Historical Gender Politics 

So i occasionally hear (usually good speakers who I generally agree with politically) people talk about "back when women had no legal rights", referring to the system of "coverture" where a woman was generally legally considered an extension of her husband.

But the flaw I always hear in this particular framing is that it treats coverture as a sort of default state of history. That's just How Things Were until women fought for and won their rights.

But it really, really wasn't. It was a specific rollback of rights, dating to roughly the 18th century. And at least in the form people recognize it was very specific to England and its empire.

And i think the particular framing of it makes it easier to fall into the liberal myth of linear progress.

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Historical Gender Politics 

@MorningSong yeah similarly “back when women couldn’t work / only worked in the home” is a very brief and culturally specific period and its only mythmaking about gender during/after that period that has convinced us it was natural and universal

Historical Gender Politics 

@Satsuma And also HIGHLY specific to upper class women. Subsistence farmer and working class women have *always* worked.

Historical Gender Politics 

@MorningSong for sure! at best it was “women weren’t supposed to work if they could afford not to” and even then that is still something we came up with like, maybe 250 years ago after a long history of women working being very normal in all of society

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