Gender and the language scholarship of the Summer Institute of Linguistics in the context of mid twentieth-century American linguistics
Low levels of participation by women scholars in mainstream American linguistics in the mid twentieth century contrast with evidence, from the 1940s onward, of productive engagement in language study and analysis by women missionary-linguists affiliated with the Summer Institute of Linguistics (now known as “SIL International”). This paper explores why SIL, unlike early twentieth-century academic study of language, seems to have consistently valued women’s linguistic work.