Amelia Earhart: Pioneering Feminist

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Online and at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center
Free, Registration Required
Presenter: Susan Ware

Explore the life and legacy of Amelia Earhart through a feminist lens

Tune in on YouTube

For over 100 years aviation pioneers like Charles Lindbergh and Amelia Earhart have pushed to go higher, faster, and farther, inspiring the American public through their boundary-pushing and record-breaking flight. While these accomplishments made them household names, their influence stretches far beyond aviation. This year’s Amelia Earhart Lecture in Aviation History will explore Amelia Earhart’s legacy from leading feminist biographer Susan Ware.

More than eight decades after her disappearance, the fascination with Amelia Earhart shows no signs of abating. It is through the lens of women’s history, especially the field of feminist biography, that her life looks the richest and most compelling. A feminist interpretation of Amelia Earhart’s life, one that she would have endorsed, does not dramatically change the details or the outcome of her career, but it shifts the field of focus, with particular aspects of Earhart’s life emerging as places worthy of pausing and lingering, while more familiar parts of the story can be quickly sped over. This slight shift in priorities opens up previously unexplored connections between the life story of this unique individual and the broader patterns of twentieth-century women’s lives.

This program will be presented in-person at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Virginia, and will be streamed on YouTube with live closed captioning. Registration is required for in person attendance and encouraged for online viewing.

Register to attend in person at the Udvar-Hazy Center.

Register to attend online.

 

The Amelia Earhart Lecture in Aviation History is sponsored by Pratt & Whitney. 

Aviation People Women
How to attend

Online and at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center

Can't wait for the lecture?

Explore Amelia Earhart's friendship with First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt —  from their shared background as social workers to their mutual love of flight and advocacy of women’s empowerment and social justice — in a recent episode of our AirSpace podcast.

You might also like Amelia Earhart: Missing for 80 Years But Not Forgotten 1932: Amelia Earhart Flies Nonstop Across U.S. Amelia and Eleanor Go for a Ride by Pam Munoz Ryan National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC
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