ABSTRACT

A Tale of a Fool? explores the life of Guðrún Ketilsdóttir, a peasant woman born in Iceland around 1759. Guðrún worked as a farmhand for most of her adult life, and when she died she left behind a partial autobiography, which is believed to be the oldest autobiography of an Icelandic peasant woman.

In this autobiography, Guðrún writes openly about her life and provides colourful depictions of the society in which she lived, providing one of the few first-hand accounts that have survived from members of the peasant class at that time. A Tale of a Fool? demonstrates how it is possible to work with this kind of source using the methods of microhistory as a historical tool to study events and individuals of the past. In doing so, it not only provides an illuminating study of the life of a peasant woman in the 18th and 19th centuries but also addresses the question of the methods, priorities and interpretations applied in the collecting, cataloguing and publication of women’s writing.

Analysing the place of the individual in traditional agrarian societies and highlighting the impact that women have had on the cultural and social history of the period, A Tale of a Fool? is ideal for researchers of microhistory and early modern Iceland/Scandinavia.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction: women in a men's world

chapter 1|17 pages

One woman, one story

chapter 2|19 pages

Early years

chapter 3|15 pages

In service: clever and well behaved

chapter 4|15 pages

Employment on her own terms

chapter 5|20 pages

When one door closes, another opens

chapter 6|11 pages

Guðrún at her professional peak

chapter 8|10 pages

Alone again

chapter 9|5 pages

We all grow more craven with age

chapter 10|11 pages

Auction of Guðrún's worldly goods

chapter 11|6 pages

The bigger picture

chapter 12|15 pages

History of the manuscripts