Women without History? History without women? Studies on the representation of prehistoric gender roles in Austrian exhibitions

Archaeological exhibitions make statements not only about chronology, material culture and production techniques, but also about aspects of social organization and social dynamics. This includes statements about gender roles and their development through time. In order to investigate these statement...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kerstin Kowarik, Jutta Leskovar
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Editions de la Maison des Sciences de l'Homme 2015-06-01
Series:Les Nouvelles de l’Archéologie
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/nda/3029
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spelling doaj-34c2f56a9acc4ae6a28907e8a976b4982020-11-25T01:26:23ZfraEditions de la Maison des Sciences de l'HommeLes Nouvelles de l’Archéologie0242-77022425-19412015-06-01140515510.4000/nda.3029Women without History? History without women? Studies on the representation of prehistoric gender roles in Austrian exhibitionsKerstin KowarikJutta LeskovarArchaeological exhibitions make statements not only about chronology, material culture and production techniques, but also about aspects of social organization and social dynamics. This includes statements about gender roles and their development through time. In order to investigate these statements further we initiated a project analysing the permanent archaeological exhibitions of Austria. The project began with certain expectations. We assumed that we would encounter certain patterns in our investigations: stereotyped representations of gender relations, a lesser importance of women in the sphere of crafts, economy, politics and subsistence. Also we did not expect to encounter images of strong female roles or images showing women as influential and active individuals. The preliminary data confirms much of our initial assumptions. Women, when they are represented, are depicted as inactive and inproductive.http://journals.openedition.org/nda/3029gendermuseumtext and image analysisarchaeologypublic archaeology
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kerstin Kowarik
Jutta Leskovar
spellingShingle Kerstin Kowarik
Jutta Leskovar
Women without History? History without women? Studies on the representation of prehistoric gender roles in Austrian exhibitions
Les Nouvelles de l’Archéologie
gender
museum
text and image analysis
archaeology
public archaeology
author_facet Kerstin Kowarik
Jutta Leskovar
author_sort Kerstin Kowarik
title Women without History? History without women? Studies on the representation of prehistoric gender roles in Austrian exhibitions
title_short Women without History? History without women? Studies on the representation of prehistoric gender roles in Austrian exhibitions
title_full Women without History? History without women? Studies on the representation of prehistoric gender roles in Austrian exhibitions
title_fullStr Women without History? History without women? Studies on the representation of prehistoric gender roles in Austrian exhibitions
title_full_unstemmed Women without History? History without women? Studies on the representation of prehistoric gender roles in Austrian exhibitions
title_sort women without history? history without women? studies on the representation of prehistoric gender roles in austrian exhibitions
publisher Editions de la Maison des Sciences de l'Homme
series Les Nouvelles de l’Archéologie
issn 0242-7702
2425-1941
publishDate 2015-06-01
description Archaeological exhibitions make statements not only about chronology, material culture and production techniques, but also about aspects of social organization and social dynamics. This includes statements about gender roles and their development through time. In order to investigate these statements further we initiated a project analysing the permanent archaeological exhibitions of Austria. The project began with certain expectations. We assumed that we would encounter certain patterns in our investigations: stereotyped representations of gender relations, a lesser importance of women in the sphere of crafts, economy, politics and subsistence. Also we did not expect to encounter images of strong female roles or images showing women as influential and active individuals. The preliminary data confirms much of our initial assumptions. Women, when they are represented, are depicted as inactive and inproductive.
topic gender
museum
text and image analysis
archaeology
public archaeology
url http://journals.openedition.org/nda/3029
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AT juttaleskovar womenwithouthistoryhistorywithoutwomenstudiesontherepresentationofprehistoricgenderrolesinaustrianexhibitions
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