C-dot
Call Me a Cab
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Kitty_Sheridan said:Still appalls me that the documentary makers took such lovely people as Jo, Debbie and Diane, who I see most weekends here in the WW2 scene in the UK and bullied them, harangued them and basically tried to make what is a lovely way of life into something heinous.
Fletch said:Pardon yet another bifurcated interloper, but what do you think of the implication that a vintage lifestyle is something essentially female?
Would focusing on the couples as couples, who are into something together, conflict with the message the media are building? And what is that message, and what's shaping that message?
And I mean beyond the intent to be eye-grabbing and freaky. What assumptions are the TV folk working under that they don't know about?
Howard Hughes said:PS. I have known Joanne's husband for approx 4 years and have seen him wear a Trilby once.
Magdalena said:II think she knows that you don't have to be rich and famous to enjoy life.
Helysoune said:What started out to as a movement to give women the choice and opportunity to have a career has evolved into a situation that's the complete opposite from what used to be. A great many women these days have no choice but to work due to the family's finances, even if they'd prefer to be housewives and stay-at-home moms. Not only that, choosing to stay at home is highly frowned upon, as we've all seen. Homemakers are seen as dull, dimwitted, oppressed and enslaved to their brutish husbands and bratty children. People become positively flabbergasted and call it unnatural if they hear of a women voluntarily giving up the rat race to raise her children herself, rather than dutifully turning them over to The System to be raised at six weeks old.
C-dot said:The debate is not about being middle class, it's a feminist debate. Before feminism took off in the mid-60's, women had no choice but to be housewives, just as the ladies in Time Warp Wives are.
Nowadays, women have the choice to be a working woman - they aren't forced into the aforementioned role. However if one chooses to be a housewife, it's seen as setting the cause backward. Whether it is or not is open to argument, and thus, you have your "flustered" people.
C-dot said:The way I see it: It would, because people would be suspicious of the men. My mum and her good friend watched the program, and when Joanne's hubby was introduced, she said: "I guess we know why he likes having a vintage wife!"
The message seems to be that ladies should be doing everything their husband is doing, and more. Really though, if Time Warp Women are upholding certain duties, are Time Warp Men not? If the woman is not doing everything - doesn't that mean the husband must be doing his share?
I believe the producers are working under the assumption we suspect they are: That the vintage wife is subservient to her vintage husband, and she likes it that way!
Thanks for chiming in Howard. I'll search on your posts on the topic. But over all, I just don't get your point. I'll chalk it up to one of those jazz moments...Howard Hughes said:HELLO FLETCH/ALL.
To be fair, the producer did want to make this programme as a "couples thing", but one of the chaps had the foresight to not get involved too heavily, only enough to show that his partner (not wife, not yet anyway), was not some freak loner.
I went into detail last year on this forum to defend the people prtrayed on the programme, please see the other threads if still available, and will not waste my time in doing so again.
I can only hope that this programme will only serve to warn others of the "dangers" of allowing the media into their lives.
Hope you all have a good day.
Toodleoo
HH.
PS. I have known Joanne's husband for approx 4 years and have seen him wear a Trilby once.
Don't get sucked in !
reetpleat said:True to a point, but probably more accurate is the fact that back then, you could more easily afford to have a one income household. True, it is partly based on consumer choice. If we lived as simply and frugally today, we probably still could.
Viola said:To be fair plenty of Golden Era women worked. Both my grandmothers worked through my parents' childhoods. All of my great-grandmothers worked, at least intermittantly. They were not exotic, either, not brazen doing truly bold things; nothing it wasn't perfectly normal for women to do.
Part of the rosy view of the The Past is the rosy view of the middleclass.
LizzieMaine said:Exactly. Nearly forty percent of the workforce was female in 1940.
C-dot said:I have to wonder how many of them were single, or childless.