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Author Archives: Anna Clutterbuck-Cook

$1 reviews: inheritance

06 Thursday Jan 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in book reviews

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british isles, history

I picked up an advance review copy of Robert Sackville-West’s family history Inheritance: The Story of Knole and the Sackvilles (New York: Walker & Co., 2010) at Brattle last week. While I’m not particularly up on the history of the British aristocracy, I do have some background on Knole (the family home) and the Sackville-Wests having read Portrait of a Marriage and two fictional odes to Knole in the form of Vita Sackville-West’s The Edwardians and Virginia Woolf’s Orlando (a trippy love letter to both Vita and her ancestral home).

Inheritance is a quick read, each chapter chronicling the tenants of Knole from Thomas Sackville, 1st Earl of Dorset (who lived in Knole from 1604 to his death in 1608) to the National Trust, who bought the home from the family in 1946. Robert Sackville-West, the current custodian of the family’s interest in the home — and resident, along with his family, in the private quarters on the estate — draws on substantial family papers and documents of record as well as family memory to provide a light-hearted romp through history. Some of the best bits of the story are told in the words of the author’s ancestors who were thoughtful enough to leave behind diaries, daybooks, ledgers, and correspondence for future generations. Robert does not seem particularly anxious about protecting the family propriety in sharing anecdotes — if anything, he seems to enjoy highlighting the angst and drama of Knole’s inhabitants.  In the chapter on Richard Sackville, 5th Earl of Dorset, he writes

There is … a strange agreement countersigned by the countess on 30 July 1674 — although, beside her signature, she has crossed out the words “by my husband’s Command.” The document is titled an “Engagement from my Wife to me upon the dismissing of a servant of mine named Thomas Jones at her desire,” and relates how a certain Lady Charnoche had (or so Frances [the countess] had been “credibly informed”) wagered that Frances would die within the year. When a new servant previously employed by Lady Charnoche arrived at Knole, Frances was terrified that he would ‘in all lyklyhood have some Instructions” to poison or shoot her “upon this surmise.” In return for her husband dismissing this servant, Frances promised that she would never trouble him with such a request in the future. But his conditions went further: she would ‘never molestt disquiet or disturbe him again in this or in any other thing namely in medling with any business of his”; she would not hinder him from going or being where and “in whatt Company he pleases, without my running clamouring or hunting after him”; and she would not stir from Knole without his consent. (74)

Particularly charming are the documents which chronicle the family’s sexual history in surprisingly frank terms. In 1754, for example, Lionel Sackville (1st Lord of Dorset) received a letter from his good friend Robert Cunningham congratulating him on the event of his marriage. “Before you receive this Letter I do suppose your Nuptials are consummated … We [Cunningham and his wife] can both easily imagine how you will be employed next Tuesday night, and shall certainly do what we can to imitate your example. I shall persuade Betty that what you have in size I have in vigour, that our wives, when they meet, may not dispute who are best served” (121).  We can only hope a good time was had by all!

As with Victoria Sackville-West’s diaries, written during her early marriage, in which she provides “a sexual tour of the house, of where and how often the young couple made love” (181). Including, Robert conveys, such sites as the lawn, under a big tree, on a sofa in Victoria’s sitting room, in the library, in bed, in the bath, and so forth — up to four times a day such as on the 18th of September when Victoria notes “Stallion” approvingly.

I don’t really have more to say about this title, although it does provide (reading somewhat between the lines, although Robert does note the inequalities of gender when it comes to inheritance) a peep into a number of unhappy domestic scenes, suggesting far beyond the scope of the book the tensions of social expectations on private lives and sexual inclinations.

$1 reviews: tassajara bread book (in pictures)

04 Tuesday Jan 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in book reviews

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Tags

domesticity, family, fun, photos

Last week, while on our winter vacation, Hanna and I went down to the Brattle and picked up a whole stack of books from the $1 cart. One of them was a much-used paperback copy of the 1970s classic Tassajara Bread Book, published by the San Francisco Zen Center.  This is a cookbook along the lines of the Moosewood cookbooks or Diet for a Small Planet: the hand-drawn illustrations are whimsical and the descriptions all sound vaguely as if they were written while the authors were slightly high. A recipe for alfalfa ice cream: “Take it like you find it, or leave it like it is.” For “Oriental” spice muffins: “Inscrutable.” For unkneaded unyeasted bread: “Never made this, but it must be all right.”

