Category Archives: Feminism

Feminism History

Only for Homo erectus…

The Musee Terra-Amata is curiously located at the foot of a standard huge apartment block overlooking the port of Nice, somewhere that humans have been gathering for a long time, for it was here, now some distance from the sea but then the shore, that a group of Homo erectus – hunters of young elephants and rhinos particularly camped, probably for a number of seasons.

The museum is on the very spot where their camp was found, complete with what must have claim to being the oldest wall in the world, a small stretch perhaps 50cm high that was the foundation for a wooden framework. They weren’t very tidy, these erectuses – the site is scattered with discarded tools, human coprolites, and the inside of the shelter was scattered with discarded bones – presumably throwing your bones out of the hut wasn’t required etiquette. There’s even one (not very distinct) footprint. Most of the tools are basic, but one of them is rather fine…

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Once again, though, I found my feminist hackles rising, for this is the image used to illustrate the replica of the site…

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You might notice there’s something missing – women. All of the figures are male – based so far as I can see on no evidence whatsoever. Sure this was, as we understand, a hunting camp, but I don’t know about any evidence of sexual division of labour among erectus.

The other thing that I was left puzzled by was the purpose of the “shelter”. Certainly, as reconstructed upstairs, it wouldn’t keep out rain or wind; maybe it would serve as a certain barrier to dangerous predators – but really what would it achieve for the amount of effort required? There are several apparent heaths in and around it, but I couldn’t help wondering if it might have supported some kind of hide cover – although I don’t think it would generally be thought that erectus was that far advanced.

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Books Feminism Women's history

What happened to 2m ‘surplus’ women?

I should have loved Virginia Nicholson's Singled Out. I love reading about, and then getting to write about in reviews like this one, women pioneers, women successes, women who beat all of the odds. And there are hundreds of stories like that here: Beatrice Gordon Holmes, suffragette, founder of the Association of Shorthand Writers and Typists, and tremendously successful city businesswoman; the middle-class young lady Victoria Alexandrina Drummond, who against fervent opposition became a marine engineer and in 1940 worked her ship to safety and won the Lloyd's war medal for bravery at sea; Mary Milne, who became matron of St Mary's Paddington, known, unusually for a woman in that role, for her sympathetic handling of trainees and junior staff.

But there are two reasons why, while glad to have read it, I thought that Singled Out was as a book something less as a whole than the sum of its parts. One isn't, perhaps, Nicholson's fault. She charts, fairly enough, the astonishing public hostility against these women – the Daily Mail figures prominently here; Lord Northcliffe, its owner, publicly referred to "Britain's problem with two million superfluous women". Plus ca change… Then there are authors such as Walter M Gallichan, who in The Great Unmarried (1916) wrote of the "modern woman":

Ideas are seething in her busy little brain. She is desperately intellectual. One day she tells you that she is prepared to die for the cause of Women's Suffrage. Next week she will be immersed in economics, or vegetarianism, or free love… 'I don't mean to marry,' she says, with a ring of disdain/ 'I want to live my own life…. She tried to disguise her sex attractions by dressing dowdily, neglecting her hair, wearing square-toed boots, and assuming inelegant poses.

It is souring to read such stuff; women being blamed for being in circumstances that were no choice of their own (they hadn't even had the choice of the politicians who took Britain into the war). You can't help getting angry (and reminded of all of the similar junk still thrown around today, often in the same places). Maybe there needed to be a taster here, but perhaps there's more than is needed.

The second problem is clearly Nicholson's – one of structure. There isn't a very clear one: we swing back and forth from the working classes to the privileged, revisit some women several times, such as the hugely impressive archaeologist Gertrude Caton-Thompson and the writer Vera Brittain, but I never really had a sense of where we were going, or why. And I'm not quite sure why we have to visit the horror of the trenches in the first chapter. Certainly, this was reflected back to the women, but surely that could come through their stories, rather than the men's.

Nonetheless, there's a lot to admire here – and particularly the oral histories, which Nicholson has captured at the last possible moment (many of her interviewees being around the 100 mark). She's great at painting short pictures of ordinary, extraordinary lives, such as that of Olive Wakeham, born in 1907, who spent much of her career as a nursery nurse, since her family couldn't pay for teacher training, was the centre of the lives of many of her 28 first cousins, then ended up as president of the Devon County Association for the Blind, and an MBE.

Then there's Evelyn Symmonds, who got her first job in 1922 at the age of 14, in the Post Office making her a "Civil Servant", a source of pride, then she was gradually promoted, passing exams despite very basic education, and after 30 years was an executive officer in the Accountant General's Department, retiring at 60 after 45 years in the post office. She told Nicholson: "We used to on holidays and please ourselves. We had good money, and I loved my job. I've thoroughly enjoyed life, I must admit…"

And the stark facts of the story are powerful in themselves. In 1911 there were already 664,000 more women than men in Britain – because girl babies are tougher and men were more likely to emigrate to the colonies. And in 1917 you can only admire both the courage and the clearsightedness of the senior mistress of the Bournemouth High School for Girls who stood before the assembled sixth form and told them: "Only one out of ten of you girls can ever hope to marry. This is not a guess of mine. It is a statistical fact. Nearly all of the men who might have married you have been killed. You will have to make your way in the world as best you can." By the 1921 census her words were born out – there were 19,803,022 women in England and Wales and only 18,082,220 males. And this in a world where at the turn of the century less than 30% of women had jobs – and virtually all of these in the traditional housework, childcare or factory roles.

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Feminism

Sex and space

A post on Comment is Free about sex work has topped the 1,000-comments mark, and (perhaps not typically) for its depth, knowledge and thougtfulness, deserved all the attention. It is from a sex worker, and she not only neatly points out the extraordinary methological flaws on a recent, much-reported study (if you ask brothels the age of their workers, do you really believe the answers?), but explains why she chose sex work, and why she doesn’t want this option taken away from her.

Also at the Guardian, a fascinating piece about how urban design is done by men, for men.

Feminism

Abortion rights – don your armour

With the battle to modernise Britain’s abortion law (and give women in Northern Ireland access to abortion) in sight next month – Abortion Rights has a lobby on October 7 – now seems as apt time to glance south, where in the Australian state of Victoria, women are tantalisingly close to winning full decriminalisation to 24 weeks (the law having passed the lower house).

But, The Age newspaper reports, on just how nasty the anti-choicers get. (I’ve heard from British MPs that they also regularly do the plastic foetuses thing here.)

And a link from one of the feminist lists I’m on reports on just how intellectually incoherent they are prepared to be in their arguments – not even trying to hold them up under sustained questioning. This from the organisation to which the prospective US vice-president belongs.

Blogging/IT Carnival of Feminists Feminism

Carnival of Feminists No 64

Drumroll please…. the Carnival of Feminist No 64 is now up on This is What a Feminist Blogs Like.

As you might expect in the circumstances, there are plenty of perspectives on Sarah Palin, but there’s much, much more, from uterus art to the incidence of underground abortions in the US.

Don’t waste time over here – go over there and check it out!

(And if you’re looking for more blogosphere browsing, the Britblog Roundup No 187 is now up on Liberal England, live from the Lib Dem conference, complete with screeching U-turns.)

Feminism

Abortion in Northern Ireland

I’m pleased to say that the just-concluded Green Party conference passed by a huge margin an emergency motion calling on MPs to extend the abortion law that applies in the rest of the UK to Northern Ireland. On Green Despatches there are full details of the motion; on Liberal Conspiracy I’ve set out the issues and a bit of the background.