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@sunoxy
Need this
Following up on the conversation from yesterday, if anyone is interested in the economic history of women I would like to recommend three books:
Women’s Work: The First 20,000 Years by Elizabeth Wayland Barber. This is a very good summary of the role of textile production in European history from prehistory up until the Middle Ages and, because textile production is the quintessential woman’s work, it is also a history of the economic role of women. My only objection is that it ends with the adoption of the treadle loom and the subsequent removal of weaving from the home to the workshop (and the domain of men). IMO it should have gone up to the Industrial Revolution, especially because weaving was not exclusively the domain of men after the introduction of the treadle loom (see the next book), but I do understand that Barber is primarily an expert in prehistoric textiles and even the Middle Ages is a little too modern for her.
A Midwife’s Tale: The Life of Martha Ballard by Laura Thatcher Ulrich. Honestly one of the few books that really explores the “secondary economy” between women that was based on the home economies of textile production and land management. It uses the diary of a woman in Maine in the late 1700s/early 1800s to examine social mores and women’s domestic production of the place and time. The biggest challenge to understanding the history of women’s economic role is that it was almost never written about, or at least not in writings that have survived, because most of those writings were done by men, who were concerned with other things. Ballard’s diary is one of the few surviving writings that is very focused on women’s economic concerns because, well, that was Ballard’s life. It also puts paid to a lot of the stereotypes we have about the social and cultural mores of the time.
Empire of Cotton: A Global History by Sven Bekert. A history of the Industrial Revolution through it’s most important commodity, cotton. Culturally we usually think of the Industrial Revolution as centered around coal, but coal was the means, not the ends. The point of the Industrial Revolution, the product that drove all of the technological invention and subsequent social change, was cloth. I really, REALLY strongly recommend reading the first two books, or at least Women’s Work, before reading this one, because to understand the changes wrought by the Industrial Revolution you must understand the time and effort that had to be devoted to textile production prior to the invention of the spinning jenny and powered loom. My biggest objection to this book is that it is very obviously written by a man – Bekert is perfectly sufficient as a historian and, to be fair, he is primarily concerned with global trends, but he has clearly never picked up a spindle or a shuttle and he does not truly understand the extent to which textile production dominated every aspect of women’s lives prior to the industrial revolution, nor does he give enough thought to the secondary domestic economy of women.
I also recommend to everyone, literally everyone, at least once in your life, picking up a drop spindle and attempting to spin some thread. You don’t need to try your hand at weaving. You don’t need to sew. But honestly look at the cloth you are wearing, see how much thread it requires, and then pick up a drop spindle and spend twenty minutes with it to try and gain an understanding of what the primary concern of your ancestors* was for 20,000 years.
(*Not all cultures were textile-dominant but a) most of them were, including most indigenous cultures; and b) the dominant world culture today certainly descends from a textile-dominant culture so it is still important to understand. We are all children of the Industrial Revolution whether we like it or not.)
Rodeo has remained a sport dominated by white men, but the two-year-old team whose members met in Maryland is inspiring girls as they seek victory
This is amazing…had to post.
Bird QR Other places to see my posts: INSTAGRAM / FACEBOOK / ETSY / KICKSTARTER
(via Turkish woman allegedly kills abusive husband, becomes social media icon)
“Will women always die? Let some men die too,” Dogan told police. “I killed him for my honor.”
queen shit
I’ve made this post like six times but it still fucks me up the China’s mountains just look like that. Like I spent decades thinking it was stylistic but no, they just have different mountains over there.
For reference, here’s what my local mountains look like:
Here’s the general art style Chinese mountains are drawn in:
And here’s how some of them actually look:
What the FUCK
I’m specifically reblogging this here because I know there is a geological reason for this and I know at least one of you has to know it.
Limestone I believe.
Quartz sandstone actually. Limestone is a good guess because it’s very easy to erode, even the wiki article notes most people guess limestone first, but nope! Just a lot of time, and mechanical weathering from ice and plant roots.
Ooh, hey, I know a related thing! We have similar formations in Colorado, and they’re eroded sandstone. What happened was that some sandy areas had heavy rocks/boulders sitting on top & the weight compressed the sand beneath it into stone hard enough to withstand the erosion of the (in this case) Colorado River over the years. This is a picture of Bryce Canyon, with a bunch of those monoliths/columns.
And here’s some at the Colorado National Monument.
Rocks wear hats to protect them from the weather and humans think it looks very cool.
