The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Historical novelist says Dundee could become home to ‘Museum of Misogyny’

Where Are The Women? celebrates city’s feminist firebrands

- STEFAN MORKIS smorkis@thecourier.co.uk

Dundee should be home to a “Museum of Misogyny” celebratin­g Scotland’s feminist activists, a leading author has suggested.

Sara Sheridan, a best-selling historical novelist, has written a new book considerin­g ways in which Scotland could better celebrate the heritage of its women.

Published next week, Where Are The Women? imagines Dundee – which was home to some of the most prominent members of the suffragett­e movement – as the ideal base for a “Museum of Misogyny” exploring the oppression of women and their campaigns for equality over the centuries.

Dundee was also known as a “women’s town” because so many workers in the city’s jute mills – nearly three-quarters of the workforce – were female and often the sole wage earner in a family.

Ms Sheridan writes the museum would be located next to V&A Dundee on the waterfront “because of the city’s long-standing excellent record on women’s rights”.

She also describes the Minnie the Minx statues on Dundee High Street as an “icon” of the spirit of Dundee.

The book describes 1,000 women who have shaped Scotland today but whose lives go largely unrecognis­ed.

“I started out on the book with a massive research project, found more than 5,000 women across Scotland, and then around 1,000 I wanted in the book.

“I bought a huge map of the country and tried to work out the best place for them to go on the map and how I could memorialis­e them.

“When I began looking at Dundee there was a feminist culture early on and a strong sense of women there having rights. There was a strike by maid servants for better conditions in the 19th Century. I could see Dundee felt like the right place for this.”

The idea of the book is to make readers imagine a country where notable women are as celebrated as its men.

She added: “The idea with the book is that people read about a country where only the women are memorialis­ed, then walk out into the real world and maybe notice that it is really only men that are recognised, and realise how strange and imbalanced it is.

“I would love it if a Museum of Misogyny did happen in Dundee. But it will be up to other people to take it up. My expertise is imaginatio­n.”

When I began looking at Dundee there was a feminist culture early on...

 ?? Picture: Kris Miller. ?? The Minnie the Minx statue in Dundee city centre. Minnie has been declared an early feminist role model.
Picture: Kris Miller. The Minnie the Minx statue in Dundee city centre. Minnie has been declared an early feminist role model.

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