This collection of essays examines the life, career, work and context of familiar but previously little-known Irish women artists. It focuses on the work of women artists living in Ireland.
A collection on the gender imbalance in Anglophone philosophy. The essays represent a variety of approaches to the problem of women's underrepresentation. 1. Introduction: Searching for Sofia: gender and philosophy in the 21st Century / Fiona Jenkins and Katrina Hutchison: 2. Women in philosophy: why should we care? / Marilyn Friedman: 3. Implicit bias, stereotype threat and women in philosophy / Jennifer Saul: 4. Women and deviance in philosophy / Helen Beebee: 5. Singing the post-discrimination Blues : notes for a critique of academic meritocracy / Fiona Jenkins: 6. Sages and cranks : the difficulty of identifying first-rate philosophers / Katrina Hutchison: 7. Models and values : why did New Zealand philosophy departments stop hiring women philosophers? / Adriane Rini: 8. Not just a pipeline problem : improving women's participation in philosophy in Australia / Susan Dodds and Eliza Goddard: 9. Women in and out of philosophy / Catriona Mackenzie and Cynthia Townley: 10. Rethinking the moral significance of micro-inequities : the case of women in philosophy / Samantha Brennan: 11. The silencing of women / Justine McGill: 12. Finding time for philosophy : Michelle Bastian: Appendix 1: Seeing the trends in the data / Glenys Bishop, with Helen Beebee, Eliza Goddard and Adriane Rini: Appendix 2: Statistical analyses / Glenys Bishop.