It seems like hoodoos are sort of the opposite of these formations in China though? Those form in very wet conditions, and hoodoos form in dry, hot areas.
More mountains in China (these ones are limestone/karst and are in the southeast):
And these ones are in central China near Song Shan. I don’t know anything about the geology, but they look like the earth was stacked like pancakes and then turned in its side. They’re fantastic!
Another example of the thing shown above (rock columns left due to particular erosion patterns) is the Putangirua Pinnacles in New Zealand
Which as a fun fact was the setting for the Paths of the Dead in Return of the King. Here is a little summary about them
thinking about how tiktoker caitlin reilly has deconstructed, criticized, and parodied every aspect of upperclass white womanhood in the span of like 6 months
i’m in awe of her
Traces of coca and nicotine found in Egyptian mummies - WTF fun facts
well DUH. a lot of historians are still trying to process the fact that ancient egyptians knew how to build boats, which is ridiculous. why would they not be seafarers and explorers?
this is not new or surprising information at all. it pretty much day one of any african-american studies course.
the egyptians knew that if they put their boats in front of the summer storm winds it’d blow them right across the sea to the Americas and they shared that with the greeks.
It’s really hard for people to understand that everyone had boats, exploration, and trade interactions without the same level of murder, colonization, and violence that the Europeans did. It’s really hard for people to get that.
Well, no people find hard to understand that one of the earliest civilizations could build a boat sturdy enough and reliable enough to cross a 8,766 mile stretch that gave people thousands of years of technological progress later great difficulty.
The notion that technology is a steady upward climb of “progress” is, itself, part of a Eurocentric historical narrative revolving around the tacit teleological assertion that Western European civilisation represents the culmination and endpoint of history.
In reality, technologies are frequently discovered, lost and rediscovered, often multiple times, and frequently in parallel. A Dark Age in one region may be a time of rapid technological development in another region, and it’s not uncommon to encounter evidence of ancient civlisations using technologies a thousand years out of whack with the “proper” order of discovery… where “proper” is defined in terms of the order in which those technologies were discovered in Western Europe - there’s that Eurocentrism again.
I mean, just to give you an idea of how flexible the order in which technologies are developed can be and how ultimately wrong-headed the notion of linear technological progress is, there are Central American civilisations that had indoor plumbing, central heating and hot and cold running water before inventing the wheel. Some of the First Nations in what is now Eastern Canada had sophisticated climate models and reliable weather prediction - including functioning barometers and other simple meteorological instruments - before they figured out metallurgy.
So no, it’s not particularly incredible that the ancient Egyptians had boats far more advanced than they “should” have given their overall level of technology. That stuff happens all the time.
People invent the technology they need. They can even invent a technology, then not use it.
The Inca are often accused of “not knowing about wheels.”
Except, they did have wheels. They just didn’t use wheels for long distance transportation. They had a huge road system. On which everything was moved by pack animals and people. The Inca road is an incredible feat of engineering.
So, why didn’t they use wheels?
Because their land was so freaking mountainous that the road would repeatedly turn into this:
Tell me what earthly use a wheel is when your road keeps having to have steps and narrow bridges because you live on top of a mountain.
But that image shows us what they did have.
That’s a suspension bridge. Europeans didn’t invent those until centuries after the Inca did.
Because when the most efficient route through your home hits chasms, guess what?
You get real good at making bridges!
And when the best way to move goods through your desert homeland is a big river?
You get real good at making boats.
The technology a culture develops and uses is the technology they need. In Europe that was one suite of technology, and because white folk are so dang arrogant, we think that’s the superior means of development. It’s not, it’s just how technology develops in Europe.
The Minoan civilisation in Greece, around 2,500 BCE, developed huge technological advancements, including fully operational water and sewage systems, complete with flushing toilets. This would be around 3,000 years before one was invented in England.
Minoan Greece was also a sea power. They had huge fleets of ships, which meant they did a lot of exploration. They also built one of the biggest trade networks in the world, reaching as far as Egypt, Cyprus, Canaan, Syria, the Iberian Peninsula (modern-day Spain and Portugal), the Levantine coast, Anatolia and Mesopotamia (modern-day Turkey, Israel and Iraq).
A volcano eruption on a nearby island, which caused a tsunami, possibly destroyed their sea power and left them vulnerable, which is why most of their technology was lost.
The Late Bronze Age Collapse a few centuries later led to the simultaneous destruction of advanced civilisations in Greece, Egypt, the Near East, Asia Minor, North Africa, Caucasus, Balkans and the Eastern Mediterranean. This caused a dark age across two continents which created isolated village cultures, and is the reason most of their advancements were lost.
