The Library of Congress > LCCN Permalink

View this record in:  MARCXML | LC Authorities & Vocabularies | VIAF (Virtual International Authority File)External Link

Hill Collins, Patricia

LC control no.n 90607416
Descriptive conventionsrda
Personal name headingHill Collins, Patricia
    Browse this term in  LC Authorities  or the  LC Catalog
Variant(s)Collins, Patricia Hill
Birth date1948-05-01
Place of birthPhiladelphia (Pa.)
Field of activityFeminism Racism
AffiliationBrandeis University Harvard University Tufts University American Sociological Association University of Cincinnati. Department of Afro-American Studies University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)
Profession or occupationCollege teachers Feminists Authors
Found inHer Black feminist thought, 1990: CIP title page (Patricia Hill Collins)
Her Black sexual politics, 2003: ECIP data sheet (Author requests that DOB be removed from all her records)
From Black power to hip hop, 2006: CIP title page (Patricia Hill Collins) data sheet (Hill Collins, Patricia)
CIP pub. data ch'g request from Temple Univ. Press, July 19, 2005: ("author's last name is Hill Collins, not simply Collins")
Patricia Hill Collins, 2014: page ix (Collins has been, and remains one of the foremost Black feminist writers of our time)
Wikipedia, Decemeber 17, 2014 (Patricia Hill Collins, born May 1, 1948, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; bachelor's degree from Brandeis University in 1969 as a Sociology major; Master of Arts Degree in Teaching in Social Science Education from Harvard University in 1970; Director of the Africana Center at Tufts University from 1976 to 1980; currently a Distinguished University Professor of Sociology at the University of Maryland, College Park; former head of the Department of African American Studies at the University of Cincinnati, and past President of the American Sociological Association Council; the 100th president of the ASA and the first African American woman to hold this position; work primarily concerns issues involving feminism and gender within the African-American community; first came to national attention for book 'Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness and the Politics of Empowerment', published in 1990)
Associated languageeng