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Elizabeth Lapovsky Kennedy : ウィキペディア英語版 | Elizabeth Lapovsky Kennedy
Dr. Elizabeth Lapovsky Kennedy (born 1939) was one of the founding feminists of the field of Women's Studies and is a lesbian historian whose book ''Boots of Leather, Slippers of Gold: A History of the Lesbian Community'' (co-authored with Madeline Davis) documents the lesbian community of Buffalo, NY in the decades before Stonewall. ==Biography== Elizabeth "Liz" Lapovsky was born on December 3, 1939 in Brooklyn, New York. Liz was the second of three children to neurologist Arthur Joseph Lapovsky and psychiatrist Martha Shulman Lapovsky. She attended public schools, notably Erasmus Hall High School, where she excelled in mathematics. From 1956 to 1960, she attended Smith College, earning a BA in Philosophy in 1960. At Smith, she became aware of her talent and interest in understanding cultural difference by taking a course in classical literature. Deciding she wanted to be an anthropologist, Lapovsky enrolled in an Anthropology MA program at the University of New Mexico. After working on archaeological sites at Seattle, Albuquerque, and Jerusalem under the mentorship of professor Harry Basehart, she changed her focus to social anthropology. basehart was fond of British social anthropology and encouraged Lapovky to study at Cambridge upon completing her MA. Before leaving for Cambridge, Lapovsky married Perry Kennedy, a beatnik and writer. Through her marriage to Perry Kennedy, who had more radical leanings developed in Putney work camp, Kennedy became involved with the anti Vietnam-war movement in England. Together, Liz and Perry developed a lifelong commitment to social activism.
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