And all of the quantities would feed an army. The recipe we ended up making (bagels) we halved and still ended up with two dozen fist-sized bagels.

None of this detracts from the tastyness of the recipes therein, at least to judge by the two we have made thus far: Egg Bagels (#55) and Cheesecake Bar Cookies (#83).  The bagels don’t have a very springy bagel texture on the inside, but are a lovely bread regardless — and fairly easy to boil and bake. They also taste nice reheated in oven or toaster for breakfast or teatime.

TASSAJARA EGG BAGELS

Halved from original; makes 24 small bagels

Sponge:
1 1/2 cups warm water
1/2 Tbl yeast
1/4 cup sugar or honey
3 whole eggs, well beaten
3 cups flour (I used 1 cup white, 2 cups multigrain)

Stage two ingredients:
2-3 cups flour
1/2 cup oil
1/2 Tbl salt

1. Whisk together warm water, yeast and sugar until dissolved. Add in eggs and flour to make a thick muddy “sponge.”

2. Cover the sponge with another 1-2 cups flour (from “stage two” ingredients) and cover the bowl with a towl. Place in a warm, sheltered location (i.e. inside an unheated oven) for about 50 minutes so yeast can ferment.

3. After rising, fold in oil, salt, and work in remaining flour, kneading well until dough comes together away from the sides of the bowl.

4. Cover and let rise for 50 minutes. Punch down and knead lightly.

5. Let rise 20 minutes.

6. Punch down, knead lightly and cut in half. Set half the dough aside and divide the remaining half into half again, then each half into six equal pieces for a total of twelve lumps of dough. Roll each lump into a worm and then pinch the ends together to form rings. (The wider the rings, the more likely you’ll end up with bagel shapes rather than buns!)

7. Boil the rings of dough in water for 10 seconds each (the bagels will float to the top of the water, making it easier to scoop them out) and place on a pan either greased or dusted with cornmeal to reduce sticking.

8. Rest bagels for 20 minutes under a towl while oven heats to 425 degrees (Fahrenheit).

9. Bake bagels for 20 minutes or until the tops are golden brown.

renovation updates

02 Sunday Jan 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in admin

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blogging

“I guess if you can die without ever understanding how it happened than you can also live
without a complete understanding of how. And in a way that’s kind of relaxing.” 
~ Miriam Toews, A Complicated Kindness

A very happy New Year to you all!

As Hanna pointed out this morning, the content will obviously be changing as I add more and re-arrange stuff … I just meant none of the posts would be lost! 
I’ve updated my blogroll on the sidebar … tried to make it reflect more accurately the sources of the stuff I read most often on Google Reader and share over at tumblr. Obviously check out the tumblr feed if you want actual snippets of content. 
I’m kinda liking this layout and color scheme. Still trying to decide if I’ll stick with the minimalist header or get my amazing brother to re-tool the old one, which featured Minerva, Goddess of the Blog. Feedback on any and all aspects of the re-design are welcome if you feel so moved. 

notice: blog renovations underway

31 Friday Dec 2010

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blogging

For the next few weeks or so I’m going to be fussing around with a blog re-design. So apologies in advance for anything super garish that appears (and then hopefully disappears) in the meantime. I’m testing stuff out, trying to decide what I want the look and feel of the site to be like for the next iteration. Rest assured all the content will remain the same! 

new favorite thing: vegan peanut butter chocolate pillows

30 Thursday Dec 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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domesticity, fun, holidays

Vegan Peanut Butter Chocolate Pillows
image pulled from Diary of a Vegan

About a year ago, Hanna and I bought the amazing Vegan Cookies Invade Your Cookie Jar cookbook by Isa Chandra Moskowitz and Terry Hope Romero. I do not exaggerate when I say we have loved every single cookie recipe we’ve made out of Vegan Cookies. Since neither of us are vegan, we occasionally substitute dairy products (butter, milk) for the nondairy ingredients, but we’ve had equally good luck with nondairy alternatives such as soy milk.

