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Tuesday 11 January 2011

What's in a name?

Well, while I’m working here on this blog the dishes certainly aren’t getting done. Shut the door and ignore it.




The idea has its root in ‘A Room of One’s Own’ by Virgina Woolf.
  “Now my belief is that this poet who never wrote a word and was buried at the crossroads still lives. She lives in you and in me, and in many other women who are not here tonight, for they are washing up the dishes and putting the children to bed." 
She summed up centuries of the problem. Women’s historical domestic place in the economy has always prevented us from fulfilling our true potential – poet or otherwise.

80 years later and not many of us are still at home washing the dishes. I have an army of talented and intelligent friends who have embraced the opportunities given us, who have freed themselves from the shackles of the kitchen sink.

Looking at us, you’d imagine that the war has been won.  Our new economic power has given us the independence and freedom to rule our own lives in ways generations before us could only imagine. And yet there are deep rooted anxieties amongst all of us. About our looks, about security, about raising children, about relationships, about our place in the world.

Beyond our little lives there is plenty of evidence that women do not have equal footing with men. Think of the way the female image is presented in the media, the pay gap, the glass ceiling, the imbalance in political representation. I could, and at some point will, go on.

And are women like us outraged by these inequalities? Are we active in tackling them? We are not. Feminism hardly ever rears its head in our self-obsessed lives.

I have often wondered if we’ve let the side down (more of that later too.) Could we, and should we be doing more? Are we happy just accepting what we’ve got without pushing progress further?

And that’s what this blog is about. It’s not militant or overly political. It’s about the ordinary experience of a woman who wants to be feminist, who also embraces femininity; who is at once traditional and radical (sometimes, a bit); who’s trying to make amends for taking too much for granted but who sometimes finds it hard to break free from the weight of convention and conditioning.

And a woman who’s always arguing with her other half about washing the dishes.

5 comments:

  1. I like your blog, Kate Treacy. And I feel the complex balance issue. I often think that maybe if I attend a Feminist Friday with Object, I will have made amends with being a stay-at-home mum. But then that's silly, right?

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  2. Yes! Silly! I bet you have more time to engage in more things since you've been at home. The 6.30 alarm call is hardly living the dream, is it? And actually, being at work can be quite limiting. Teaching Best Words for the 5th time in a row is hardly expanding your horizons. Work, by it's nature, is repetitive and boundary driven.

    See, it's difficult, this modern woman malarky. But, feminist Friday is a good idea. Wanna do it?

    (thanks for link too)

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  3. I hear ya'. There are so many internal struggles I face as a feminist and also as a stay-at-home mum and birth/breastfeeding activist. It can very very frustrating and tiring at times!

    Great blog, I've subscribed. :-)

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  4. Yes! Let's do Feminist Friday! The next one's the 28th of Jan, methinks... (I don't envy your 5th time around with Best Words, not at all not at all)

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  5. I don't think that your generation have let the side down: you're taking your place in world and making good use of hard-won opportunities and for me that makes much more of an impact than the burning of bras.

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