Plainly larkin31 thinks history begins c. 1840, since she thinks of the “
Cult of Domesticity” has anything to do with the 6000 year tradition of the West.
Remember that Eddy Izzard bit where he’s talking about how Americans are impressed by a thing being restored to its condition of
50 years ago: “What?! Nobody was alive back then!”
It’s frankly provincial, that you think of the petty local customs of the past two centuries or so constitute the tradition we here are concerned to defend. The tradition I am defending is that described in Regine Pernoud’s “Women in the Days of Cathedrals”, and no other. In High Medieval France, women could own property, conduct trades and crafts, file lawsuits, give evidence and present defenses in court, and, oh yeah,
vote—and also gloried in the roles of wife, mother, and nun as no women have in all of history.
So it is highly quaint, like a small child’s concept of the Olden Days, for an inheritor of the rank patriarchy that was the Renaissance, Enlightenment, and all forms of Liberalism, to get self-righteous with those of us who crowned a woman Queen of Heaven and treasure a story of her revising
the very timetable of the Messiah himself.