Over the Christmas weekend we made a new recipe from the book, the Peanut Butter Chocolate Pillows. Neither Hanna nor I are big into peanut butter cookies, so we hadn’t tried them before. But for some reason they sounded good on Sunday so I made them.

This quite possibly was a mistake.

Because they were AWESOME.

Here’s the recipe.

VEGAN PEANUT BUTTER CHOCOLATE PILLOWS

Makes 2 dozen (24) cookies

For the Chocolate Dough:

1/2 cup canola oil

1 cup sugar

1/4 cup pure maple syrup

3 tablespoons nondairy milk

1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour

1/3 cup unsweetened cocoa powder

2 tablespoons black unsweetened cocoa powder or more regular unsweetened cocoa powder

1/2 teaspoon baking soda

1/4 teaspoon salt

For the Filling:

3/4 cup natural salted peanut butter, crunchy or creamy style [or any other nut butter that strikes your fancy]

2/3 cup powdered sugar

2 to 3 tablespoons soy creamer or nondairy milk

1/4 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

1. In a large mixing bowl, combine oil, sugar, maple syrup, nondairy milk, and vanilla and mix until smooth. Sift in flour, cocoa powder, black cocoa powder if using, baking soda, and salt. Mix to form a moist dough.

2. Make the peanut butter filling: In another mixing bowl, use a hand mixer to beat together peanut butter, powdered sugar, 2 tablespoons of the soy creamer, and vanilla to form a moist but firm dough. If peanut butter dough is dry and crumbly (natural peanut butters have varying moisture contents), stir in the remaining tablespoon of nondairy milk. If dough is too wet knead in a little extra powdered sugar.

3. Preheat oven to 350°F. Line two baking sheets with parchment paper [or tinfoil].

Shape the Cookies:

1. Create the centers of the cookies by rolling the peanut butter dough into twenty-four balls (try dividing dough in half, then each part in half again and roll each portion into six balls). Scoop a generous tablespoon of chocolate dough, flat¬ten into a thin disc, and place a peanut butter ball in the center. Fold the sides of the chocolate dough up and around the peanut butter center and roll into a smooth ball between your palms. Place on a sheet of waxed paper and repeat with remaining dough. If desired, gently flatten cookies slightly, but this is not necessary.

2. Place the dough balls on lined baking sheets about 2 inches apart and bake for 10 minutes. Remove the sheet from the oven and let the cookies stand for 5 minutes before moving them to wire racks to complete cooling. Store cookies in tightly covered container.

call to participate: a year of feminist classics

28 Tuesday Dec 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in book reviews

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call to participate, feminism, history

two young women (unfinished)
by kobanashikaoru @ Flickr.com

As I posted earlier in December on tumblr, a group of women have established a blog / reading group called A Year of Feminist Classics, where they plan to read and blog for twelve months (beginning January 2011) about a series of feminist texts.

You can sign up as part of the reading group here, but drop-ins are welcome. Check out their final reading list here if you think you might be interested in dropping by for one or two specific months out of the twelve.

They’ll be kicking things off in January with Mary Wollstonecraft’s Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792).  If you’re like me, you may well want an actual physical copy of the text in which to take notes in the margins and dog-ear (much to my girlfriend’s horror).  But for any of you who don’t have the money to purchase a copy, who can’t locate one through your local library, etc., here are a few places you can access the full text online:

Internet Archive (various formats to read online and download)

LibraVox (MP3 audio download)

Project Gutenberg (various formats to read online and download)

I’ve signed up and plan to participate in at least a handful of months — depending on my other obligations and the book scheduled. I look forward to chatting with at least some of you there!

movienotes: holiday inn

27 Monday Dec 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

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bigotry, holidays, movies, web video

On Christmas Eve, Hanna and I watched Holiday Inn, a 1942 Bing Crosby/Fred Astair/Irving Berlin vehicle that I’ve heard was a precursor to the enduring classic White Christmas (also starring Crosby, though the 1954 film replaced Astair with Danny Kaye). I thought, vaguely, that I had seen Holiday Inn before.

I was wrong. So wrong.

To give you a taste, here’s the original trailer.

