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Women in the Barracks - The VMI Case and Equal Rights (Paperback, New edition)
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Women in the Barracks - The VMI Case and Equal Rights (Paperback, New edition)
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In June 2001, there was a decidedly new look to the graduating
class at Virginia Military Institute. For the first time ever, the
line of graduates who received their degrees at the "West Point of
the South" included women who had spent four years at VMI. For 150
years, VMI had operated as a revered, state-funded institution--an
amalgam of Southern history, military tradition, and male bonding
rituals--and throughout that long history, no one had ever
questioned the fact that only males were admitted. Then in 1989 a
female applicant complained of discrimination to the Justice
Department, which brought suit the following year to integrate
women into VMI. In a book that poses serious questions about equal
rights in America, Philippa Strum traces the origins of this
landmark case back to VMI's founding, its evolution over fifteen
decades, and through competing notions about women's proper place.
Unlike most works on women in military institutions, this one also
provides a complete legal history--from the initial complaint to
final resolution in United States v. Virginia--and shows how the
Supreme Court's ruling against VMI reflected changing societal
ideas about gender roles. At the heart of the VMI case was the "rat
line" a ritualized form of hazing geared toward instilling male
solidarity. VMI claimed that its system of toughening individuals
for leadership was even more stringent than military service and
that the system would be destroyed if the Institute were forced to
accommodate women. Strum interviewed lawyers from Justice and VMI,
heads of concerned women's groups, and VMI administrators, faculty,
and cadets to reconstruct the arguments in this important case. She
was granted interviews with both Justice Ginsburg, author of the
majority opinion, and Justice Scalia, the lone dissenter on the
bench, and meticulously analyzes both viewpoints. She shows how
Ginsburg's opinion not only articulated a new constitutional
standard for institutions accused of gender discrimination but also
represented the culmination of gender equality litigation in the
twentieth century. Women in the Barracks is a case study that
combines both legal and cultural history, reviewing the long
history of male elitism in the military as it explores how new
ideas about gender equality have developed in the United States. It
is an engrossing story of change versus tradition, clear and
accessible for general readers yet highly instructive and valuable
for students and scholars. Now as questions continue to loom
concerning the role of state funding for single-sex education,
Strum's book squarely addresses competing notions of women's place
and capabilities in American society.
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