This year the Women's History Yearbook (# 41) is focusing on Gender at Sea. It's rare that a multi-authored, multinational book focusing on a 'minority' in maritime life hits the bookshelves.
Gender at Sea is so rich and diverse. In all my years of reading such books it feels like the last one that excited me as much was Iron Men, Wooden Women in 1996.
Yes, I've got a chapter in Gender at Sea. So I would be delighted, wouldn't I? But even if I wasn't a contributor I'd still be welcoming all these fascinating new angles on the subject.
Editor Djoeke van Netten and the Editorial Board write in their summary:
"For centuries seafaring people thought that the presence of women on board would mean bad luck: rough weather, shipwreck, and other disasters were sure to follow. Because of these beliefs and prejudices women were supposedly excluded from the maritime domain.
In the field of maritime history too, the ship and the sea have generally been perceived as a space for men. "This volume of the Yearbook of Women's History challenges these notions. It asks:
- To what extent were the sea and the ship ever male-dominated and masculine spaces?
- How have women been part of seafaring communities, maritime undertakings, and maritime culture?
- How did gender notions impact life on board and vice versa?
"From a multidisciplinary perspective, this volume moves from Indonesia to the Faroe Islands, from the Mediterranean to Newfoundland; bringing to light the presence of women and the workings of gender on sailing, whaling, steam, cruise, passenger, pirate, and navy ships.
"As a whole it demonstrates the diversity and the agency of women at sea from ancient times to the present day.
See picture of celebrations on launch day, 27 January, at the Netherlands National Maritime Museum, in Amsterdam. (Pic courtesy of Bob van de Poll)
Published in Hilversum Netherlands, this book may not be as widely circuated as it deserves elsewhere.
Therefore I'm including the contents list. That way you can see that this is a book that should be on the shelf of everyone in the maritime industries, worldwide.
CONTENTS
Iris van der Zande on behalf of the Editorial Board. Preface
Djoeke van Netten. Introduction:Taking Women on Board.
PART 1. Women and Children First: Uncovering the Presence of Women and Children on Board
Laurel Seaborn. Searching for Signs of Seafaring Women in the Age of Sail
Sarah Lentz. Overlooked Inhabitants of the ‘Wooden World’. Child Passengers as Part of Shipboard Societies in the Age of Sail
Joan Druett. ‘The Late Fashion;’ Discovering Whaling Wives at Sea
Kristof Loockx. Jackie of All Trades. The Emergence of Stewardesses in the Belgian Fleet, 1870-1914
Iris van der Zande. The Cruise Tourist’s Corset: Gender, Space, and Mobility on Dutch Youth Cruises in the 1930s
PART 2. Experiences at Sea: Women Travelling from Europe to Asia and Australia
Simon Karstens. An Unfaithful Wife and a Cross-Dressing Soldier:Christian Burckhardt’s Report of Two Women Sailing to Batavia in 1675
Neptune Ceremony, Wasp,1942. Image with thanks to https:// laststandonzombieisland.com/ 2015/11/05/crossing-the-line/ |
Ron Brand and Kirsten Kamphuis. Zusters op zee: Reiservaringen van missiezusters naar Nederlands-Indië en Indonesië in de negentiende en twintigste eeuw
Emily Hutcheson. Women in Ocean Science: The Two-Part Research Programme of the Siboga Expedition
Vicki S. Hallett. Salt Fish Maids. Untold Stories of Gender and Sex in the Labrador Floater Fishery
PART 3. Violence and Victims: Gendered Agency on Board
Virginia W. Lunsford. Piracy and the Hidden History of Female Agency. The Case of the Buccaneers
Alicia Schrikker. Januari’s schim
Elisa Camiscioli. Sexing the Steamship,Prostitution, Trafficking, and Maritime Travel
Jo Stanley. Women/Sea/Misogyny:Ending Silences about Sexual Abuse at Sea
Víctor Ramírez Tur. Problematizing Homoerotic Relationships on the High Seas. The Exhibition ‘Desire Flows Like the Sea’
Image from Barcelona Maritime Museum's "Desire Flows Like the Sea"
PART 4. Stories to be Told. Power and Representations of Women at Sea
Image from Barcelona Maritime Museum's "Desire Flows Like the Sea" |
Roberta Franchi. Woman and the Sea in Classical and Christian Texts
Muhammad Buana. The Stranger Sea Queens: Gender, Migration, and Power in Sulawesi and Javanese Traditions
Stefan Roel Reyes. ‘Tweete Sielle’: The Affective Presence of Women in the Sailing Letters of Seventeenth and Eighteenth-Century Dutch Seafarers
Valerie Sallis. Spiritual Anchors or Sinful Shoals; Women, Religion, and Spirituality in the Shipboard Writings of American Sailors,1810-1859
Russell Fielding and Ina Seethaler. Women and Whaling in the Faroe Islands
Getting it
Price 32 Euros. Paperback. 308 pages, with illustrations. ISBN 9789464550399. Obtainable via https://verloren.nl/Webshop/Detail/catid/90/eid/58732/gender-at-sea
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