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Friday, May 05, 2006

A standing remembrance

I love the view from my office window. I sit at the forth floor and I look down on a river, a waterfall and some old mills. It is a beautiful view, but it is also a nice remembrance of the past.

The first industrial revolution did not reach Norway. The country was still rural at the beginning of the nineteenth century, and Oslo - or Christiania as it was called then - was just a small city. However, as the century matured the Christiania bourgeoisie started to look to Britain and the blooming textile industry. If it is one thing Norway had, it was water power (This made the second industrial revolution with power demanding chemical industries as larger sucess in Norway). They got the idea to use Akerselva - the river that divides Oslo in East and West - and its waterfalls to create a textile industry in Oslo.

As Norway was rather underdeveloped, they decided to import everything from England. Not only the ideas and the machines, but also architectural drawings of factories and spinners and weavers to train the new factory girls. The buildings outside my window is very much in the English 19th century style and tells a story between the modern office buildings. As bricks are not common building material in Norway they stand out in their colour as well.

Tuesday, June 07, 2005

Happy Centenary

Norway is celebrating 100 years as an independent nation today. The union with Sweden ended quietly in 1905. Fortunately, there is still a good relationship between the countries.

There will be celebrations in the streets in Oslo city centre this evening. Fingers crossed the weather will stay nice.

Happy Centenary!

Tuesday, March 08, 2005

International Women's Day

Happy Women's Day to all readers!

I was in a discussion yesterday on the origins of the International Women's Day and someone suggested that the The Russian Revolution was the reason. I was sure that the February Revolution (In February by Russian Calendar, In March by Western European Calendar) had started because the women had celebrated the International Women's Day and that the demonstrations got out of hand when soldiers joined the women and asked for peace and bread. I therefore had to look this up.

It was decided on the Second International Socialist Women's Congress in Copenhagen in 1910 that a women's day was needed. The day should be used to promote female suffrage and other women's rights. The first Women's Day was thus celebrated in 1911 in a few European countries. The day, 8th March, was chosen by German women as the Prussian King, faced by military uprising, had promised many reforms on the 8th March 1848 and amongst them was an unfulfilled one on women's votes. However, the first Women's Days were celebrated on the 19th March the day celebrated on the 1910 congress.

As the years went by more and more nations took part in women's day celebrations. In I975, UN's International Women's Year, 8th of March was proclaimed as International Women's Day by the UN. The UN was, however, involved in women's day earlier than that. The Charter of the United Nations, signed in San Francisco in 1945, was the first international agreement to proclaim gender equality as a fundamental human right. Since then, the Organization has helped create a historic legacy of internationally agreed strategies, standards, programs and goals to advance the status of women worldwide.

Still, 8th of March 1917 in Petrograd (St Petersburg/Leningrad) is the most memorable Women's Day. Alexandra Kollontai, who had been one of the leading women on the 1910 congress - and been head speaker on the first Women's Day in Norway in 1915 - participated when the female textile workers decided  to mark the day even though they had been asked to keep calm.

Links:

International Women's Day on internationalwomensday,com

International Women's Day on Infoplease.com - with many links

A History of International Women's Day in Words and Images on Isis.aust.com

UN's page of The History of International Women's Day and their page for children on the International Women's Day.

A Brief History of International Women's Day

History of International Women's Day (American perspective) on National Women's History Project

Women's Day e-cards

Saturday, January 22, 2005

Cake for a princess

Yesterday, was the first birthday of Ingrid Alexandra; the Norwegian Crown Prince's first born. I celebrated this by having a piece of cake.

Norway is in quite a royal mood now, as we have a centenary to celebrate and two cute baby princesses to have pictures of in glossy magazines. However, will Princess Ingrid Alexandra ever become queen? Will the royalist mood change by the time she grows up?

Monday, January 17, 2005

Call for papers: European Social Science History Conference

I recieved this call for papers today. It might be of interest to some of you.

The Sixth ESSHC will take place from 22 - 25 March 2006 in Amsterdam.

The deadline for pre-registration is May 1, 2005.

The ESSHC aims at bringing together scholars interested in explaining historical phenomena using the methods of the social sciences. The conference is characterized by a lively exchange in many small groups, rather than by formal plenary sessions. The conference welcomes papers and sessions on any topic and any historical period. It is organised in a large number of networks which cover a certain topic.

Friday, January 07, 2005

'Nation' - the case of Norway

Norway is celebrating its centenary as an independent nation. In 1905 we went quietly out of a union with Sweden that had lasted almost a hundred years from 1814. We had gone straight from a 400 years union with Denmark into the union with Sweden, so it might look a bit strange for non-Scandinavians to understand why the Danish prince Carl was asked to be the new nation's king. He accepted and became King Haakon VII - the grandfather of our present king Harald.

