List of people considered a founder in a humanities field

[11] Westwood: For "[selling] the customised Teddy Boy threads that developed into punk... [and with her 1981 Pirate collection changing] the way people looked...[and creating] a new language of clothes.

"[81] Jessie Redmon Fauset[86][87] Zora Neale Hurston[88] Fuaset: For being "a teacher, the Literary Editor of The Crisis, and the author the celebrated There is Confusion, Fauset showed serious promise as a leading and impactful voice,"[86] as well as "selecting the works of...Langston Hughes, Countee Cullen, Arna Bontemps, Claude McKay, Georgia Douglas Johnson, Mary Effie Lee and Jean Toomer for publication.

"[87] Ferdinand de Saussure[94][95] Noam Chomsky[96][97] Alejandro Tapia y Rivera[64][104] Ursula K. Le Guin[c][106] Mary Shelley Lucian of Samosata[107] Jules Verne[108][109] H. G. Wells[108][109] Miguel de Cervantes[113] Cervantes: For writing Don Quixote.

[113] Antonio Lauro[163] Vicente Emilio Sojo[164] Michelle Malkin[e][170] Richard B. Spencer[171] Emma Goldman[173] Pierre-Joseph Proudhon[174] Søren Kierkegaard[186] Margherita Sarfatti[f][187][188] Baruch Spinoza[198] Isabel Paterson[200] Ayn Rand[200] Paterson: For "[opposing] most of the New Deal programs being instituted by Franklin D. Roosevelt[, advocating] for less government involvement in social and fiscal issues[, and going] on to write "The God of the Machine," a defense of individualism as the source of social and political progress.

""[200] Lanfranc of Canterbury[208] Anselm of Canterbury[208] Peter Abelard[208] Book: Sic et Non Ralph Waldo Emerson Margaret Fuller[214] Anne Hutchinson[215] Henry David Thoreau Fuller: For living "her entire life [with] courageous and intellectually brilliant forays into finding better answers, answers tempered by both triumphs and travails.