Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Women's History Review: Introduction

Holden, Katherine; Hannam, June; Froide, Amy

Authors

Katherine Holden

June Hannam

Amy Froide



Abstract

This article is an introduction to a special issue on the history of single women based on papers given at conference held in June 2006 at the University of the West of England, entitled ‘Single Women in History 1000–2000’. The analysis is based on original research by the authors presented in papers at the conference. The article interrogates the range of meanings that have coalesced around the single woman and links these meanings to single women’s lived experience. Its main aim is to show how in Western Europe and North America, albeit in different ways, at different times and among different social groupings, singleness has been constructed around the twin poles of gender and marriage. Popular beliefs that wifehood signified success and spinsterhood loss, and that bachelors held the winning cards are held up to scrutiny and shown not to bet borne out by the historical record. In this way both the introduction and the collection as a whole cast light on the ways in which these categories have been cons

Journal Article Type Editorial
Publication Date Dec 1, 2008
Deposit Date Dec 22, 2010
Journal Women's History Review
Print ISSN 0961-2025
Electronic ISSN 1747-583X
Publisher Taylor & Francis (Routledge)
Peer Reviewed Not Peer Reviewed
Volume 17
Issue 3
Pages 313-326
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/09612020801924084
Keywords single women, singleness, women's history, gender history, spinsters, widows, illegitimacy, unmarried mothers, old maids, marital status, bachelor girl, sistehood, family history
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/1011221
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09612020801924084
Contract Date Apr 2, 2016