Feischmidt, Margit
,
Eniki Magyari-Vince
and
Violetta Zentai
, eds (1997) Women and Men in East European Transition.
Cluj-Napoca:
EFES.
2.
Funk, Nanette
and
Magda Müller
, eds (1993) Gender Politics and Post Communism: Reflections from
Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union. London:
Routledge.
3.
Gilbert, Sandra M.
and
Susan Gubar
(1984) The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the 19th
Century Literary Imagination. New Haven, CT and
London: Yale University Press.
4.
Goldfarb, Jeffrey C.
(1997)
‘Why is there No Feminism after Communism?’
, Social Research64(2):
235–257.
5.
Hadas, Mikls
and
Mikls Vrs
, eds (1996) ‘Colonization or Partnership? Eastern Europe
and Western Social Sciences’, Replika(Special
Issue).
6.
Pet, Andrea
(1994)
‘Writing Women’s History’
, Open Society News(Fall):
10–11.
7.
Pet, Andrea
(2000) ‘The Process of Institutionalising Gender Studies
in Hungary’, in
Rosi Braidotti
and
Esther Vonk
(eds) The Making of European Women’s Studies: A Work in
Progress(Report on Curriculum Development and Related Issues).
Utrecht: Utrecht
University.
8.
Pet, Andrea
and
BÈla R·sky
, eds (1999) Construction, Reconstruction: Women, Family and Politics
in Central Europe 1945–1998.Budapest:
CEU, The Program on Gender and Culture, Austrian Science and Research Liaison
Office, Budapest, OSI Network Women’s Program.
9.
Rueschmeyer, Marilyn
, ed. (1994) Women in the Politics of Post Communist Eastern
Europe. New York:
Sharpe.
10.
Stanley, Liz
and
Sue Wise
(2000)
‘But the Empress Has No Clothes! Some Awkward Questions about the
“Missing Revolution” in Feminist Theory’
, Feminist Theory1(3):
261–288.
11.
Scott, Joan
,
Cora Kaplan
and
Debra Keats
, eds (1997) Transitions, Environments, Translations: The Meanings of
Feminism in Contemporary Politics. London:
Routledge.