Paula Doress-Worters
With great sadness, Our Bodies Ourselves notes the passing of Paula Doress-Worters. We share reminsicences in the obituary here: Remembering Paula Brown Doress-Worters. National media coverage includes the obituary for Paula Doress-Worters in the Washington Post.
Paula Doress-Worters was a founding member of Our Bodies Ourselves and co-author of "Our Bodies, Ourselves."
Her participation began at the first Women and Their Bodies workshop at the Female Liberation Conference at Emanuel College in 1969, and the subsequent group discussions and research leading to the first OBOS courses, the first newsprint edition in 1971, and all editions of "Our Bodies, Ourselves" up to and including "Our Bodies, Ourselves for the New Century" (1998).
Paula wrote on topics including the physical and psychological changes of postpartum and the ways that communities could provide more support for new mothers, feminist women in relationships with men, and women growing older. She was a co-author of "Ourselves and Our Children" (1978) and senior editor of "The New Ourselves Growing Older: Women Aging with Knowledge and Power" (1987, 1994).
In between writing book chapters, Paula taught women’s studies courses at Emerson College, UMass Boston, and Boston College. She earned a master’s degree in women’s studies at Goddard College, and a PhD in social psychology at Boston College.
For many years, beginning in 1998, Paula was a resident scholar at the Women’s Studies Research Center (WSRC) of Brandeis University, where she researched and published "Mistress of Herself: The Speeches and Letters of Ernestine L. Rose, Early Women’s Rights Leader" (Feminist Press, CUNY, 2008).
Paula's manuscript memoir describes her youth as the daughter of immigrants, and how that circumstance led to her participation in the social justice movements of the 1960s, followed by the birth of the women’s movement, and the founding of Our Bodies Ourselves.