Comments on: Vatican credits gadget for liberating women
The Vatican's official newspaper celebrates International Women's Day by crediting a household appliance--the washing machine--for liberating 20th century woman.
The Vatican's official newspaper celebrates International Women's Day by crediting a household appliance--the washing machine--for liberating 20th century woman.
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Chris Matyszczyk brings a fresh and irreverent perspective to the tech world in his CNET blog, Technically Incorrect. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.
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Chris
Sorry but I have such a woman at home. The washing machine and the dishwasher are two major wonder devices to her. And yes they have liberated her to a greater extent than the pill (side effects preclude her from using them) or the vote. She is not that interested in voting, but if she did want to vote she would tell me she would want TIME to read before doing any voting and time to do other things is the essence of what any woman would need to think about ideas of "liberation". So logically a washing machine is a huge asset to a woman who is at home taking care of a family because it gives her TIME.
Chris Matyszczyk should have to wash clothes by hand for a month in pennance for his sinful insults.
But, if you wanted to give the lady of your life time...um, well, why don't you do the washing?
I am off to the confessional now...:)
thank you for commenting,
Chris
- by anthrogirl March 10, 2009 10:52 PM PDT
- In the 1880s, the average middle class family had three sets of clothing per person. One set was in the wash, one set was used during the week, and the last set was for holidays and religious observance. Why was one set in the wash? Because it took at least three days to do the washing for a family of four or more people. The wash water had to be heated in copper tubs and all the dirty clothes had to be boiled. Then the clothing had to be dried; in winter that was done indoors. Clothes washing was so intensive that girls were usually pulled out of school on wash days in order to help- which meant their exposure to school was less than that of their brothers.
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(5 Comments)The increase of leisure time for women made it possible for them to go to school full time, have time for lectures and reading, open small businesses and go on outings. Cheaper washing machines made it possible fo women like my grandmother to hold down a job while raising 8 children, without requiring my mother, the oldest, to quit school in order to get the washing done. Becuse of this, women like my mother finished high school and were able to get good jobs, and o encourage their daughters to go to college. I am the first person in my family to have a Phd- and I am proud to say I owe it allto the simple washing machine. In another era, a black woman like myself woud be cleaning houses for a living- because of laborsaving devices, I don't have to do such things. In counties like Gambia, in introduction of simple grain-milling machines has made it possible for women to do everything from vote to leave abusive husbands to start businesses worth of micro-loans. Computers have not made anywhere near the impact on women's lives as has the washing machine and other home-based labor savers, most of which need little or no electricity in their simplest forms.
Maybe, when speaking on technology, you might want to look at the history of labor-saving devices and their impact on women. Historians and anthropologists have been discussing this topic for years. Washers, dryers and vacuum cleaners in their own humble ways completely restructured family life in technologically-advanced nations far more than did birth control or computers. If you want to check, just ask women in places like peru, Afghanistan or Cote d'Ivoire what they think would make it more possible for their daughters to gain an education and to start businesses in areas where the electrical grid is unreliable and leisure time is rare- a birth control pill or a washing machine? Which would help them have more time to grow food- the right to vote or a hot water heater? Or, don't even bother to check. Just do a week's worth of the family bedding and clothing using your bathtub, a wash board and pots full of water from the stove, after making your own soap from ashes and lye. If you have any time left over, you can write an article on how silly devices that help women are so much less revolutionary than the iPod. And don't forget to use a wood-burning stove for that authentic experience, in between cooking the family's three squares day while boiling all that water.
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/1900house/index.html