"As we've seen, Medieval women worked hard. But we're often told that women's presence in the workplace is a product of the post-war twentieth century, when women emerged from the domestic sphere to take up a place in the work world... Yet, Medieval women worked, and indeed expected to work. Why then do we treat the 'working woman' as a modern invention? Modern ways of thinking about both gender and work color the way we look at the past. Medieval women and their work were considered unimportant for the theological and philosophical reasons I've spoken of before. Women were inferior to men, and their work was viewed similarly. In Enlightenment thought, for women to participate in challenging careers, or the public sphere, was to go against 'nature.' Rousseau argued that women were better at domestic tasks that required details, while men were more intellectual, which created a mutual dependence that benefited social relationships. The best way for these social relationships to thrive was for women to retreat entirely from the public sphere, and into domestic life, that limited their own intellectual pursuits to whatever made life easiest for men. These arguments weren't revolutionary, but their effect was. As they took hold, women in the upper and middle classes retreated from the workshop, the storefront, and the political realm, into the back of their home with their children... As the modern period wore on, and a nebulous concept of science was increasingly used to validate the way the world was organized, more arguments like these followed. This is how a psychologist like Baron-Cohen is able to tell us that women are inherently nurturers, so human society assigned them to the responsibility to make the home the way it assigned men to make money. But the house-bound domestic mother was never, even in the modern period, common. Domesticity was a privilege accorded to those who could get by on a husband's wage, or who inherited wealth. Working class women have always worked. The hint is in the name."
-Eleanor Janega, The Once and Future Sex: Going Medieval on Women's Roles in Society


















