Sex and gender identities in the first millennia: Scottish evidence and its wider context Programme at a glance 9.00 Coffee/bookstalls 9.30 Introduction 9.40 Gender Identities: Devising a methodology: Eleanor de Spretter and Rachel Pope 10.10 Wives and warriors: archaeology and pop culture representations of ancient Scotland: Adrián Maldonado 10.40 Coffee/bookstalls 11.20 Knapton Wold burial: Catherine Jones and Emma Tollefsen 11.50 Wider connections? Women, mobility and power in Iron Age East Yorkshire: Mel Giles & Pedro Piexoto 12.40 Lunch/bookstalls 13.50 Images of Masculinity: Examining Gender Norms in Illustrations: Natalia Bain 14.05 Commemoration in early medieval Scotland: barrow and cairn monuments and their female inhabitants: Juliette Mitchell 14.20 Whose Shoes? 'Sexing' Footwear from Roman Forts: Charlotte Douglas 14.35 Displaying Gender in the Late Iron Age and Roman Period: Melanie Bruhn 15.10 Coffee/bookstalls 15.50 Warriors and Womenfolk? Gender, Burial and Power in Early Viking Age Scotland: Stephen Harrison 16.35 Humans of Prehistory: Deconstructing a gendered gaze: Ann MacSween and Emily Killgore 16.50 Discussant (TBC)/Discussion 18.00 Reception in the Macmillan Room Attendance is free but please book your place to avoid disappointment at fmsgseminars@gmail.com (Subject: FMSG 18) Organised by: Lisa Brown, Dave Cowley, Mairi Davis, Fraser Hunter, Rebecca Jones, Rod McCullagh, Jeff Sanders Sponsored by: Image Jun 19 2018 00.00 - 00.00 Sex and gender identities in the first millennia: Scottish evidence and its wider context This day seminar offers an exploration of sex and gender identities in pre - and proto-historic societies in a range of papers interspersed with discussion to inform a richer understanding of the past. (Published 3 May, 2018) Meadows Lecture Theatre, Doorway 4, William Robertson Wing, Old Medical School, Teviot Pl Find the venue
Sex and gender identities in the first millennia: Scottish evidence and its wider context Programme at a glance 9.00 Coffee/bookstalls 9.30 Introduction 9.40 Gender Identities: Devising a methodology: Eleanor de Spretter and Rachel Pope 10.10 Wives and warriors: archaeology and pop culture representations of ancient Scotland: Adrián Maldonado 10.40 Coffee/bookstalls 11.20 Knapton Wold burial: Catherine Jones and Emma Tollefsen 11.50 Wider connections? Women, mobility and power in Iron Age East Yorkshire: Mel Giles & Pedro Piexoto 12.40 Lunch/bookstalls 13.50 Images of Masculinity: Examining Gender Norms in Illustrations: Natalia Bain 14.05 Commemoration in early medieval Scotland: barrow and cairn monuments and their female inhabitants: Juliette Mitchell 14.20 Whose Shoes? 'Sexing' Footwear from Roman Forts: Charlotte Douglas 14.35 Displaying Gender in the Late Iron Age and Roman Period: Melanie Bruhn 15.10 Coffee/bookstalls 15.50 Warriors and Womenfolk? Gender, Burial and Power in Early Viking Age Scotland: Stephen Harrison 16.35 Humans of Prehistory: Deconstructing a gendered gaze: Ann MacSween and Emily Killgore 16.50 Discussant (TBC)/Discussion 18.00 Reception in the Macmillan Room Attendance is free but please book your place to avoid disappointment at fmsgseminars@gmail.com (Subject: FMSG 18) Organised by: Lisa Brown, Dave Cowley, Mairi Davis, Fraser Hunter, Rebecca Jones, Rod McCullagh, Jeff Sanders Sponsored by: Image Jun 19 2018 00.00 - 00.00 Sex and gender identities in the first millennia: Scottish evidence and its wider context This day seminar offers an exploration of sex and gender identities in pre - and proto-historic societies in a range of papers interspersed with discussion to inform a richer understanding of the past. (Published 3 May, 2018) Meadows Lecture Theatre, Doorway 4, William Robertson Wing, Old Medical School, Teviot Pl Find the venue
Jun 19 2018 00.00 - 00.00 Sex and gender identities in the first millennia: Scottish evidence and its wider context This day seminar offers an exploration of sex and gender identities in pre - and proto-historic societies in a range of papers interspersed with discussion to inform a richer understanding of the past. (Published 3 May, 2018)