The Scotsman

Statues should not be set in stone

If statues to women are to go up in prominent locations, some to men may need to give way

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Statues tend to be set in stone. However, despite this being literally true, we are not bound by the metaphor.

For centuries, Britain was a profoundly sexist place and so it is unsurprisi­ng that our most prominent monuments reflect this.

Happily, we have come to the realisatio­n in recent decades that women and men are equally capable of doing most things. Women’s suffrage, the 1960s sexual revolution, the first female prime minister and women in the armed forces were all significan­t milestones on our journey towards a more enlightene­d society. However, looking down upon us from the patriarcha­l past, our statues have remained predominan­tly male, sending a message to new generation­s that is decidedly outdated and one that most people fundamenta­lly disagree with.

So campaigner­s have been making the case for new statues of women, such as the one of the suffragist Millicent Fawcett unveiled in London yesterday. At the ceremony, our second female Prime Minister, Theresa May, made clear Fawcett’s contributi­on to the UK: “I would not be standing here today as prime minister, no female MPS would have taken their seats in Parliament, none of us would have had the rights and protection­s we now enjoy, were it not for one truly great woman – Dame Millicent Garrett Fawcett.”

Put like that, the only question is why did it take so long for the first statue of a woman in Parliament Square to stand alongside the likes of Nelson Mandela, Mahatma Gandhi and Sir Winston Churchill?

There is a similar picture in Scotland, where our capital still has more statues of animals than named women. Anyone not embarassed by that stark statistic should be – it is hardly the kind of image we would want to project in the modern world.

A practical problem is there are only a limited number of prominent locations in our city centres for statues and many of them are currently occupied. So it is perhaps time for a reassessme­nt to identify those figures who are still relevant and candidates to replace them. David Hume and Adam Smith should rest easy, but there are perhaps others whose achievemen­ts have slipped into the past and who may not have begrudged making way. We should not get rid of them, just find other spaces. Statues are meant to last, so it’s not a process that should happen often and decisions must be taken carefully. But just as our society has changed, so should its monuments.

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