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Hidden traces: writing sociologists’ wives into existence

Hidden traces: writing sociologists’ wives into existence
Hidden traces: writing sociologists’ wives into existence
In this article we draw on our investigation of the un- and under-acknowledged contributions of major post-war sociologists’ wives to the development of the discipline in the post-war period, as well as others’ accounts of recovering wives of academics from obscurity. In the first part of the article we show how legitimisations of wives’ invisibility are sustained through an essentially empiricist approach to evidence of their intellectual endeavours, alongside the gendered politics of the intellectual great man narrative and of the institutionalised status of wifehood. The second part is a retrospective reflection on why and how researchers are enabled to write the wives’ involvement into existence using slivers and scrappy traces of their presence and contributions. We argue that feminist relational sensibility comprises a critical edge: reading against the grain as well as with it, and paying conceptual not just empiricist attention to the wider social, economic and political conditions of institutional and interpersonal power relations of post-war wifehood. The lens of these broader gendered relations enables informed analysis and plausible interpretations of the contributions of the wives of influential sociologists to disciplinary knowledge.
Sociologists’ wives, post-war sociology, great man narrative, wifehood, feminist relational sensitivity,
0038-0261
Edwards, Rosalind
e43912c0-f149-4457-81a9-9c4e00a4bb42
Gillies, Val
9c9bcf7c-be6d-4fce-bc64-4df1c1953db1
Edwards, Rosalind
e43912c0-f149-4457-81a9-9c4e00a4bb42
Gillies, Val
9c9bcf7c-be6d-4fce-bc64-4df1c1953db1

Edwards, Rosalind and Gillies, Val (2025) Hidden traces: writing sociologists’ wives into existence. The Sociological Review. (doi:10.1177/00380261251375423).

Record type: Article

Abstract

In this article we draw on our investigation of the un- and under-acknowledged contributions of major post-war sociologists’ wives to the development of the discipline in the post-war period, as well as others’ accounts of recovering wives of academics from obscurity. In the first part of the article we show how legitimisations of wives’ invisibility are sustained through an essentially empiricist approach to evidence of their intellectual endeavours, alongside the gendered politics of the intellectual great man narrative and of the institutionalised status of wifehood. The second part is a retrospective reflection on why and how researchers are enabled to write the wives’ involvement into existence using slivers and scrappy traces of their presence and contributions. We argue that feminist relational sensibility comprises a critical edge: reading against the grain as well as with it, and paying conceptual not just empiricist attention to the wider social, economic and political conditions of institutional and interpersonal power relations of post-war wifehood. The lens of these broader gendered relations enables informed analysis and plausible interpretations of the contributions of the wives of influential sociologists to disciplinary knowledge.

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Hidden Traces TSR accepted 30.7.25 - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 30 July 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 September 2025
Keywords: Sociologists’ wives, post-war sociology, great man narrative, wifehood, feminist relational sensitivity,

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 504723
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504723
ISSN: 0038-0261
PURE UUID: 336750d5-a860-47dc-86c6-40f27d705a8a
ORCID for Rosalind Edwards: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3512-9029

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Date deposited: 18 Sep 2025 16:45
Last modified: 19 Sep 2025 01:45

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Author: Val Gillies

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