How Questions about Gender and Sexuality Matter
Part of: Society for Historical Archaeology 2014
Gender research in historical archaeology began in the 1960s, analyzing changing Native American gender roles due to colonization, although the words ‘»contact» and ‘»assimilation’» were Eurocentrically used. In the 1970s historical archaeologists began asking feminist questions about gender and sexual power dynamics, although the word ‘power’ was rarely used. While all feminist questions are concerned with gender, not all questions about gender roles address power dynamics. In the 21st century the word ‘power’ has been used to more overtly discuss gender and sexual power dynamics. The papers in this session are about how each of us came to ask questions about gender and/or sexuality, whether influenced by other research or publications, the feminist movement and/or feminist theory, etc, and new research insights gained by asking questions about gender compared to ungendered research. The papers show how asking questions about gender matters and is important for research in historical archaeology.
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-8 of 8)
- Documents (8)
- The Archivist, the Archaeologist, and Feminist Questing (2014)
- Cooking Matters: Questions for the Next Generation (2014)
- Emancipating Practices? Investigating a situated feminism (2014)
- Keepers of the Flame: Inughuit Women at Floeberg Beach, Nunavut, 1905-1909 (2014)
- The Multiplication of Identity, or Women’s Lives and Identities Are Complex, Dynamic, and Multiple (2014)
- “O What a Happy Meeting it Was!” Women, Alcohol, and Power in the Civil War Era (2014)
- The Personal is Political: Feminist research and the importance of exploring gendered experiences of the past and present (2014)
- Propaganda and Power: Men, Women, Social Status, and Politics in Rural Connecticut during the Late Colonial and Early Republican Periods (2014)