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Never Mind Patriarchy, But Do Mention the War! Reflections on the Absence of Gender History from the House of European History

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 February 2020

Ann Ighe*
Affiliation:
Department of Economy and Society, University of Gothenburg, Box 625, 405 30Gothenburg, Sweden. Email: ann.ighe@econhist.gu.se

Abstract

This article explores the absence of a consistent longer historical narrative about gender relations in European history, as the latter is presented in the recently opened House of European History in Brussels and, to some extent, in the European Parliament’s visitor centre, Parlamentarium. It is argued that gender equality is presented as part of a modern European identity, but that it is a phenomenon that isn’t given such a problematic history as many other phenomena – gender inequality is not construed as a part of European history in the way that, for example, totalitarianism and colonialism are. Gender inequality isn’t seen and constructed as a previous challenge to European unification and integration, and therefore gender equality can’t be perceived as a solution to a relevant problem in the narratives at hand.

Type
Focus: Thinking Beyond Europe’s Cultural Borders
Copyright
© 2020 Academia Europaea

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Footnotes

Guest Editor: Mats Andrén

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