Ackelsberg was born in 1946.[1] She attended Radcliffe College where she earned a BA in 1968, and Princeton University where she graduated with an MA in 1970 and a Ph.D. in 1976.[1][2] She was a co-founder of the New York Women's Health Collective in 1970. The following year, while a graduate student, she campaigned for the university to report names to potential employers in a gender-neutral way.[1] She also co-founded Ezrat Nashim in 1972, an organization dedicated to women's equality in Judaism.[1][3]
Career
Ackelsberg joined the faculty at Smith College in 1972.[4] Ackelsberg was one of the first professors in the Women's studies program at Smith College, which she has been credited with helping to build.[5] Throughout her first several decades as a professor, Ackelsberg was active in Jewish feminist activism with groups like B'not Esh.[6] In 2006, she was appointed the Five College 40th Anniversary Professor at Smith College, and in 2007 she was named the William R. Kenan Jr. Professor.[4] She retired in 2014.[4]
Ackelsberg has written and edited several books. In 1991 she published Free Women of Spain: Anarchism and the Struggle for the Emancipation of Women, which has since been reissued. The book is a history of the Mujeres Libres (Free Women), a women's organization during the Spanish Revolution of 1936 that distinguished itself from other anti-fascist groups by seeking a broad emancipation of women in Spanish society.[7]
Ackelsberg also wrote the 2010 book Resisting Citizenship: Feminist Essays on Politics, Community, and Democracy.[2] This collection of essays studies the connection between community and power, using the United States as a case study to investigate this connection in the context of democratic theory.[8] The essays particularly focus on power as obtained and expressed by feminist activists among their lager communities.[8]
Together with Kristen Renwick Monroe and Rogers Smith, Ackelsberg received the 2010 Frank Johnson Goodnow Award from the American Political Science Association, a lifetime award that "honors service to the community of teachers, researchers, and public servants who work in the many fields of politics."[9]
^Humphrey, Michelle (1 July 2005). "Review Free Women of Spain: Anarchism and the Struggle for the Emancipation of Women". Clamor (33): 68.
^ abMaurer, Erin (1 January 2013). "Review Ackelsberg, Martha A., 2009, Resisting Citizenship. Feminist Essays on Politics, Community and Democracy. London & New York: Routledge, 288pp., ISBN 978-0415935197, $37.33 (pb)". Comparative Sociology. 12 (4): 582–584. doi:10.1163/15691330-12341277.