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Protesting with, not against a monument: women’s activism and the Women of Steel, Sheffield, UK

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Protesting with, not against a monument: women’s activism and the Women of Steel, Sheffield, UK. / Peniston-Bird, Corinna.
In: Journal of Gender Studies, Vol. 7, No. 3, 03.06.2025.

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Peniston-Bird C. Protesting with, not against a monument: women’s activism and the Women of Steel, Sheffield, UK. Journal of Gender Studies. 2025 Jun 3;7(3). Epub 2025 Jun 3. doi: 10.1080/09589236.2025.2510281

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@article{cb02383c10284b7da805da329de27952,
title = "Protesting with, not against a monument: women{\textquoteright}s activism and the Women of Steel, Sheffield, UK",
abstract = "In 2016, a monument to the female steel workers of South Yorkshire, who had worked in the local factories and steel mills in the World Wars was unveiled in Sheffield, England. Rooted firmly in Sheffield{\textquoteright}s industrial past and the national memory of the wars, the monument began as an act of recognition of this group of working women{\textquoteright}s contributions to the war effort. It swiftly became more. Since its unveiling, Women of Steel has been mobilized in multiple acts of activism for such diverse causes as the ordination of women in the Church of England, gender-based violence, and as a battle ground for antagonistic views on what is denoted by the term {\textquoteleft}woman{\textquoteright}. This mobilization is remarkable in the histories of gender, place, commemoration, and activism for being conceived by activists as in alignment with, not antagonistic to the meanings of the monument. This paper offers the first academic analysis of Women of Steel, uncovering how and why a monument erected without attendant controversy was swiftly adopted in activism for diverse gendered causes. The paper explores the interplay between gender and time, the denotation of design, and the associative connotations of the monument and the spaces it inhabits.",
keywords = "memorial, activism, women",
author = "Corinna Peniston-Bird",
year = "2025",
month = jun,
day = "3",
doi = "10.1080/09589236.2025.2510281",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
journal = "Journal of Gender Studies",
issn = "0958-9236",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Protesting with, not against a monument

T2 - women’s activism and the Women of Steel, Sheffield, UK

AU - Peniston-Bird, Corinna

PY - 2025/6/3

Y1 - 2025/6/3

N2 - In 2016, a monument to the female steel workers of South Yorkshire, who had worked in the local factories and steel mills in the World Wars was unveiled in Sheffield, England. Rooted firmly in Sheffield’s industrial past and the national memory of the wars, the monument began as an act of recognition of this group of working women’s contributions to the war effort. It swiftly became more. Since its unveiling, Women of Steel has been mobilized in multiple acts of activism for such diverse causes as the ordination of women in the Church of England, gender-based violence, and as a battle ground for antagonistic views on what is denoted by the term ‘woman’. This mobilization is remarkable in the histories of gender, place, commemoration, and activism for being conceived by activists as in alignment with, not antagonistic to the meanings of the monument. This paper offers the first academic analysis of Women of Steel, uncovering how and why a monument erected without attendant controversy was swiftly adopted in activism for diverse gendered causes. The paper explores the interplay between gender and time, the denotation of design, and the associative connotations of the monument and the spaces it inhabits.

AB - In 2016, a monument to the female steel workers of South Yorkshire, who had worked in the local factories and steel mills in the World Wars was unveiled in Sheffield, England. Rooted firmly in Sheffield’s industrial past and the national memory of the wars, the monument began as an act of recognition of this group of working women’s contributions to the war effort. It swiftly became more. Since its unveiling, Women of Steel has been mobilized in multiple acts of activism for such diverse causes as the ordination of women in the Church of England, gender-based violence, and as a battle ground for antagonistic views on what is denoted by the term ‘woman’. This mobilization is remarkable in the histories of gender, place, commemoration, and activism for being conceived by activists as in alignment with, not antagonistic to the meanings of the monument. This paper offers the first academic analysis of Women of Steel, uncovering how and why a monument erected without attendant controversy was swiftly adopted in activism for diverse gendered causes. The paper explores the interplay between gender and time, the denotation of design, and the associative connotations of the monument and the spaces it inhabits.

KW - memorial

KW - activism

KW - women

U2 - 10.1080/09589236.2025.2510281

DO - 10.1080/09589236.2025.2510281

M3 - Journal article

VL - 7

JO - Journal of Gender Studies

JF - Journal of Gender Studies

SN - 0958-9236

IS - 3

ER -