The notion that technology can only advance is some white nonsense.
That too.
(Minoan Crete may have been part of the inspiration for Atlantis).
This is also why Egyptians didn’t bother with the wheel* for like three thousand years. What fucking good are wheels when EVERYTHING IS SAND?
But on the flip side…they came up with a way to use water to basically hydroplane those giant stone blocks in their buildings across the desert. Which is a hell of a lot more useful in an unpaved sandy region.
Likewise let’s not forget the Aztecs, who came up with a farming system so efficient (chinampas) that parts of it are still used today and really ought to be revived on a wider scale as part of sustainable farming. And also Native Americans, and I’m using that term BECAUSE it’s so broad: look at tribes across the country and you’ll see something interesting. Iroquois, living in a cold, well-forested, and often icy land, built immovable longhouses—which would survive the bitter northeastern winters. Plains tribes developed the tipi/teepee—while they also faced long, even dangerous winters, they also lived in a place where travel was far easier and the worst of winter could be weathered by heading south. Or down where I live, the Sinagua (later assimilated into the Hopi) built their homes IN CLIFFS. And by that I mean “off the ground, built into the cliff face with adobe.” Aka, some of the best pre-refrigeration insulation against the heat that you could possibly hope for. We still don’t know how they did it, incidentally. “With ladders, dumbass” is an obvious answer in some of their dwellings, but in others it’s not clear how they just….hung over a sinkhole, a quarter of a mile or so above the water, and chipped out the front doors so they had a place to sit while they made the rest. Scaffolds? Very well-balanced rope ladders? Smaller cliffs they chipped off afterward to prevent enemy incursion? We don’t know, but we do know they found a way to make the extreme heat survivable and even sort of a nonissue. They never bothered with stuff like modern central AC because they found a way to let the stone and clay do the job for them.
Technology isn’t always a race. Sometimes it’s just an evolution.
*nominally. We have extant toys from this period that have wheels to make them move.
AAVE: STOP APPROPRIATING IT
What you as a non-black person shouldn’t be saying (this includes non-black poc):
killin it
-game too strong (i.e. eyebrow game too strong, etc.)
-ass (i.e. That’s some ignorant-ass shit.)
hella
turnt/turnt up/turn up/turn down for what
shade/throwin’ shade
ratchet (don’t be a smartass, the adjective not the object)
werk
yas
habitual “be” (i.e. they be killin it, he be walkin, bitches be like, etc.)
the thirst/thirsty
anything being “real” (i.e. the struggle is real, the thirst is real, etc.)
the struggle
on point (i.e. outfit is on point)
chill (as in got no chill)
side-eye
stank face
cray cray
-had me like
trippin’
boo/bae
imma be
do/dough/dat
gurl/boi
basic (as in basic bitch)
holla
finna (i.e. I’m finna do xyz)
tho/doe
reading/read
school/schooling
dope
fo sho/fo real
y’all
dig/dig it/ya dig/you dig
respect (i.e. respect man)
about that/here for that (i.e. I’m not about that life, I’m here for this)
tight (i.e. this shit got me tight)
giving life (i.e. Beyonce gives me life, black tumblr giving me life)
swag
goin’ through it
Things to avoid in general because they are offensive and/or mock black culture:
Sassy (NO YOU DO NOT HAVE A SASSY BLACK WOMAN LIVING INSIDE OF YOU. STOP. LOOKIN AT YOU WHITE GAY COMMUNITY).
Do not call black hair kinky or nappy. (Don’t touch it either).
Do not call things ghetto. Just don’t.
Don’t use the word thug in relation to black men.
Do not assume black people are ignorant just because they don’t speak the same dialect of English as you do.
Don’t make fun of black names.
If you use the n-word, I have no sympathy for you. Good fucking luck.
If you’re non-Black, you should reblog this.
And if you’re non-Black and this bothers you? Unfollow me right now.
Here’s some more for y'all:
Ridiculous that I have to say this but… literally any version of the n word
Deadass
Lit
Real talk
Bless/bless up
Fierce (you know what I’m talking about)
Salty
Woke
Not about that life
On fleek/fleek
Thot
Bye (like “Girl, bye”)
Bye Felicia/son/girl/etc.
