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BADGES OF HONOUR: CAPTURING NARRATIVES OF ACTIVISM AND<br />

THE FORMING OF CAMPAIGNING IDENTITIES THROUGH ARCHIVING<br />

EPHEMERA<br />

Adele PATRICK *<br />

Glasgow Women’s Library, a unique resource in Scotland with Lending Library, Archive and<br />

Museum collections embarked on a new project, Badges of Honour in May 2013. The aim was<br />

manifold but principally it aims were; to capture more of the stories and contexts behind the<br />

hundreds of badges in the GWL museum collection, to ask women to contribute further badges and,<br />

critically, to share the stories they associated with them online and add them to our archive. As in all<br />

our history related projects an objective was to employ a feminist approach that sought to promote<br />

the idea of women’s histories and lives and the ephemera that marked their (changing) identities<br />

being of social historical importance. Since women have frequently been in the vanguard of political<br />

change in Scotland, a further ambition was that the resulting oral and video testimonies would also<br />

help to contribute to the knowledge of the diverse range of territories of feminist and equalities<br />

activism.<br />

The project has been ground breaking, enabling an expansion in the badge collection at GWL and,<br />

through the process of capturing the stories that are associated with them, an understanding about<br />

how these important but frequently overlooked political and social artefacts can be used to map the<br />

first, second and third waves of feminist activism and the wide range of associated campaigns which<br />

women have steered and developed in Scotland and Britain. The project has entailed the recording<br />

of many video testimonies, the creation of photographic portraits of badge‐owners/donors and the<br />

involvement of them, our volunteers and the staff team at GWL in the interpretation of items within<br />

the collection.<br />

Before I go on discussing the project in more detail it might be helpful to describe GWL, a little of<br />

its work over the past two decades and its approach to working with women and their histories. With<br />

the announcement that Glasgow was to be European City of Culture in 1990 a group of women<br />

including myself were keen to ensure that when the international spotlight was turned on Glasgow’s<br />

culture it would not find it represented solely by white men. At this time, the image of the city was<br />

robustly masculine (for example the epithet for the burgeoning movement in the visual arts was<br />

dubbed, significantly, the ‘Glasgow Boys’) 1 Women in Profile, a grass‐roots arts organisation was<br />

established to try to ensure that women’s cultural contributions, histories and creativity were part of<br />

the picture in 1990. Following a successful women’s arts and cultural festival in the City of Culture<br />

year, Women in Profile evolved into Glasgow Women’s Library, launching in 1991 in small premises<br />

in a city centre neighbourhood . From the outset the organisation was a crucible where women with<br />

diverse backgrounds and life experiences could meet and where very different histories and stories<br />

of life in Glasgow as women could be shared and collected. Although academics were involved, this<br />

was a project owned as much by local women, women who were experiencing poverty, and women<br />

who had little or no social, cultural or economic capital. This rare hybridity in the users and<br />

stakeholders of the Library has been fostered and developed over the past 2 decades and accounts<br />

for what many have attributed to the organisation as its ‘special ingredient’ 2 . The Library’s users and<br />

its collections have steadily grown since its inception, broadening its range of services, learning<br />

programmes, specialist staff and collections. The organisation’s commitment to ensure all women<br />

are equally welcomed has led to diversification in approaches and strategies to engage and<br />

*<br />

Glasgow Women's Library - Glasgow, UK

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