ABSTRACT

Archaeologists are increasingly aware of issues of gender when studying past societies; women are becoming better represented within the discipline and are attaining top academic posts. However, until now there has been no study undertaken of the history of women in European archaeology and their contribution to the development of the discipline.
Excavating Women discusses the careers of women archaeologists such as Dorothy Garrod, Hanna Rydh and Marija Gimbutas, who against all odds became famous, as well as the many lesser-known personalities who did important archaeological work. The collection spans the earliest days of archaeology as a discipline to the present, telling the stories of women from Scandinavia, Mediterranean Europe, Britain, France, Germany and Poland. The chapters examine women's contributions to archaeology in the context of other, often socio-political, factors that affected their lives. It examines issues such as women's increased involvement in archaeological work during and after the two World Wars, and why so many women found it more acceptable to work outside of their native lands.
This critical assessment of women in archaeology makes a major contribution to the history of archaeology. It reveals how selective the archaeological world has been in recognizing the contributions of those who have shaped its discipline, and how it has been particularly inclined to ignore the achievements of women archaeologists.
Excavating Women is essential reading for all students, teachers and researchers in archaeology who are interested in the history of their discipline and its sociopolitics.

chapter 1|28 pages

Excavating Women

Towards an engendered history of archaeology

part I|124 pages

General Perspectives on the History of Women in European Archaeology

chapter 2|31 pages

Rescue and Recovery

On historiographies of female archaeologists

chapter 6|21 pages

Spanish Women in a Changing World

Strategies in the search for self-fulfilment through antiquities

chapter 7|7 pages

When the Wall Came Down

East German women employed in archaeology before and after 1989

part II|162 pages

History Through the Individual

chapter 8|20 pages

Archaeology, Gender and Emancipation

The paradox of Hanna Rydh

chapter 9|23 pages

Women in British Archaeology

Visible and invisible

chapter 10|16 pages

Fieldwork is Not the Proper Preserve of a Lady

The first women archaeologists in Crete

chapter 11|21 pages

The State of Denmark

Lis Jacobsen and other women in and around archaeology

chapter 12|31 pages

Greek Women In Archaeology

An untold story

chapter 13|29 pages

From Pictures to Stories

Traces of female PhD graduates from the Department of Prehistoric Archaeology, University of Tübingen, Germany

chapter 14|20 pages

The Impact of Modern Invasions and Migrations on Archaeological Explanation

A biographical sketch of Marija Gimbutas