Because of the centenary there will be many celebrations; most of them from February onwards culminating in a massive 7th June party - the official date of the independence. (Interestingly enough the Norwegian national day is not out independence day, but our constitution day: 17th May). Magazines and newspapers have started to publish articles on "1905". I enjoy reading historians discussing the events leading up to the independence. However, I miss a discussion of the vocabulary creating the political discourse in the years previous to 1905. I would in particular like to know about the discussion of 'nation'.

Norway has been a nation for approximately a millennium, with few changes of borders. And even if the country has been in unions, the Norwegian identity has as always been connected with the area which now is Norway. This is true both for the Middle Ages when Norway had an Empire "the Norse Sea Empire" including Iceland, Greenland, Shetland, the Faeroe Islands, some Scottish islands and, if I remember correctly, parts of Ireland at least some islands and for the time in the Danish early modern Empire where Norway was just a potato and fish producing area showing more or less loyalty to the king in Copenhagen. Norwegians have always been different from Swedes, Danes and Icelanders.

19th Century historiography in the new university in Christiania (Oslo), debated theories of immigration to the Scandinavian peninsula and concluded that Norwegians were from a different (perhaps more noble) race than Swedes, Finns, Samis and Russians. These theories were put back in the 1860s and 70s, but it shows that historians have tried to "prove" the national identity of Norway. Norway has not always been a state, but there has always been a Norwegian nation.

In Geschichtliche Grundbegriffe (eds. Brunner, Conze and Koselleck) the concepts of 'state', 'nation' and 'people' (Volk) is debated and differentiated. As far as I know there has been done no research on the Norwegian similar concepts. In my opinion the centenary as a independent nation state would have been a perfect occasion for such an investigation. (It seems to be easier to attract money for anniversaries and other celebrations...)

However, I do not know of a Anglophone investigation on this either. The European Union is a union of states, but is not The United Nations also mainly a union of states, though I believe there might be exceptions. The founding of the Scottish parliament in the 1990s must indicate a Scottish national identity, but what does a two parliament system of Scotland - Hollyrood and Westminster - say about the English nations one; Westminster?

What is a country? What is a nation? And what does national identity have to say in a multicultural state? These might be grand political questions, but one approach to them might be a conceptual analysis of our vocabulary both of the present and historically.

Wednesday, November 03, 2004

History of Women's Political Thought

I have recieved a call for paper to a conference in Australia next summer: 'Toward a History of Women's Political Thought, 1400-1800'. I do not really do things pre-modernity, so this is somewhat outside the topic of my dissertation, but I would love to know more about the topic. It would be interesting to investigate if these "thinking" women were part of a masculine or feminine discourse; if the vocabulary they used were different and if their ideas have had influence on later feminine political discourse.

Thursday, March 11, 2004

Norse Gods on BBC Radio 4

This morning I hear an interesting program on The Norse Gods on BBC Radio 4's In Our Time. The program is repeated at 21.30 tonight and will probably be online for a while as well.

The program discusses the importance of the different Gods in the Nors mythology. The argument is much in favour of Thor as the main God bacause he was of most importance and had masculine power. This contradicts my childhood learning of Odin as the main Norse God. However, I can understand that masculine power was a more sought after quality than wisdom and poetic abilities in a pre-Christian society with warrior ideals.

I have always been fascinated by viking women, because they had a strong possition in their socity. Amongst tha Gods, however, the males were in favour. This program mentions Freya, but there seem to be difficult to say if she could be seen as a feminine ideal for women the way Thor was a masculine ideal for the Viking men.

Monday, March 08, 2004

International Women's Day

Congratulations to all women out there!

I have noticed that noone here in St Andrews say "Happy Women's Day!" or something similar. Perhaps it is not a British thing to do. However, in Noway I have usually been congratulated (mostly by other women, though). When I read the online papers today, the Norwegian papers are more concerned with the International Women's Day than the British ones.

Jill Walker at Jill/txt mention that she has been congratulated today and links to the history of the International Women's Day.

Feminism has developed a lot since 1900. Both because some goals have been reached and because society in general has developed. Buffy-feminism would not have been possible a hundred years ago. I do not mind different approaches to feminism, but I am a bit concerned with the development of feminism as it seems to be of no importance for young girls today. But I hope they will prove me wrong.

Update 09.03.2004: I got two congratulations yesterday. Both from Norwegians. In addition I got a "Happy International Women's Day to you then" from a British woman when I asked if it was not celebrated here. The debate on women's issues continue in Norwegian papers today, and many of them seems to emphasize that a Men's day is needed to give support to men that take care of their children or are in "women's jobs".

Thursday, February 05, 2004

Alan Bullock

I got the news of the famous historian Alan Bullock's death from Josh Cherniss' blog Sitting on a fence. He has a rather good and personal post on his thoughts on Bullock's death.

Orbituary in the Guardian