Östlund, Lars
- Department of Forest Ecology and Management, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Research article2020Peer reviewedOpen access
Ostlund, Lars; Obom, Alexander; Lofdahl, Amanda; Rautio, Anna-Maria
Logging and forestry have traditionally been seen as a purely masculine sphere. The aim of this study is to analyze women's introduction into and situations in the forestry sector in twentieth century northern Sweden. We interviewed 30 women who worked as cooks between the 1930s and the 1960s, and examined written sources. We found that driving forces behind the emergence of a system involving forestry cooks included state investigations, rationalization of the forest sector, the effects of WW2, and overall modernization of society. Our informants were unmarried and young when they started working, and their introductions to the job were characterized by encouragement and pressure in their surroundings. They had prior knowledge of cooking, but few underwent formal training. They were, in most cases, hired by the forest workers, and portray the camps as egalitarian social systems. It is clear that the Swedish system was rather unusual internationally, and these women had a definite impact on modernizing a workspace far from cities and industries. For the women, the job entailed hardships, but also a sense of freedom. Conceivably, a seed of women's liberation in twentieth century Sweden was planted by these thousands of young women working in the northern forests.
Cooks; logging; forest history; gender; boreal forest
Scandinavian Journal of Forest Research
2020, Volume: 35, number: 7, pages: 403-416 Publisher: TAYLOR AND FRANCIS AS
SDG5 Gender equality
SDG8 Decent work and economic growth
SDG10 Reduced inequalities
Forest Science
Gender Studies
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/02827581.2020.1808054
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/107836