Beyond 'Notability': Re-evaluating Women's Work in Archaeology, History and Heritage in Britain, 1870 - 1950

Lead Research Organisation: University of London
Department Name: Inst of Classical Studies

Abstract

'It's hard to be what you can't see.' Marian Wright Edelman's observation captures the importance of diversity and representation in social, intellectual and political life. This project seeks to address this challenge in one field: women's work in British archaeology, history and heritage in the 19th and 20th centuries. Although academic research and citizen-science initiatives have begun to address this agenda, and figures such as Amelia Edwards and Gertrude Bell have entered the popular imagination, obstacles remain to evaluating the full extent of women's historical contributions to British cultural life. Political disenfranchisement, gendered social roles, and dependent economic status combined to place women in informal, ancillary positions in museums and other cultural institutions. Their work is often overlooked in contemporary sources and their networks difficult to reconstruct, obscured by married names and non-professional status.
Archives offer a key to unlock the work of women and other non-elite historical actors, creating a fuller and more inclusive understanding of the past. Yet many significant national and regional institutional archives remain inaccessible. Few have been catalogued or digitised. Even where physical access is possible, inherited conventions of naming and data organisation render women hard to identify, their activities difficult to reconstruct.
This project brings together academic researchers with expertise in intellectual and social history, information science and digital humanities in partnership with the Society of Antiquaries of London (SAL) in order to recover the broad landscape of women's work in archaeology, history, and heritage and their intellectual networks in 19th and 20th-century Britain via detailed investigation of two significant cultural-institutional archives. We will take as our basis the extensive archival holdings of the SAL (founded 1707), and the Royal Archaeological Institute (RAI, founded 1844), housed together at the SAL headquarters in Burlington House, Piccadilly. We will conduct the first ever comprehensive analysis of these institutions' archival holdings for the period 1870 to the 1950s: a time of great social, political and cultural change in Britain which was marked by women's entry into various fields of British public life. Building upon approaches in recent information science, we will develop a framework for cataloguing the archives so as to highlight and render discoverable the rich evidence of women's historical activities that they contain. We will also trace these women's activities beyond the SAL and RAI archives, using Linked Open Data to connect them to other institutions and heritage sites in the UK and beyond.
On the basis of this analysis we will write a new history of archaeology, history, and heritage in 19th- and 20th-century Britain, which will reveal the extent of women's contributions to the shaping, practice and institutionalisation of these fields. With the SAL's assistance we will develop partnerships with other institutions that emerge, through our research, as significantly connected to the women whose histories we uncover, in order to enrich interpretations of regional and local museums, heritage sites and other cultural institutions across the UK. We anticipate interest in the project findings from cultural and heritage institutions, local and national media, and academic and public history researchers.
Team members will produce a research monograph and articles, a unique research dataset published under open-license in a project website, conference papers, a programme of interactive public engagement events and digital creative materials that can be adapted and reused to enrich education and outreach in museums and heritage institutions.

Publications

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Title Beyond Notability: Re-evaluating Women's Work in Archaeology, History and Heritage, 1870 - 1950 
Description Wikibase, being gradually populated with data (October 2021 - ) as part of research project, Beyond Notability. (NB in Spring 2022, will migrate to Wikibase Cloud, so URL for wikibase will change). 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2021 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact Underlies entire project outputs, dissemination and impact strategy. Freely available to all research users and interested members of the public. 
URL https://beyond-notability.wiki.opencura.com/wiki/Main_Page
 
Title Scholarly articles written by women extracted from Indexes of Archaeological Papers (1891-1907) Gomme's Index of Archaeological Papers 1665-1890 
Description The dataset `List-of-Women-in-Archaeological-Indexes_cleaned.tsv` contains scholarly articles written by women extracted from annual Indexes of Archaeological Papers published between 1891 and 1907 inclusive and George Laurence Gomme's Index of Archaeological Papers 1665-1890, referred to hereafter as the source datasets. These Indexes were published in London, initially by the Congress of Archaeological Societies directly, and from 1898 by Archibald Constable & Co. The Indexes were sent to Societies subscribing to the Congress, but could also be acquired separately. A list of indexes consulted in available on our Zotero library. The dataset is published in .tsv and .xslx formats. This is v2 of the dataset, including some cleaned publication titles and the addition of the socities that published each journal (v2.1 fixes a faulty dataset export in v2). 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact Informing development of our Wikibase LOD project database, as open-access research resource. 
URL https://zenodo.org/record/5816875#.YhY2pOh_rD5
 
Description Society of Antiquaries of London-Beyond Notability Partnership 
Organisation Society of Antiquaries of London
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution Research of SAL archives, investigation of institutional history of SAL, publication and publicity of research value of archive and of SAL as an institution.
Collaborator Contribution Facilitating access to archive, expert knowledge of Library and Archives staff, allowing digitisation, hosting public engagement events (online/social media and future physical ones).
Impact Database: Beyond Notability: Re-evaluating Women's Work in Archaeology, History and Heritage, 1870 - 1950 Dataset: "Scholarly Articles Written by Women Extracted from Indexes of Archaeological Papers (1891-1907) Gomme's Index of Archaeological Papers 1665-1890 (v2.1)". Blog: http://beyondnotability.org/blog/ Research talks
Start Year 2021
 
Description International Women's Day Twitter takeover of Society of Antiquaries of London Twitter Account (@SocAntiquaries) 
Form Of Engagement Activity Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Twitter takeover of Society of Antiquaries of London Twitter account for International Women's Day 2022, publicising biographies of notable women antiquaries enriched by our project research. Five biographies were tweeted out over the course of the day.

Full analytic stats to follow.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://twitter.com/SocAntiquaries?s=20&t=KKYwhRDOc68xZEWeZxa0qQ
 
Description Presentation: "Assessing an Archive Assemblage", Society of Antiquaries Christmas Miscellany (online) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Online talk delivered as part of the Society of Antiquaries of London Christmas Miscellany (online because of Covid). Audience generally drawn from fellowship of Society of Antiquaries of London but the talk was also streamed live online on YouTube and remains archived on the SAL YouTube channel. Viewing figures (correct as of 1 March 2022):

Live on Zoom- 62
Live on Youtube- 32
Subsequent Views- 191
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
URL https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gqmI3f3kgdg
 
Description Presentation: "Beginning Beyond Notability: excavating the archives for women in archaeology, history and heritage in Britain 1870-1950" Current Archaeology Live! 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Public (online) talk at Current Archaeology Live!, which is the annual festival of Current Archaeology magazine (https://archaeology.co.uk/). The talk was prerecorded and posted on YouTube. The talk had 139 views during the conference weekend. Of those, 60.4% were from the UK and the rest were from the USA, Canada, Australia, Egypt, Germany, Ireland, Japan, India, South Africa, and the Netherlands.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://archaeology.co.uk/live
 
Description Project website and blog 
Form Of Engagement Activity Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Website and associated blog for project. Between July and December 2021 amassed 2633 unique visitors, 4260 visits, 13907 page views and 28,550 hits.
Jan-Feb 2022 amasssed 502 unique visitors, 1180 visits, 3348 page views, 8051 hits.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021,2022
URL https://beyondnotability.org/
 
Description Twitter account (@beyondnotables) 
Form Of Engagement Activity Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Project Twitter handle posting regular updates on the project
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021,2022
URL https://twitter.com/beyondnotables