Gender and Feminist Studies

Explore the multifaceted experiences and understandings of gender and sexuality, and learn to identify and question linkages between identity, power, and representation through feminist modes of analysis

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About This Program

  • Pitzer’s Gender and Feminist Studies program is an interdisciplinary major. You’ll learn from faculty trained in a variety of disciplines including anthropology, art, English and world literature, history, and political studies. 
  • Students often combine this major with other disciplines in the social sciences, humanities, and fine arts, or pair it with other interdisciplinary subjects such as Asian American, Africana, and Chicano/Latino/a Studies. 
  • Pitzer’s Gender and Feminist Studies program is part of the rich diversity of Gender, Feminist, Sexuality, Queer, and Women’s Studies programs across the Claremont Colleges. Choose from extensive course offerings at Pitzer, Pomona, Scripps and Claremont McKenna Colleges.
  • Intercollegiate Feminist Center for Teaching, Research, and Engagement brings together students and faculty from across The Claremont Colleges with programming and events.

At a Glance

Degree Awarded

  • Bachelor of Arts

Field Group

Gender and Feminist Studies

Program Type

Area of Study

Gender and Feminist Studies Program Details

View the Course Catalog

As a Gender and Feminist Studies student, you will focus on the relations of power that have produced inequalities among genders through three avenues of study: examining the lives and contributions of women and other historically marginalized genders, grappling with the role of gender in existing theories of society and being, and exploring intersections of race, class, ethno-national origin, and sexuality in theories and identities.  

What You Will Learn

  1. How to connect knowledge about women, gender, and sexuality across multiple disciplines.
  2. The interdisciplinary, intersectional, international, and transnational approaches of different feminist and/or queer scholarly and activist perspectives.
  3. How to address social inequality and injustice, both in theory and in practice.
  4. How to examine the interrelationship of theories, methods, and ways of knowing (epistemologies) about gender and sexuality.
  5. Understand how gender and sexuality have key roles in the formation of transnational, national, and local identities, desires, and bodies. 

Learn More

Visit the Gender and Feminist Studies Field Group page for more information and resources. 

Gender and Feminist Studies Field Group

Gender and Feminist Studies Faculty

portrait of sarah gilbert

Sarah Gilbert

  • Associate Professor of Art
  • Art Field Group
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Carina Johnson

  • Peter and Gloria Gold Professor of History
  • History Field Group
portrait of harmony o'rourke

Harmony O'Rourke

  • Professor of History
  • History Field Group

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