ABSTRACT

Heroines in History: A Thousand Faces moves beyond stories of individual heroines, taking a thematic, synthesising and global in scope approach to challenge previous understandings of heroines in history.

Responding to Joseph Campbell’s Hero with a Thousand Faces, Katie Pickles explores the idea of a transcultural heroine archetype that recurs through time. Each chapter addresses an archetypal theme important for heroines in history. The volume offers a new consideration of the often-awkward position of women in history and embeds heroines in the context of their times, as well as interpreting and analysing how their stories are told, re-told and represented at different moments. To do so it recovers and compares some women now forgotten, along with well-known recent heroines and brings together a diversity of women from around the world. Pickles looks at the interplay of gender, race, heredity status, class and politics in different ways and chronicles the emergence of heroines as historical subjects valued for their substance and achievements, rather than as objects valued for their image and celebrity.

In an accessible and original way, the book builds upon developments in women’s and gender history and is essential reading for anyone interested in this field.

chapter 1|8 pages

Introduction

The heroine with a thousand faces?

chapter 2|23 pages

Mothers

Super-womanly, spiritual Goddess power

chapter 3|22 pages

Warriors

Modern Amazons serving their people

chapter 4|21 pages

Callings

From selfless to gloriously selfish

chapter 5|19 pages

Cross-dressing

The limits of binary identity

chapter 6|26 pages

Death and disability

A heroine's lot

chapter 7|26 pages

Feminist icons and role models

White, female and middle class

chapter 8|22 pages

Glamour

All image and no substance?

chapter 9|9 pages

Conclusion

Plastic body parts, celebrity mothers, Perspex cages and a new Joan of Arc