In recent years, research and popular wisdom have often linked the feminization of sociology with discussions of sociology's
decline. In light of these concerns, this article examines recent data on the influx of women into sociology's graduate programs
and academic positions, women’s position in the field, and the health of the field itself. The data show that women have made
notable progress moving into academic sociology's recruitment pool, and lower level academic positions. As well, the gender
gap in earnings has narrowed, real annual earnings continue to increase, and underemployment and underutilization continue
to decline. All these are strong indicators that the field is on the upswing, and women's position in it improving. Despite
these successes, gender boundaries remain in the sociological workplace. Women are not represented in the numbers one would
expect in the tenured associate and full professor ranks, and all races have not benefited equally from the declining earnings
gap. Intellectual boundaries also persist, as men and women often operate in different sociological spheres.
This article is a revision of a talk given at the 1995 Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Washington,
D.C., August. An abridged version (without tables) was published in the Newsletter of the American Sociological Association's
Section on Organizations, Occupations, and Work. I wish to thank Lee Clarke, Helmut Anheier, and Judith Gerson for helpful
comments on an earlier draft, and Carla Howery and Michael Schuchert for providing data from ASA data bases.