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Drifting: Feminist oral history and the study of the last female drifters in Iceland

Drifting: Feminist oral history and the study of the last female drifters in Iceland


Title: Drifting: Feminist oral history and the study of the last female drifters in Iceland
Author: Eygerðardóttir, Dalrún J.
Date: 2018-06-15
Language: English
Scope: 1-15
University/Institute: Háskóli Íslands
University of Iceland
School: Hugvísindasvið (HÍ)
School of Humanities (UI)
Department: Sagnfræði- og heimspekideild (HÍ)
Faculty of History and Philosophy (UI)
Series: Feminist Research;2(1)
DOI: 10.21523/gcj2.18020101
Subject: Metoo; Women’s history; Narrative dances; Women’s oral tradition; Female drifters; Feminist oral history; Sagnadansar; Flökkufólk; Munnleg saga; Munnleg geymd; Kvennasaga; Konur
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/753

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Citation:

Dalrún J. Eygerðardóttir. (2018).Drifting: Feminist oral history and the study of the last female drifters in Iceland. Feminist Research, 2(1), 1-15. doi:10.21523/gcj2.18020101

Abstract:

This paper examines the story of the last female drifters in Iceland from the voices of women who remembered them. It examines the advantages of the woman-on-woman oral history interview when obtaining women’s perspectives on women’s history. An examination of women’s narrative techniques suggests that women’s narrative style is often consistent with a conversational style; therefore it is important to construct a space in woman-on-woman oral history interviews that carries a sense of place for a conversation. It also examines the woman-on-woman oral history interview as a continuation of women’s oral tradition in Iceland, especially an oral tradition from medieval Iceland called a narrative dance (ice. sagnadans). Lastly, it examines the shared features of the Icelandic #Metoo event stories and the Icelandic narrative dances, in relation to woman-on-woman oral history interviews.

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