Preach (like “Preach it”)
Say/speak that shit
Fuckboy/fuckboi
Stank
Killin’ it
Bruh
Squad/squad goals
Buggin’
Shawty
X was mad X (like “Shit was mad funny”)
Fly (like “She looks fly”)
Aggy (as in aggravated/angry)
Wack/whack (like “That was wack”)
Gas/gassed/gassin’/gassin’ up (like “Gas this” or “She was gassin” or “They gassin’ me up”)
Fam
Wilin’/wildin’ (like “They was wildin’”)
Wit it (as in “With it”)
Throwing hands
Snatched
Wig
Extra/so extra
What’s good/What’s gud
Wont (as in “want”)
Hisself or theyself
We/they was (or any other grammatically incorrect noun-verb agreement. Don’t use ‘was’ like that; you know what I mean)
We X (like “We good”)
I’m weak
Rando (as in “random”)
Slay (like "Girl, slayyy")
They/she/he X (leaving out linking verbs like are or is and just using the next verb; like “They talking” or “He wildin’”)
Don’t refer to anyone as “lightskin/light skinned/light skint” if you’re White
Again, if you’re not Black, you should read this and reblog it. And adjust your daily vocabulary accordingly if you say any of these (minus “y'all” but please still recognize that that word came from Black people & slaves)👍🏾
List of Black Lives Matter and Racial Equality Petitions to sign:
Justice for George Floyd
Justice for George Floyd 2
Justice for George Floyd 3
Charge the Officers Responsible for George Floyd’s Murder
Charge the Officers Responsible for George Floyd’s Murder 2
Justice For Ahmuad Arbery
Justice For Ahmuad Arbery 2
Justice for Breonna Taylor
Stand with Breonna
Charge Officers Responsible for Breonna Taylor’s Murder
Justice For Tamir Rice
Justice For Joāo Pedro
Justice for Alejandro Vargas Martinez
Justice for Belly Mujinga.
Justice for Rashad Cunningham
Justice For Tony McDade
Justice for Dion Johnson
Justice for Jennifer Jeffley
Justice for Young Uwa
Justice for Elijah Nichols
Justice for Tete Gulley
Justice for Tazne Van Wyk
Justice for Michael Dean
Justice For Amari Boone
Justice for Darrius Stewart
Justice for Shukri Abdi
Justice for Ashton Dickson
Justice For Darrius Stewart
Justice for David McAtee
Justice for Cameron Green
Justice for Crystal Mason
Justice For Zinedine
Justice for Regis Korchinski-Paquet
Justice for Christopher Josey
Justice for Amiya Braxton
Justice For Emerald Black
Justice for Andile Mchunu
Justice for Cameron Green
Justice for Tamla Horsford
Justice for Collins Khosa
Free Siyanda
Reopen Sandra Bland’s Case
Free Willie Simmons who has served 38 years for a $9 robbery
Get Washington State to Hold Police Officers Accountable for Police Brutality
Arrest Officer Jared Campbell for macing a child
Demand Jail Time for Dylan Mota and Jacob Robles
Demand Jail Time for All Police who Murder Innocent People
Fire Racist Criminal Michael J Reynolds from the NYPD
Petition for Nationwide Police De-Escalation Training
Petition for Nationwide Police Required Racial Bias Test
stop immigrants being poisoned by ICEBan the use of inhumane rubber bullets
Demand a retrial for Angel Bumpass wrongfully convicted 13 year old with a life sentence
End Police Brutality and Violence Against BIPOC in the USA
Ban the use of rubber bullets for crowd control
Join Campaign Zero
Drop All Charges Against Incarcerated Trafficking Survivor Chrystul Kizer!
Reopen Kendrick Johnson’s Case
Abolish Prison Labour in the USA
Require Dash and Body Cameras for the King County Sheriff’s Office
Donation Links
A thread of Youtuve videos you can stream to donate to BLM
Official George Floyd Memorial Fund
OFFICIAL Gianna Floyd Fund (George Floyd’s child)
Black Lives Matter
We Cant Breathe
43 Bail Funds to Support
Homeless Black Trans women fund
Split a donation between 70+ community bail funds, mutual aid funds, and racial justice organizers
Minnesota Healing Justice Network
Women for Political Change
Spiral Collective
When We All Vote
National List of Bail and Mutual Aid Funds/Organizers/Black Owned Businesses
Venmo names of black trans people that need help
Latino Community on Lake Street
Black Immigrant Collective
Centro de Trabajadores Unidos en Lucha
Atlanta Black Owned Business Relief
Al Maa'uun
Remembering Shana Isuroon
Fundraising for destroyed black owned businesses
Joyce Preschool
Black Table Arts
Northside business support
Du Nord Riot Recovery Fund
Unicorn Riot
Donate to Destiny Harrison & her daughter Dream’s Legacy
Pimento Relief Fund
Southside Harm Reduction
West Broadway Business and Area Coalition
Division of Indian Work
TC Care Collective
Justice for Breonna Taylor
Justice for Jamee
Justice for David McAtee
THIS RIGHT HERE
You guys are dangerously close to realizing specifically what kinds of people they keep from voting and why.
