ABSTRACT

Gender and Heritage brings together a group of international scholars to examine the performance, place and politics of gender within heritage. Through a series of case studies, models and assessments, the significance of understanding and working with concepts of gender is demonstrated as a dynamic and reforming agenda. Demonstrating that gender has become an increasingly important area for heritage scholarship, the collection argues that it should also be recognised as a central structuring device within society and the location where a critical heritage studies can emerge.

Drawing on contributions from around the world, this edited collection provides a range of innovative approaches to using gender as a mode of enquiry. From the politics of museum displays, the exploration of pedagogy, the role of local initiatives and the legal frameworks that structure representation, the volume’s diversity and objectives represent a challenge for students, academics and professionals to rethink gender. Rather than featuring gender as an addition to wider discussions of heritage, this volume makes gender the focus of concern as a means of building a new agenda within the field.

This volume, which addresses how we engage with gender and heritage in both practice and theory, is essential reading for scholars at all levels and should also serve as a useful guide for practitioners.

part I|14 pages

Introduction

part II|64 pages

Performance

chapter 2|13 pages

Johanna, Moa and I’m every lesbian

Gender, sexuality and class in Norrköping’s industrial landscape

chapter 3|14 pages

Gender, heritage and changing traditions

Russian Old Believers in Romania

chapter 4|17 pages

Handicrafting gender

Craft, performativity and cultural heritage

part III|88 pages

Place

chapter 6|18 pages

It’s a man’s world. Or is it?

The ‘Pilgrim Fathers’, religion, patriarchy, nationalism and tourism

chapter 7|14 pages

The fleshyness of absence

The matter of absence in a feminist museology

chapter 8|16 pages

Taller than the rest

The Three Dikgosi Monument, masculinity reloaded

chapter 10|19 pages

Impasse or productive intersection?

Learning to ‘mess with genies’ in collaborative heritage research relationships

part IV|86 pages

Politics

chapter 11|16 pages

Transversal dances across time and space

Feminist strategies for a critical heritage studies

chapter 12|22 pages

Gendering ‘the other Germany’

Resistant and residual narratives on Stauffenbergstraße, Berlin

chapter 13|14 pages

Gender and intangible heritage

Illustrating the inter-disciplinary character of international law

chapter 15|14 pages

‘Does it matter?’

Relocating fragments of queer heritage in post-earthquake Christchurch

part V|16 pages

Conclusion

chapter 16|14 pages

The politics of heritage

How to achieve change