Carol Gilligan Named to Chair in Gender Studies
Carol Gilligan, the world-renowned psychologist and writer, has been
named the first Patricia Albjerg Graham Professor of Gender Studies. Gilligan
is the author of In a Different Voice, a landmark study showing how the
inclusion of women changes the traditional paradigm of human psychology.
The $2.5 million endowment, a gift of four women closely affiliated with
the Harvard Graduate School of Education, honors Harvard's first woman
dean, and recognizes the importance of gender research to the field of
education.
"Carol Gilligan's influential work has truly changed the dynamic
of the classroom and helped educators to better teach all students,"
says Jerome T. Murphy, dean of the School. "She is precisely the
right person to hold this chair and to receive this well-deserved recognition."
"It is truly an honor to be named to this unique professorship,"
says Gilligan. "I am proud to hold a chair that was created by alumnae
and friends of the School, women who share a commitment to gender research
and to ensuring that all students' voices are heard."
In a Different Voice (1982) ushered in a new era of thinking about human
development and mental health by exploring the significance of how women
view human relationships. Up to that point, women were considered less
psychologically developed than men--their sense of self and moral
judgments were based more on a psychology of relationships than on a mathematical
logic of rights and rules. Gilligan reframed the discussion of human development
and provided a new theoretical model. Today, many psychologists and laypeople
agree with her finding that responsiveness in relationships and emotional
intelligence are crucial elements of mental health.
Following publication of In a Different Voice, Gilligan continued her
exploration of psychological development in a variety of domains including
women's contributions to psychological theory and education; women and
girls' experiences of psychotherapy;and the relational world of girls.
Her most recent book, Between Voice and Silence, published in 1996 with
Jill McLean Taylor, Ed.M.'84, Ed.D.'89, and Amy Sullivan, Ed.M.'89, Ed.D.'97,
studies economically disadvantaged girls and their struggles to be heard
and taken seriously. It also addresses the challenges faced by women who
set out to join with one another to understand and support girls' development
across racial, cultural, and class differences.
Respected for her research methodology as well as her writing, Gilligan
is also known for developing the voice-centered (listening to) relational
method, a hallmark of the Harvard Project on Women's Psychology and Girls'
Development, which she initiated.
Currently, Gilligan is expanding her research. For the past two years,
she has co-directed, with Barney Brawer, the Harvard Project on Women's
Psychology, Boys' Development and the Culture of Manhood. With Brawer,
Judy Chu, and Ilina Singh, she has been studying the emotional and developmental
changes that boys face in childhood. As boys adapt to the culture of manhood,
their ability to be self-reflective, empathic, and compassionate may be
injured. Gilligan and her colleagues ask whether the extraordinary growth
of the diagnosis of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and
increasingly serious violence among young boys may reflect a cultural
crisis over the norms and values that have traditionally been associated
with masculinity.
A graduate of Swarthmore College (B.A. 1958), Gilligan earned a master's
degree from Radcliffe College in 1960 and a Ph.D. in clinical psychology
from Harvard in 1964. She began teaching at Harvard with Erik Erikson
in 1967, and received tenure as a full professor in 1986. Among her many
accomplishments, she was appointed Pitt Professor of American History
and Institutions at the University of Cambridge in England in 1992 and
was awarded the prestigious Grawemeyer Award in Education, which honors
achievements in fields not recognized by the Nobel prizes, such as education
and music.
Gilligan and her husband, James Gilligan, are the parents of three adult
sons.
For More Information
Contact Ariadne Valsamis at 617-496-1895