2017.
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