QUEERDOM
Researching queer domesticities and intimacies in Norway 1842–1972.
About the research project
Ordinary lives and marginal intimacies in rural regions. Contrasting cultural histories of queer domesticities in Norway, ca 1842-1972
QUEERDOM will investigate how women and men with same-sex desires – about whom we use the term ‘queer’ – lived and organized their everyday lives across a complex domestic terrain in ways that unsettles customary understandings of private life and family organization in modern Norway (1842–1972). These ‘queer domesticities’ will be investigated through the intersecting lenses of time, space, class, and gender.
One of our central hypothesis is that it was not until after WWII that Norway became truly immersed in the increasingly universal modern discourse on ‘sexuality’.
QUEERDOM shifts the focus of queer historical research firmly from the global metropolises to rural regions of Europe, from the cities to the rural districts, from the courtrooms and asylums to the mundane and everyday, and from activism to domesticity and intimacy. The project will highlight the changing dynamics of societal norms and expectations, change and stability, processes of exclusion as well as of inclusion through the period 1842–1972.
Partner institutions
People
Project manager
Tone Hellesund Project Manager
Participants
Gry Bang-Andersen PhD Candidate, University of Bergen
Ole Aastad Bråten Valdres museum
Matt Cook Mansfield College, Oxford
Elisabeth Engebretsen Universitetet i Stavanger
Silje Gaupseth Polarmuseet, Norges arktiske universitetsmuseum
Åsmund Borgen Gjerde Postdoktor, Universitetet i Bergen
Line Førre Grønstad Skeivt arkiv
Jennifer Britt Lundberg Hansen PhD Candidate, Polarmuseet, Norges aktiske universitetsmuseum
Anne Marit Hauan Polarmuseet, Norges arktiske universitetsmuseum
Bjørn Sverre Hol Haugen Anno museum / Universitetet i Oslo
Dag Hundstad Høgskolen Innlandet
Runar Jordåen Skeivt arkiv
Hans Wiggo Kristiansen Oslo Metropolitan University
Mona Pedersen Kvinnemuseet
Heidi Rohde Rafto Skeivt arkiv
Tonje Louise Skjoldhammer PhD Candidate, University of Bergen
Stephen Vider Cornell University
Antu Sorainen University of Helsinki
Bård Gram Økland Bergen Sjøfartsmuseum