BardwickJ.M.DouvanE. (1971). Ambivalence: The socialization of women. In GornickV.MoranB.K. (Eds.), Woman in sexist society: Studies in power and powerlessness. New York: Basic Books.
2.
BirdC. (1968). Born Female: The high cost of keeping women down. New York: David McKay.
3.
BoyatzisR.E. (1973). Affiliation motivation. In McClellandD.C.SteeleR.S. (Eds.), Human motivation: A book of readings. Morristown, NJ: General Learning Press.
4.
BrovermanI.K.VogelS.R.BrovermanD.ClarksonF.RosenkrantzP.S. (1970). Sex role stereotypes and clinical judgments of mental health. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 34, 1–7.
5.
DeauxK.EmswillerT. (1974). Explanations of successful performance on sex-linked tasks: What is skill for the male is luck for the female. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 29, 80–85.
6.
DouvanE. (1976, Fall). The role of models in women's professional development, Psychology of Women Quarterly, 1, 5–20.
7.
EpsteinC.F. (1970). Woman's Place: Options and limits in professional careers. Berkeley: University of California Press.
8.
FeatherN.T. (1969). Attribution of responsibility and valence of success and failure in relation to initial confidence and task performance, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 13, 129–144.
9.
ForishaB.L.GoldmanB.H. (1981). Outsiders on the inside: Women and organizations. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
10.
GrahamM.F.BirnsB. (1979). Where are the women geniuses? Up the down escalator. In KoppC.B. (Ed.), Becoming female: Perspectives on development. New York: Plenum Press.
11.
HackerH.M. (1951 October). Women as a minority group, Social Forces, 30, 60–69.
12.
HodgeR.W. (1966). Occupational prestige in the United States. In LipsetS.BendixR. (Eds.), Class, status, and power (2nd ed.). New York: Free Press.
13.
HornerM.S. (1970). Femininity and successful achievement: A basic inconsistency. In BardwickJ.M.DouvanE. (Eds.), Feminine personality and conflict. Belmont, CA: Brooks/Cole.
14.
HornerM.S. (1972). Toward an understanding of achievement — Related conflicts in women. Journal of Social Issues, 28, 157–176.
15.
HuserW.GrantC. (1978). A study of husbands and wives from dual-career and traditional-career families. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 3, 78–89.
16.
KanterR.M. (1977). Men and women of the corporation. New York: Basic Books.
17.
MattfeldJ.A.Van AkenC.G. (Eds.). (1965). Women and the scientific professions. Cambridge, MA: Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press.
18.
MertonR.K.BerberE. (1963) Sociological ambivalence. In TiryakianE.A. (Ed.) Sociological theory, values and sociocultural change. New York: The Free Press of Glencoe.
19.
OppenheimerV.K. (1975) The sex-labeling of jobs. In MednickM.T.S.TangriS.S.HoffmanL.W. (Eds.), Women and achievement: Social and motivational analysis. New York: John Wiley.
20.
RossiA. (1965). Barriers to the career choice of engineering, medicine, or science among American women. In MattfeldJ.A.Van AkenC.G. (Eds.), Women and the scientific professions. Cambridge, MA: The M.I.T. Press.
21.
Safilios-RothschildC. (1974). Women and social policy. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
22.
SchafferK. (1981). Sex roles and human behavior. Cambridge, MA: Winthrop.
23.
SeidmanA. (Ed.). (1978). Working women: A study of women in paid jobs. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
24.
UngerR.K. (1979). Female and male: Psychological perspectives. New York: Harper and Row.
25.
WallaceP.A. (1982). Women in the workplace. Boston, MA: Auburn House.
26.
WardV.S. (1961). Educating the gifted: An axiomatic approach. Columbus, OH: Charles E. Merrill.