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Valerie Saiving : ウィキペディア英語版 | Valerie Saiving Valerie Saiving (1921–1992) was a feminist theologian. She is the author of the influential essay ''(The Human Situation: A Feminine View )''. ==Biographical details== Valerie Saiving Goldstein was born in 1921, and received her BA from Bates College, Maine, United States in 1943, studying both theology and psychology. Her University of Chicago Divinity School PhD thesis, ''The Concepts of Individuality in Whitehead’s Metaphysics'', was published in 1966. She was co-founder of the Department of Religious Studies and of the Women's Studies programme at Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Geneva, New York State, where she taught from 1959 to 1987.〔(Archive of Hobart and William Smith Colleges )〕 She died in 1992. In 1960, she published an 18-page article in ''The Journal of Religion'', entitled ''(The Human Situation: A Feminine View )''. She critiqued contemporary theology largely by means of psychological observations, noting that, whereas little girls learn that they will grow up — just by waiting — to be women, boys on the other hand learn that to be men they must "do something about it. Mere waiting is not enough; to be a man, a boy must prove himself and go on proving himself."〔(''Time'' magazine article 27 June 1960 )〕 The article had substantial influence on subsequent feminist theolgians. Mary Daly, for example, cited her in her work ''The Church and the Second Sex'', while Judith Plaskow both published a dissertation on Saiving's essay (entitled ''Sex, Sin and Grace: Women’s Experience and the Theologies of Reinhold Niebuhr and Paul Tillich'') and reproduced the 1960 article in her 1979 anthology ''Womanspirit Rising: A Feminist Reader in Religion''.〔See, e.g., 〕
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