Bonnie Anderson
Combating centuries of sexism that had erased women’s contributions, Bonnie Anderson published one of the first major surveys of women’s history, A History of Their Own. Anderson graduated from Brown University in 1964 and joined the women’s movement while studying at Columbia, where she earned her PhD in 1972. She then began teaching at Brooklyn College and joined the Coordinating Committee for Women in the Historical Profession. Her work in the emerging field of women’s history led to her first major collaboration with Judith Zinsser, A History of Their Own, published in 1988. The book, which offers a detailed survey of women’s lives from prehistory to the present, has remained a watershed for women’s history and has been translated into German, Italian, and Spanish. Anderson’s later works include Joyous Greetings: The First International Women’s Movement 1930–1860 (2000) and The Rabbi’s Atheist Daughter: Ernestine Rose, International Feminist Pioneer (2017). Anderson became professor emerita in 2005, but she continues to lecture widely on women’s history and related topics and writes a blog on current events and politics.