voluptuary_manque
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Sep 5, 2007
- Posts
- 30,841
to one of our predecessors and to her pioneering work in female sexuality.
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It's kind of a sad story, but interesting. It reminds me that the "Surface Society", where all the girls are chaste and boys are vile. the President is always right and Taxes are a privilege, is so often different from the reality.
Most all of the women in my family were strong and capable, and held up to the vicissitudes of life in America well. They seemed to feel that you could categorize them anyway you wanted but they reserved the privilege of having good sense.
My mother was the first Female Hydraulic Mechanic at Norton AFB, in ~'54. Until then females were only used for clerical work. When she was sent to the Hydraulic shop to clerk, she noticed that mec's made three times what clerks made and asked for the job.
Her boss gave her a try and in three weeks she was wanting to run the test stand. Well that took some time, after all who wanted to trust a 5'2', 125 lb WOMAN with high pressure hoses?
She was my hero and her female offspring are just as aggressive in showing their capabilities. Lord help the man who says they can't do anything they want.
The origin of the Hand Salute is uncertain. Some historians believe it began in late Roman times when assassinations were common. A citizen who wanted to see a public official had to approach with his right hand raised to show that he did not hold a weapon.
Her master's thesis, for example, showed that women breathe from the diaphragm, as men do, rather than from the chest, as was believed at the time. She concluded that this so-called biological difference was really due to tight corsetry.
I think she could have found a publisher, actually. Women would have taken a few steps much sooner, if she had!This lady was truly ahead of her time. I can just imagine the shock and outrage if she had published her findings immediately...presuming she could have found a publisher.Women have, in fact, come a long way.
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When women's Lib came along, I wondered what they were talking about. Women had always worked, but the upper class females that led the movement may not have known that.Most of them probably didn't have to.
How very chauvinistic of you two. Let's start with Box's criticism of the women's movement being made up of ladies who didn't know that women had ever worked before--and were of a class that didn't have to know. BULLSHIT! BULL-SHIT Box! The feminist movement from it's very start always was and always did and still does fight for lower class working women like your mother. What it tried to get them was not only equal pay and better working conditions, but things like maternity leave, child care and such. Do you think men would consider that? Women did and FOR women. ALL women. You're old enough to remember when women who went off to have babies lost their jobs, or lost pay if they had to stay home to care for sick children, or couldn't get anyone to look after their toddlers.Uh-huh. Back in the '70's it was definitely a class-driven issue. I mean, just look at some of the jargon. "I don't want to be just a sex object!" Now who would say a thing like that? Someone working for a living or someone whose heaviest chore was making dinner after the maid cleaned the house?
How very chauvinistic of you two. Let's start with Box's criticism of the women's movement being made up of ladies who didn't know that women had ever worked before--and were of a class that didn't have to know. BULLSHIT! BULL-SHIT Box! The feminist movement from it's very start always was and always did and still does fight for lower class working women like your mother. What it tried to get them was not only equal pay and better working conditions, but things like maternity leave, child care and such. Do you think men would consider that? Women did and FOR women. ALL women. You're old enough to remember when women who went off to have babies lost their jobs, or lost pay if they had to stay home to care for sick children, or couldn't get anyone to look after their toddlers.
All this the Feminist movement of the 60's and 70's fought to get for women LIKE YOUR MOTHER, not just educated and upper class women. And they DID get it for such women. So it's a flat out lie to think or perpetuate the misogynistic stereotype and myths of that time (and that somehow stick like BULLSHIT to this day) that the feminist movement was not about lower class working women. It was. It always has been. It still is. Most fiercely.
Oh, come on. You must know that I was just being sarcastic. I have included all my earlier post, not just what you took out of context. What I meant to say was that the upper class women didn't have to work, not that they didn't have to know about work. Maybe I should have been clearer, but it looked alright at the time.
It was commmon knowledge in the 1950s and '60s that many women worked, and the early women liberationists certainly knew it. Many of their mothers or the mothers of their friends held jobs, and there were thousands of female teachers and store clerks and waitresses and nurses and other occupations. One of their big complaints went something like: Women should be able to be more than just housewives. They should be able to go out and work and be able to pay their own way. That attitude or belief was what I was referring to, because they already knew there were millions of women who were doing just that.
The critique of American white, upper class feminists as insensitive to problems of other groups belongs to the 1970's, when black feminists like Audre Lorde struggled to find their voice. That's pinpointing a particular, narrow point in space and time, though, and seriously confusing the chronology.
In the Victorian era we were talking about—and for longer after that than we like to remember—higher education (and with it, access to professions) was precisely one of the things that were denied to women. One should not make a mistake of taking Prof. Mosher from the article as a rule; she was an exception, and not just for her field of study. She was exceptional in holding a PhD to begin with.
The first woman in the US to obtain an MD's diploma and the first woman in the US to graduate from a law school came around the same time. They were exceptions, too. It wasn't until the 1920's that prestigious universities even began opening their doors to women, and some, like Princeton, persisted almost to the 1970's in being exclusively male. In Mosher's time, 'an educated woman'—if by that we mean someone who could put their education to use, not just recite poetry, play piano, and smile prettily—could pretty much be one thing and one thing only: a school teacher.
In other words, before there could be educated women one could accuse of living in an ivory tower—a ludicrous accusation in any context but the one I mentioned above—women had to be admitted to higher education in the first place. It rather boggles the mind to think of how recent that achievement is.