Myth and materiality in a woman’s world
Shetland 1800–2000Lynn Abrams
Shetland has a history unique in Europe, for over the past two centuries it was a place where women dominated the family, economy, and the cultural imagination. Women ran households and crofts without men. They maintained families and communities because men were absent. And they constructed in their minds an identity of themselves as ‘liberated’ long before organised feminism was invented.
And yet, Shetland is a place which was made by the most masculine of societies - those of the Picts, Scots and above all the Vikings - and its contemporary identity still draws on the heroic exploits and sagas of medieval Norsemen. This book examines how against this tradition Shetland became a female place, and offers answers as to how, in this most isolated island community, the inhabitants transgressed and reversed their traditional gender roles.
Reconstructing this ‘woman’s world’ from fragments of cultural
experience captured in written and oral sources, this book will appeal
to scholars in the fields of social and cultural history, social
anthropology, gender and women’s studies.
Contents
List of tables and figures
List of Illustrations
Glossary
Note on Shetland dialect
Map
Preface and acknowledgements
1. Pasts, peoples, selves
2. Stories
3. Place
4. Work
5. Culture
6. Sexualities
7. Power
8. Reflections
Bibliography
Index
Lynn Abrams is Professor of Gender History at the University of Glasgow
216x138mm 256pp
hb 9780719065927 10 September 2005 £49.99
pb 9780719065934 01 June 2010 £14.99
6 b&w illustrations and 1 map
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