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The Intersections of Labour Division - An intersectional archaeological and osteological study of labour division, based on the Ljungbacka grave field in Scania, Sweden

Hedenstedt, Theresa LU (2020) ARKM21 20201
Historical Osteology
Abstract
This thesis, The intersections of labour division – an intersectional archaeological and osteological study of labour division, based on the Ljungbacka grave field in Scania, Sweden, has been written with the intention of exploring new ways to approach, interpret and understand labour division. This has been done by practically applying intersectional theories to the Ljungbacka grave field, Lockarp parish, Scania by analysing the grave goods in correlation with the osteological results, with a focus on not only biological sex, but also on age, corporeality and status.

The questions asked were: is it possible to discern division of labour by looking at a diverse set of posts within a dataset, such as sex, age, skeletal changes and grave... (More)
This thesis, The intersections of labour division – an intersectional archaeological and osteological study of labour division, based on the Ljungbacka grave field in Scania, Sweden, has been written with the intention of exploring new ways to approach, interpret and understand labour division. This has been done by practically applying intersectional theories to the Ljungbacka grave field, Lockarp parish, Scania by analysing the grave goods in correlation with the osteological results, with a focus on not only biological sex, but also on age, corporeality and status.

The questions asked were: is it possible to discern division of labour by looking at a diverse set of posts within a dataset, such as sex, age, skeletal changes and grave goods, focusing on intersectionality?; what types of labour division can be discerned by analysing the Ljungbacka grave field?; and what can an intersectional perspective add to the research regarding labour division?

The results of the analysis show that it is possible to discern division of labour by looking at diverse posts within a dataset with intersectional perspectives, but that it has its limitations. The main correlation between the labour indicative grave goods and the interred individual, seem to lie not in biological sex, but instead the social status of the interred. This has shown that an intersectional perspective can help researchers disconnect from their own biases regarding the perceived notion of labour being directly connected to biological sex. (Less)
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author
Hedenstedt, Theresa LU
supervisor
organization
course
ARKM21 20201
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
labour, labour division, intersectionality, queer theory, gender theory, corporeality, sex, gender, Iron Age, Viking Age, Scania
language
English
id
9038092
date added to LUP
2021-10-01 10:47:29
date last changed
2021-10-01 10:47:29
@misc{9038092,
  abstract     = {{This thesis, The intersections of labour division – an intersectional archaeological and osteological study of labour division, based on the Ljungbacka grave field in Scania, Sweden, has been written with the intention of exploring new ways to approach, interpret and understand labour division. This has been done by practically applying intersectional theories to the Ljungbacka grave field, Lockarp parish, Scania by analysing the grave goods in correlation with the osteological results, with a focus on not only biological sex, but also on age, corporeality and status.

The questions asked were: is it possible to discern division of labour by looking at a diverse set of posts within a dataset, such as sex, age, skeletal changes and grave goods, focusing on intersectionality?; what types of labour division can be discerned by analysing the Ljungbacka grave field?; and what can an intersectional perspective add to the research regarding labour division?

The results of the analysis show that it is possible to discern division of labour by looking at diverse posts within a dataset with intersectional perspectives, but that it has its limitations. The main correlation between the labour indicative grave goods and the interred individual, seem to lie not in biological sex, but instead the social status of the interred. This has shown that an intersectional perspective can help researchers disconnect from their own biases regarding the perceived notion of labour being directly connected to biological sex.}},
  author       = {{Hedenstedt, Theresa}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{The Intersections of Labour Division - An intersectional archaeological and osteological study of labour division, based on the Ljungbacka grave field in Scania, Sweden}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}