Stockholm university

Marie Steinrud

Publications

A selection from Stockholm University publication database

  • Follow Lundh! Between Text and Context in a Photographer’s Archive

    2020. Marie Steinrud. Culture Unbound 12 (1), 16-35

    Article

    No matter how well documented a life is, only shards, bits and pieces remain of what was once a vibrant person, with purpose, memories, feelings, actions and ideas. For any historian, these slivers are what remains and what can be used to access a past. This article presents a case study where the photographs taken by the photographer Gunnar Lundh (1898–1960) are in focus. The archive contains next to no written sources, and the information about the motifs is scarce. This is in fact the fate of many personal archives, especially those containing few written sources. The contact sheets Gunnar Lundh used in his business as a photographer provide some mostly routine and brief information, usually the year and sometimes where the photo is taken, in “Denmark” or “Skåne”. A majority of them are picturing anonymous individuals. The lack of information makes the archive of Lundh, in a sense, silent or mute. The purpose with my research is to investigate what happens to a photograph or a set of photographs when more contexts are added. By adding biographical knowledge it is possible to read the photographs. In this, I am using the art historian Joan M. Schwartz’s ideas about functional context. The process of adding context to an archive is a negotiation of the past that will contribute new dimensions in our collective memory, and also generate new, additional archives. There are options other than silence, and the inevitable reversion and degradation into oblivion for those silent, or mute, personal archives in focus here. A biographical method can however operate in the area between text and context, joining them together and thus letting the material speak.

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  • Perfoming Women: The life and work of actresses in Stockholm, c. 1780-1850

    2018. Marie Steinrud. Early professional women in Northern Europe, c. 1650-1850, 115-134

    Chapter

    Women, performing on stage – acting, singing and dancing – became a visible part of theatre life during the eighteenth century. This chapter discusses actresses at the Swedish theatres in Stockholm from around 1780 to 1850, and their lives both on stage and off. Five practising actresses are followed throughout their lives with a microhistorical approach. In public consciousness, the actress became a symbol of depravity, destructivity and irresponsibility. At the same time their popularity increased. They supported themselves financially, acted on stage and claimed space in the public sphere. Paradoxically, they could be both condemned and honoured for this.

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