For those of you familiar with White Christmas, this earlier film shares relatively little with its “remake” aside from Bing Crosby, the song “White Christmas,” and the concept of rescuing a failing tourist hotel through the musical revue. There is much to cirtique in White Christmas if you’re in the mood — from the postwar nostalgia for the heroism of the war to the portrayal of gender dynamics and relationship expectations. I went into Holiday Inn expecting more or less the same, perhaps even a bit less based on my previous experience of late 1930s/early 1940s films — often, they are slightly less gender essentialist than after the end of the war.

In this case … not so much.  And in addition, Holiday Inn suffers from the additional problem of having been visited by the racist fairy and the weak plot fairy (yes, you really can have a film with less of a plot than White Christmas).

First, the gender issues. As in White Christmas, there are two women and two men. But instead of sisters, are introduced sequentially to two female entertainers, both of whom are expected to decide which of the two male leads (Crosby or Astair, the crooner or the dance man) she wishes to marry. The first woman, Lila (Virginia Dale) is the third member of Crosby and Astair’s act when the show opens, performing on stage the role she has clearly slid into in real life as well: a “who will she pick?” flirt. She is engaged to Crosby, who has plans to marry her and retire to the countryside and run a farm; on the side, she and Astair have made plans to marry instead — eloping at the last minute and heading off to a life of penthouses and entertainment glory.  The second woman, Linda (Marjorie Reynolds) is the ingénue who, in effect, takes Lila’s place when Lila runs off to marry a Texas tycoon … though Lila returns at the end so that both men have someone to marry and make the story a “happily ever after” tale.

There are some brief proto-feminist moments, such as when Linda tells Crosby off for trying to manipulate her into marrying him instead of just asking for gods’ sake.  But on the whole, the women come across as accessories to the friendship of Crosby/Astair, rather than individuals in their own right — something Rosemary Clooney and Vera Ellen are able to combat much more successfully in the later film, despite a similar trajectory of plot (i.e. that all healthy men of a certain age must be in want of a wife and that all “good” women are desperate to marry well).

After Crosby’s venture at the simple life fails, he decides to turn his faltering farm into an inn … an inn only open on holidays (thus giving him over three hundred days per year to rest and relax).  The two extremely unfortunate bits of the film are located at the Holiday Inn.

One is the 4th of July musical number, which devolves into mainlining propaganda for the war effort. We’re talking documentary footage of air raids and everything. Ouch.

The second, much more winceingly present problem is the racism.  First noticeable in the fact that the only black people in the cast is Crosby’s cook, Mamie, and her two unnamed children whom she continually orders to stay in the kitchen.

Louise Beavers as Mamie in Holiday Inn

Since watching Holiday Inn, Hanna and I re-watched White Christmas and realized anew how entirely white the cast is. And I mean no one with even a deep suntan. So on the one hand, I suppose you could argue that having an African-American woman in the cast — even as the housekeeper (a role played by a white woman in White Christmas) — is better than nothing?

But then there’s the blackface. Which was the bit where we just kinda lost it. Why blackface, you say? Well, mostly because they needed a plot device to keep Astair from finding Marjorie Reynolds too early in the film (’cause then the plot would be totally shot) so Crosby puts her in blackface as a disguise.  And then dresses himself up in blackface too, just for good measure.

To sing about Abraham Lincoln’s birthday.

*headdesk*

It’s just … not. okay. Not even a little bit okay. And after that, the whole film starts to take on this patina of wrong that it just cannot shake. ‘Cause everything trails around it this after-image of Crosby and Reynolds in blackface. And how wrong it all was.

So that’s kinda the upshot of my review folks: looking for a Christmas movie? Avoid Holiday Inn. And if you really want to hear White Christmas as sung by Crosby, rent the redux version. Really. You’ll thank me.

joyeux noel

25 Saturday Dec 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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cat blogging, holidays, photos

Virtual Christmas 2010: Opening presents with extended family in Michigan via Skype
2010-12-25 Photograph by Hanna

Geraldine is unimpressed by the presents, except those that were mailed in the same package as her catnip!
2010-12-25 Photograph by Hanna

’twas the night before the night before Christmas

24 Friday Dec 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in admin

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blogging, domesticity, holidays

Fenway Victory Gardens (Boston, Mass.)
December 2007

It’s the eve before Christmas Eve as I write this and Hanna and I are hunkered down with Geraldine for the Christmas holidays. I’m breaking my self-imposed blogging hiatus to wish you all a happy holiday season and to share with you the gracious welcome post the gals over at The Pursuit of Harpyness put up today, announcing the new members of the blogging team. In addition to the founding members Miss BeckySharper, Michelle Dean, PhDork, PIlgrimSoul, SarahMC and sarah.of.a.lesser.god, I will also be in the company of Marie Anelle and foureleven. Hooray for more bloggers to get to know and learn from in the new year!

