At Brown University, Carroll completed a reader graduate assistantship from 1953 to 1954 and a teaching assistantship from 1954 to 1955. She held the Miss Abbott's School Alumnae fellowship and a graduate assistantship from 1955 to 1956.[2] She studied modern European history, history of science, renaissance and reformation, English medieval constitutional history, European economic history, and American political history since 1783.[2] Carroll was awarded a Fulbright Award and studied at the University of Frankfurt am Main from 1956 to 1957 and University of Göttingen in 1957.[2] In 1957, she received another Miss Abbott's School Alumnae fellowship to research German records in Alexandria, Virginia. As a result, from December 1957 to July 1959, Carroll joined the microfilming project staff of the American Historical Association's committee for the study of war documents at Alexandria.[2]
Carroll completed Ph.D. from Brown University in 1960.[1] Her June 1960 dissertation was titled Design for Total War: The Contest for 'Wehrwirtschaft' under the Third Reich. Donald G. Rohr was her doctoral advisor.[2]
Carroll worked as the UIUC director of the department of gender and women's studies from 1983 to 1987 and led the creation of the women's studies program. The women's studies minor was also approved during her tenure.[3]
Carroll became the director of the Purdue University women's studies program in 1990.[3] She was awarded the Violet Haas Award "for developing an educational program that promoted the advancement of women and their rights" while at Purdue University.[3]
Campaign for the Equal Rights Amendment
Carroll was an outspoken supporter of the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA). In 1981, Carroll co-founded a group called Grassroots Group of Second Class Citizens alongside activists Mary Lee Sargent.[8]Georgia Fuller, an activist from the National Organization for Women in Virginia, was also involved in this campaign as was notable ERA supporter Sonia Johnson. These women planned a series of non-violent actions to raise awareness for the amendment which failed to see ratification by the 38 states necessary by 1982.[8] After the failure of the ERA in 1982, members of the Grassroots Group of Second Class Citizens planned a series of direct action protests with Women Rising in Resistance.[9]
Personal life
Carroll was married to Robert Carroll. They had two sons.[1] She later married social psychologist Clint Flink.[1] Shel died on May 10, 2018, in Lafayette, Indiana.[3]
Selected works
Carroll, Berenice Anita (1968). Design for Total War: Arms and Economics in the Third Reich. De Gruyter Mouton. ISBN978-3-11-100225-5.
Carroll, Berenice A., ed. (1976). Liberating Women's History: Theoretical and Critical Essays. University of Illinois Press. ISBN978-0-252-00441-4.
Carroll, Berenice A.; Mohraz, Jane E., eds. (1989). In a Great Company of Women: Nonviolent Direct Action (Special issue. Published as volume 12, number 1, 1989 of Women's Studies International Forum). New York: Pergamon Press. OCLC19899314.
Smith, Hilda L.; Carroll, Berenice A., eds. (2000). Women's Political & Social Thought: An Anthology. Indiana University Press. ISBN978-0-253-33758-0.
^ abcdefgCarroll, Berenice (1960). Design for Total War: The Contest for 'Wehrwirtschaft' under the Third Reich (Ph.D. thesis). Brown University. OCLC23863128.