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Lyn Mikel Brown
Professor of Education
Education


Office: Diamond 105
Phone: 207-859-4422
Fax: 859-4425
Email:
lmbrown@colby.edu

Mailing Address:
4422 Mayflower Hill
Waterville, Maine 04901-8844

Semester Schedule

Education

B.A. 1979 Ottawa University, Ottawa, KS--Psychology
Ed.D. 1989 Harvard University, Cambridge, MA--Human Development and Psychology

Areas of Expertise:
  • Girls
  • Psychology of women
  • Anger and aggression in girls and women
  • Media and Marketing to Girls
  • Professional Information

    Lyn Mikel Brown, Ed.D., is Professor of Education and Human Development at Colby College in Maine. She writes extensively on the relational life of girls; the influences of race, class and gender on girls’ lives; the impact of media, and girls’ feelings of anger, self-knowledge, loss, hope, and desire.

    Dr. Brown’s acclaimed work on girls’ social and psychological development has consistently broken new ground and challenged old perceptions. She is the co-author, with Carol Gilligan, of Meeting at the Crossroads: Women's Psychology and Girls' Development (Harvard University Press, 1992), a New York Times Notable Book of the Year that helped spark an international debate about the lives of girls and redefine our understanding of female development.

    The NYTimes called Meeting at the Crossroads “revolutionary”. The Boston Globe said it “should sound a national alert to society that even our most privileged girls still pursue normal femininity at great risk to personal and civic health.”

    Dr. Brown, a founding member of the Harvard Project on Women's Psychology and Girls' Development and co-creator of the nonprofit Hardy Girls Healthy Women (www.hardygirlshealthywomen.org), has written two other acclaimed books on girls’ social and psychological development. Raising Their Voices: The Politics of Girls' Anger (Harvard University Press, 1998) and Girlfighting: Betrayal and Rejection Among Girl (New York University Press, 2003).

    The New York Times Book Review wrote of Raising Their Voices, “[S]ince a much-discussed study by the American Association of University Women… books have …lamented the evaporation of young girls’ feistiness into hesitancy and self-doubt…This book is an attempt to provide an alternative prophecy, with hope that it will be fulfilled.” Kirkus Review called the book “a rebuttal to … the research and popular writing that shows young teenage girls as tuned-out and turned-off shadows of their lively, challenging preadolescent selves.”

    Psychiatric Services calls Girlfighting "a serious and intelligent analysis of the cruelty and meanness involved in girls' relationships” and reviews tout it as “the smartest book on mean girls around.” “When it comes to girls’ issues, there aren’t many people more expert than Lyn Mikel Brown,” says Daughters magazine.

    Her latest book, Packaging Girlhood: Rescuing Our Daughters from Marketer’s Schemes, co-authored with Dr. Sharon Lamb, will be published by St. Martin’s Press in August, 2006. Advance praise calls the book “a must-read for anyone who cares about the health and well-being of girls.” See PackagingGirlhood.com for more information.

    Dr. Brown earned her Ed.D. at Harvard University's Graduate School of Education. She has been Henkels Visiting Lecturer at the University of Notre Dame, a recipient of the Maine Women’s Fund Sarah Orne Jewett Award, American Association of University Women Educational Foundation Scholar-in-Residence, and winner of a National Academy of Education Spencer Postdoctoral Fellowship for encouraging healthy resistance in girls. Her intense study of girlfighting garnered a Henry A. Murray Research Center Radcliffe Postdoctoral Research Award and other research grants.

    She was a member of The American Psychological Association Presidential Task Force on Adolescent Girls, and consultant to the Ms. Foundation for Women’s National Girls’ Initiative. She is the Public Interest Chair for APA’s Psychology of Women Division (35) and writes a column for The Feminist Psychologist on adolescent girls called The Wild Zone. She has also consulted for numerous film and television projects, including shows on PBS, and Fox Children’s Network.

    Dr. Brown lives in Waterville, Maine with her partner Dr. Mark Tappan and their 11 year old daughter, Maya.

    Current Research

    My research focuses on girls' psychological and social development in diverse contexts, girls' anger, girlfighting, and media and marketing to girls. In Girlfighting: Betrayal and Rejection Among Girls, I make the case that girls' so-called meanness is the result of a culture that denegrates femininity and encourages divide and conquer strategies among women. Drawing from interviews with over 400 girls, I argue that girlfighting is not a biological necessity, but a protective strategy and an avenue to power learned and nurtured in early childhood and perfected over time.

    In Packaging Girlhood: Rescuing Our Daughters' From Marketers' Schemes, Sharon Lamb and I guide parents through marketers' attempts to claim their daughters. We show parents the image of girls (sexy, diva, boy-crazy, shoppers) that's being packaged and sold, pretty in pink. We write about how “girl power” has been co-opted by marketers of music, fashion, books, cartoons, TV shows, movies, toys, and more to mean the power to shop and attract boys, and how girls are encouraged to use their “voice” to choose accessorizing over academics, sex appeal over sports, and boyfriends over friends.

    Publications

    Books


    Lamb, Sharon & Brown, Lyn M. (2006). Packaging Girlhood: Rescuing Our Daughters From Marketers' Schemes. New York: St. Martin's Press.

    See PackagingGirlhood.com for more information and a peek inside the book.


    Brown, Lyn M. (2004). Girlfighting: Betrayal and Rejection Among Girls. New York: New York University Press


    Brown, Lyn M. (1998). Raising their Voices: The Politics of Girls Anger. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.


    Brown, Lyn M and Gilligan, Carol. (1993). Meeting at the Crossroads: Women's Psychology and Girls' Development. New York: Ballantine Books.