Monthly Archives: June 2006

Miscellaneous

Hi ho, hi ho…

it is away from my computer I go. Back in c. 36 hours… the Carnival reading should keep you going for that long.

Carnival of Feminists

Carnival of Feminists … drumroll please

The Carnival of Feminists No 17 is now up on Bitch| Lab, and it is one cornucopia of delights. I was particularly taken with the post about Flappers and feminism, about the exploitation of smuggled workers, and astonished by the news that female athletes are being made to take pregnancy tests before competing. But no doubt you’ll have your own favourites.

The “official” summary:

Themes covered:
1. The virtues of being mouthy, talking back, refusing norms of politeness, etc.
2. Explorations of Carol Hanisch’s original meaning behind the popular
phrase, ‘the personal is political.’
3. Solstice Sex Positive Feminist Mini-Carnival, plus scattered notes on
the BJ Wars.
There are also beautiful, witty, and hilarious posts on motherhood,
reproductive rights, comic book fandom, movie and book reviews, violence
against women, critical readings of advertisements, body image, feminist
analyses of misogyny in rock music, and feminist takes on media and
culture, and more….

There are a lot of bloggers there I haven’t seen involved in the carnival, which is great!

Please help to spread the word…

Early modern history Women's history

From light to dark – with an English Bible

To an excellent paper last night at the Institute for Historical Research by Lori Ann Ferrell (Claremont Graduate University, California), on “Early Modern How-To’ Books and the Early Modern English Bible”.

I’d misread the title and was expecting a spot of carpentry, a touch of animal husbandry and similar, but the “how to” actually referred to books on how to read the Bible, from Erasmus’s Paraphrases (1548), to Edmund Bunny’s The whole Summe of Christian Religion, giuen forth by two seuerall Methodes or Formes: the one higher, for the better learned, the other applyed to the capacitie of the common multitude, and meete for all, etc. (1576) and Thomas Middleton’s 1609 text about the gates of heaven.

The big idea from the talk – which I thought belongs in that all too rare “simple but brilliant” class – is that the assumption has been made that when the Bible came in English the Christian faith was immediately illuminated, opened up, made accessible. But in fact the reverse happened, for the Bible is, as a text to read, in fact extremely inaccessible, difficult, contradictory, confusing. (I was reading recently of the bit about stoning your neighbours if you see them working on the Sabbath…)

The suggestion here was instead that there was a period of rampant confusion and consequent distress. Under the old Latinite regime, Bible stories had been developed for a popular audience through Mystery plays and similar, providing a coherent, commonsense, familiar narrative, while priests pottered away comfortably in their Latin (or faked at being comfortable in Latin), doing things they had done before, as their predecessors had done before them.

Suddenly dump an English-language Bible, Henry VIII’s Great Bible of 1539 into this minimally literate, minimally educated community with no experience at all of engaging in such a complex text, and watch the confusion and discomfort. (At a time, of course, when getting it right was seen as a matter of eternal life or torture.)

So the “how to” books began with Erasmus’s Paraphrases, which tells the story in a fairly coherent form, unlike the Bible itself. Soon after come books that explain really “how to study”. How to take notes, how to summarise, how to cross-reference — things that simply hadn’t been taught, or needed, before. So the tone of these books is much like a self-help book today, much jollying along, encouragement, praise for imagined progress.

About the same time arrived the Geneva Bible, claiming to be user-friendly, with numbered verses, a big advance for the anxious students. James I brought in his version in an attempt to combat Puritanism, but many people in the 17th century worked with the two versions side by side.

The other ah-ha moment I had in the seminar was the statement about the problem with a certain scholar’s work – that it all depends on the selection of books you start off with. The details of this particular debate went right over my head, but it left me thinking about the “women’s conduct books”, with which the study of early modern women started.

The belief that women actually behaved the way they suggested has long been debunked (just the fact that all these men kept yelling at women “be quiet” makes it pretty certain the women were doing nothing of the kind). But if you also think about the books/pamphlets/broadsheets that women would have been reading as a guide to conduct, most would not have been the ones for this explicit purpose. It was in romances, in news-sheets, in popular ballads that the vast majority of women have found whatever guides to conduct they found in print.

Note: this is my summary of what I got from the paper, rather than notes on what the speaker said. So don’t take it as Gospel … 😉

Women's history

Paston Letters dramatised

Some readers may be interested in the “Woman’s Hour Drama” this week (available at least temporarily online).

I’ve reviewed a book that discussed these; the BBC sets out the basic story.

Feminism

The usual suspect

Listening to the “Today” programme on Radio 4 this morning, their main, after the 8am news, item was that old abortion law issue. There was a quite interesting scientific bloke, then the usual, inevitable interview subject.

Why DO producers get Catholic church representatives on to talk about abortion? You get the predictable middle-aged single bloke, saying all of the predictable things, representing a tiny fraction of the British community.

There may be a case from lowering the abortion law limit from 24 weeks to 23 or 22, if foetuses are indeed viable at that stage – but the only people who can really set out the case are the medical experts. And of course the people running with this are just anti-abortionists (i.e. pro-coathangerists) grabbing whatever angle on the story they think might help their case.

And if the limit is lowered, then almost all of the abortions that will be stopped will be those of grossly disabled foetuses that women will then have to carry for another three months or so, knowing what they carry. Not something I’d like to do.

While I’m venting my spleen, you do have to wonder what the jury was thinking about delivering a manslaughter rather than murder verdict in this case. It is obvious the judge didn’t agree:

The judge said the fact that she was having sexual relations with another man had been disclosed a couple of days before he killed her and was therefore not “a bolt from the blue”. He said the relationship was only nine months old. He added: “The remorse you have professed in court is more directed at your own plight rather than for the woman whose life you cut short for no good reason.”

Simple, if a woman you’re with tells you she’s sleeping with someone else, leave. You’re perfectly justified in doing that. Not in attacking and murdering her.

Early modern history Women's history

Sitting on the cat, and saving a young maid

“…Sometimes as I work at a series of patent and close rolls. I have a queer sensation; the dead entries begin to be alive. It is rather like the experience of sitting down in one’s chair and finding that one has sat on the cat…’ [F. M. Powicke, Ways of Medieval Life and Thought

That’s a quote often cited by the Centre for Lives and Letters, and it is a lovely metaphor for the feeling you sometimes get in historical research that, just for a second, you’ve got really close to a flesh-and-blood real, individual person – someone just like you, but long dead.

I had one of those moments today, while reading a whole series of printed wills from what were villages around London, such as Walthamstow and Woodford. (In Elizabethan Wills of South-West Essex P.G. Emmison, Kylin Press, Waddesden, 1983)

The moment came from a will proved at West Ham in 1562, of Sybil Lye, a widow who left the bulk of her estate to “to my little maid Anne Hanyson, whom I have brought up and whom I make my executrix, to be delivered to her at 16 or marriage, if she marry advisedly”.

That raises an interesting question about deliberately appointing an under-age executor, but beyond that, I just love the phrase “my little maid”. We’ve got a presumably childless widow who has informally adopted a young girl, probably I’d guess an orphan, maybe even a foundling. Sybil knows that she’s dying (that’s usually when wills were written and given the dates she probably died within days of making this one), and is doing her best to provide for the future of her adoptee.

(Sybil’s also providing reasonably for her “keeper”, the woman who had nursed her, by leaving her clothes and bed-dressings.)
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