We’re looking forward to a quiet day tomorrow listening to the carols from Kings’ and eating Joy the Baker’s incredible sugar and spice cinnamon buns. And I’m going to head back off the internets now to read more of Jill Lepore’s The Whites of Their Eyes: The Tea Party’s Revolution and the Battle over American Memory (2010) which Hanna bought for me today as a pre-Christmas present.

A warm and restful weekend for you all.

changes afoot in blogland: adventures in group blogging

20 Monday Dec 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in admin

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

blogging, domesticity, feminism

Geraldine assists with wrapping gifts
photo by Hanna (2010-12-14). See …fly over me, evil angel… for more!

As we head into the Christmas break I plan to take a couple of weeks away from blogging so that Hanna and I can have some time together sans internets. We need to focus on enjoying the vacation time we both get (many thanks for libraries that are closed between Christmas and New Years!). It’s been an unexpectedly exhausting autumn for our household, due to some personal health and work/life balance issues — issues we’re working hard to address moving forward! — and we just need some time to recoup and reconnect. Without outside distractions.

When I come back in the new year, there will be some changes here at the Future Feminist Librarian-Activist, although I’m not yet entirely sure what those changes will look like.

This is my 679th post on the Future Feminist Librarian-Activist. I’ve been blogging here, more or less steadily, for about three and a half years: roughly the time I’ve been preparing for and actually attending graduate school (my very first post, back in March of 2007, talked about my financial aid and housing decisions).  It seems somewhat appropriate, therefore, that as I transition out of being in graduate school and into professional librarianship, I pause to consider what sort of webspace I want this blog to be, and become.

 In addition, I’ve been offered the chance to join the team of bloggers who write over at The Pursuit of Harpyness, a feminist-oriented group blog I’ve been enjoying since they first started publishing back in January 2009. You’ll be able to find me (and all the other marvelous bloggers!) there roughly three times a week starting after the New Year. If you don’t already follow them (er … us), I highly recommend stopping by and adding Harpyness to your blog reader of choice.



I’d like to take this opportunity to ask you, dear readers, what you’d like to see more of / less of / something entirely new in both this space and over at the group blog.  I’ll be blogging at Harpyness on issues of human sexuality, sexual identities, gender identities, education, politics, economics, and life on the cultural margins. More or less the stuff I do here. But if you have any specific requests, do feel free to drop me a line at feministlibrarian [at] gmail [dot] com or leave your thoughts in comments. As they say over at tumblr, “the Ask box is open and taking questions!”

In addition to group blogging of the feminist persuasion, I may also be more actively involved in the Massachusetts Historical Society’s blog, The Beehive, moving forward, as I take some of the reigns from Jeremy when leaves to begin his position at LibraryThing. We’re still hammering out the details.

In other words, I’ll have my cyber-hands full in the new year when it comes to creating online content. Hopefully, it’ll help me curb my knack for writing impossibly long sentences!

I plan to keep you all updated, here at the FFLA, about my plans for this blog, the feminist librarian reads, and other web-based media as time goes on and life becomes a bit less (fingers crossed!) in-transition.  In the meantime, I have a personal goal of writing 1-2 original-content posts per week for the FFLA (as opposed to cross-posting from Harpyness).  And I do plan to keep up with tumblr since it’s how I share those short-and-sweet internet links that are organic matter that eventually become — or support — all those blogs posts. Or just exist to make us smile (everyone knows, afterall, the internet is made of cats).


A very, very joyous and restful holiday season to you and yours. I won’t promise them, but it’s entirely possible more Christmas-themed cat pictures will make their way to this blog before the New Year.
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