Poles Apart. Have There Been Any Male and Female Graves?

Authors

  • Tove Hjørungdal Department of Archaeology, University of Umeå

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37718/CSA.1994.07

Abstract

This paper discusses archaeological burial analysis, and some ideological problems with the application of sex/gender defined as a dual positions construction, i.e. sex/gender as the male-female metaphor. Through traditional criteria as well as through multidimensional methods of defining male and female graves, we reproduce a binary assymetrical interpretation of gender. Alternatively, the ongoing discussion on ideological and theoretical aspects of gender is regarded as a challenge to archaeological burial analysis. A gender critical point of departure opens up the possibilities of looking away from the old tradition of burial analysis by which gender has been fixed in advance through a given male-female bipolarity.

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Published

1994-12-28

How to Cite

Hjørungdal, T. (1994) “Poles Apart. Have There Been Any Male and Female Graves?”, Current Swedish Archaeology, 2(1), pp. 141–149. doi: 10.37718/CSA.1994.07.

Issue

Section

Research Articles