a phrase that kinda bothers me when talking about women's historical roles in europe is "cooking, cleaning, and taking care of the children." you hear it so often, those exact words in the same order even. and once you learn a little more you realize that the massive gaping hole in that list is fiberwork. im not an expert and have no hard numbers, but i wouldnt be surprised if fiberwork took up nearly as much time as the other three tasks combined, so it's not a trivial omission.
it's not a hot take to say that the mass amnesia about fiberwork is linked to the belittlement of women's work in geneal, but i do think there's a special kind of illusion that is cast by "cooking, cleaning, and taking care of the children." you hear that and think "well i cook and clean and take care of children (or i know someone who does) and i have a sense of how much work that is" and you know of course that cooking and cleaning were more laborious before modern technology, but still, you have a ballpark estimate you think, when in fact you are drastically underestimating the work load.
i also think that this just micharacterizes the role of women's work in livelihoods? cooking, cleaning, and taking care of the children are all sisyphean tasks that have to be repeated the next day. these are important, but not the whole picture. when we include all kinds of fiberwork—and other things, such as making candles or soap—women's work looks much more like manufacturing, a sphere we now associate more with men's work. i feel like women's connection to making and craftsmanship is often elided.
a sad day for america
> read library book
> it's good
Thank you library
Woahhhh mama 😍😍😍😍😍
sisters 👯♀️
I think I just committed blasphemy
'On this land', Mahmoud Darwish, Palestinian National Poet "على هذه الأرض ما يستحق الحياة" [The Palestinian History Tapestry. Source of image and Design: Ibrahim Muhtadi (Al Quds), Gaza, Palestine; Embroidery: Hekmat Ashour (Gaza), Gaza, Palestine]
«"We have on this land that which makes this life worth living" ― Mahmoud Darwish, Palestinian National Poet.»
(edit) The Exercise at Night
I love entomologist humor. There is this famous butterfly, the one species everyone knows, the regal and instantly recognizable Monarch butterfly
and back in the day a very similar species of butterfly was discovered and thought to have evolved to mimic the Monarch (we now know this isn’t quite the case)
But because this smaller butterfly seemed to be impersonating a Monarch, they named it the “Viceroy” in a joke that is criminally underrated and makes me chuckle every time I see one of these little dudes. Clearly he’s doing important work as an appointed governor ruling in place of the sovereign
i somehow ended up on a radical christian website and this was their system of upvotes and downvotes. Bless.
Hang in There!