2013-06-23

mindstalk: (Default)
Subtitle: _The Allegory of the Female Form_. 1985. Seems really thick but that's paper thickness, about 300 pages.

A book I'm reading, found randomly in the art section. I don't know if I'll finish, it's interesting without being gripping. Basically it's about the use of female form in art, particularly as abstract allegorical figures. Lady Liberty, France, La Republique, the Muses, the Virtues, Britannia, etc. Warner notes that not showing women at all in public isn't a good sign, but covering your buildings in scantily clad abstract women isn't a sign of liberation either. Ancient Athens was viciously misogynist, despite having Athena as patron goddess. Paris is covered in ladies and France was one of the later countries to give women the vote. Lady Liberty doesn't mean women are particularly free.

Male statues show actual male individuals; female statues tend to be abstracted. Lincoln Memorial vs. Lady Liberty. No Uncle Sam statue, eh? And as images, John Bull and Uncle Sam have more personality than Britannia or Liberty or France.

First chapter is about the Statue of Liberty. Second is about Paris and all its female figures. Third is about Britannia (ironically, originally a Roman conceit, used to depict the subjection of Britain), with a lot about depictions of Margaret Thatcher. (A "masculine" woman, yet never seen in trousers, and with strong public images as mother, wife, and housewife, i.e. minimally threatening. But not object of desire, that probably would have been politically fatal.)

My vocabulary hasn't had this much of a workout in a while. Entirely new words to look up: quadriga, galantine, riggish, ambulatory as a noun (that was trivial to guess on my own, but still novel). Probably seen before: pollarded. I figured I should look up tympanum (architectural) and pediment as well, as they fell into "I feel like I know them but can't actually define them." Pediment really isn't what I'd think it sounds like.
mindstalk: (atheist)
Reading Lies My Teacher Told Me

Helen Keller, 1880-1968. We mostly hear about her discovering words when Anne Sullivan spelled 'water' into her hand. But she had a long adult life, what did she do? A lot: radical socialist, Wobbly, suffragist, birth control advocate, helped found the ACLU, pacifist, donated to the NAACP. She came to realize that her success depended on having a family wealthy enough to hire skilled tutors and constant companions for her, and also that blindness affected the lower classes a lot more, through industrial accidents and syphilis. US high school history textbooks don't mention any of that.

Woodrow Wilson exemplified the complexity of the 1900s Democratic party. He signed into law a lot of progressive legislation: antitrust acts, progressive income tax, curtailing child labor, the Federal Reserve. His democracy rhetoric inspired a lot of people. He was also a brutal imperialist who occupied Haiti and Nicaragua, and invaded Mexico, Cuba, and the Soviet Union among others. He opposed women's suffrage before he was for it. He segregated the Navy and replaced blacks with Southern whites in federal offices. He brought the US as close as it's come to a police state (there's a reason the ACLU got founded about the same time). In 1920, Harding ignored his Democratic opponent and campaigned against Wilson's record, and won a crushling landslide: 60% to 34% of the vote. Despised in the 1920s, Wilson only got beatified after WWII; now we name lots of things after him and suggest him as a fifth face for Rushmore.

Textbooks whitewash most of that too, either not mentioning it at all, or spinning it heavily, like saying he ordered troops out of Mexico without mentioning he sent them in the first place.

Profile

mindstalk: (Default)
mindstalk

June 2025

S M T W T F S
123 45 67
89 10 11121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930     

Most Popular Tags

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags

Style Credit

Page generated 2025-06-12 15:13
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios
OSZAR »