I want to drill this into everybody’s head:
The United States of America has the highest prison population in the world
Black Americans and Latin people make up the majority of this population (many of whom are non-violent offenders)
Federal Prisons in America require that their state keeps their prisons at a maximum occupancy at all times.
The 13th amendment did not entirely abolish slavery…just one form of it. It remains legal through industrial prison system
Oh and we have privatized prisons which allow companies to actually make money off of keeping people incarcerated
Here’s what’s really perverse: prisoners, who cannot vote, still get counted in the U.S. Census. The more prisoners a county has, the more representation it gets, even though the prisoners cannot vote. See how that works? The more black and brown people they lock up, the more government resources and political representation they get. Even though those prisoners have no say and cannot vote.
If county-A has a population of 50 voters but no prisons, and county-B has a population of 50 voters and 50 prisoners, the county with the prisoners gets more government funding and more political represention. This is sometimes called “prison gerrymandering” and it is used in redistrictring.
Not so fun Fact: Southern states that reliably vote for Republicans also have the highest prison population in the United States. (source). So mass incarceration is a double whammy. It’s both a form of voter suppression and a tool to strengthen white people’s political power.
i want this horrible election to be over more than the quarantine
@hope-for-the-planet @climate-anxiety-support @thehopefuljournalist
So, I was just reading an article by Darren Naish at Tetrapod Zoology about the blog’s fourteenth anniversary, and I came across this part.
I’ve been doing litter-picks at beaches for years now. Things haven’t improved but have steadily gotten worse. The end of much of the natural world is in sight.
He then posted this photo, and said:
Imagine trying to clean a beach like this of its plastic pollution. It isn’t going to happen: no-one is ever going to remove all of this waste.
Keep in mind that Naish is an actual scientist, not just some random social media commenter. If HE thinks that the ocean’s plastic problem is a lost cause, then what’s the point of living?
@cartoon-and-animal-lover
Hey there!
It’s hard not to be discouraged when faced with the enormity of the world’s plastic problem. Plastic has infiltrated most of the world’s ecosystems, to the point that microplastics are even begining to show up in the bodily fluids of some animals.
But, I am also a scientist and here is something that helps me feel more hopeful about the plastic crisis:
Did you know that the first trees on planet earth didn’t decompose when they died? Wood was a brand new invention, so the microbes that digest and break down wood didn’t exist yet. For millions of years, dead trees just piled up on the forest floor like a bunch of non-biodegradable trash.
But eventually some microbes developed a mutation that allowed them to digest wood, and because there was so much wood lying around those bacteria thrived and spread throughout the world. We think of trees as being inherently biodegradable, but that wasn’t always the case.
^These are mealworms (a type of beetle larva). They can digest styrofoam (aka polystyrene) thanks to symbiotic bacteria in their gut. That’s right; they can eat a type of plastic that is estimated to make up 30% of the trash in US landfills.
And they aren’t the only ones! A type of bacteria that can break down the plastic found in disposable water bottles was recently discovered by scientists in Japan. All this time as we’ve been pumping plastic into the world, microbes have been busily evolving a way to consume it.
Now, we are still quite a ways off from a plastic-eating bacteria that can be sprayed on landfills or releasing bioengineered, plastic-eating organisms onto polluted beaches, but those things might not be that far off in the future.
It’s still definitely better if we can limit our plastic consumption and manually pick up as much plastic as possible, but our ability to remove litter may not always be limited to what people can remove by hand. Hope is not lost!
And even if the plastic crisis was really unsolvable, life is still worth living. There will always be bad things happening somewhere in the world, and the best we can do is help when we can and seek to live our lives and find happiness in spite of those bad things.
Image Source X X
It just occurred to me that people do not know about what some people make chicken coops out of and it’s a Shame
Please, enlighten us
So the thing with chickens are, they are adaptable and frankly, do not care.
you
can
use
just
about
anything
Here are some more that I like: