Jay > Jay's Quotes

Showing 1-1 of 1
sort by

  • #1
    Rosalind Miles
    “Yet some would say, why women's history at all? Surely men and
    women have always shared a world, and suffered together all its rights
    and wrongs? It is a common belief that whatever the situation, both
    sexes faced it alike. But the male peasant, however cruelly oppressed,
    always had the right to beat his wife. The black slave had to labor for
    the white master by day, but he did not have to service him by night as well. This grim pattern continues to this day, with women bearing an extra ration of pain and misery whatever the circumstances, as the
    sufferings of the women of war-torn Eastern Europe will testify. While
    their men fought and died, wholesale and systematic rape—often
    accompanied by the same torture and death that the men suffered—
    was a fate only women had to endure. Women's history springs from
    moments of recognition such as this, and the awareness of the difference is still very new. Only in our time have historians begun to look at the historical experience of men and women separately, and to
    acknowledge that for most of our human past, women's interests have been opposed to those of men. Women's interests have been opposed by them, too: men have not willingly extended to women the rights and freedoms they have claimed for themselves. As a result, historical advances have tended to be "men only" affairs. When history concentrates solely on one half of the human race, any alternative truth or reality is lost. Men dominate history because they write it, and their accounts of active, brave, clever or aggressive females constantly tend to sentimentalize, to mythologize or to pull women back to some perceived "norm." As a result, much of the so-called historical record is
    simply untrue.”
    Rosalind Miles, Who Cooked the Last Supper? The Women's History of the World



Rss