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the feminist librarian

the feminist librarian

Tag Archives: holidays

a "fear not!" angel

14 Thursday Jan 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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holidays, photos


According to my mother, when I was a youngling my favorite character in the nativity play was the “fear not!” angel who comes to the shepherds in the field, in all his or her terrifying glory, to bring them “glad tidings of great joy” and generally scare their socks off. That’s the sort of wonderful-terrible feeling this photograph, via the Londonist blog, inspired in me when it came across my RSS feeds a few days. Ago.

That and it reminded me of Blink.

and so the new year dawns

01 Friday Jan 2010

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in Uncategorized

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boston, holidays, photos


The Charles River frozen over earlier this week. via Twitpic by @BostonTweet.

Nadolig Llawen*

25 Friday Dec 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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domesticity, holidays

As this blog post goes live, Hanna and I are hopefully enjoying a quiet Christmas morning sans internet obsessiveness. We have plans for homemade eggnog lattes, present-opening before our miniscule tree, and possibly a double-screening of Die Hard and Love Actually later in the day.

A very Merry Christmas to you all, wherever you may be.

*”Merry Christmas” in Welsh via Google Translate.

happy first day of winter!

21 Monday Dec 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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blogging, domesticity, holidays

Santas on the London underground.

I’m planning on posting with a light touch over the next few weeks, during Christmas break. Hanna and I are celebrating Christmas here in Boston and I have the work for my Wintersession class, which I’m hoping will impede as little as possible on the break-ness of the break. Hope you all have a wonderful holiday season (whatever holidays you and yours celebrate) and see you back with the “sunday smut” list and all the rest in the early days of 2010.

*image credit: Photo of the Day #31 credited to deepstoat @ Londonist.

pre-christmas cheer

19 Saturday Dec 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, domesticity, holidays

Tonight, we’re off to the Blue Heron Renaissance Choir’s “Christmas in Medieval England” concert at First Church in Cambridge.


Also in the Christmas spirit, I bring you this photograph of gingerbread daleks, courtesy of Jason Henninger @ Tor.com. Hanna and I have plans to try making them on Christmas Eve. If they turn out at all recognizable I’ll provide photographs!

gelukkig sinterklaas nacht*

05 Saturday Dec 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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domesticity, holidays, michigan

Tomorrow is St. Nicholas Day, what in my family growing up was the true beginning of the Christmas season. Every year on the night of December 5th we’d put out our shoes for St. Nicholas, and on the morning of December 6th we’d wake up to shoes full of chocolates, marzipan, and and other small holiday treats.

In fond remembrance of the holiday, I bring you Six to Eight Black Men, by David Sedaris, is perhaps my all-time-favorite commentary on the holiday; you can also listen to Sedaris read this piece in an episode of This American Life as part of one of my all-time favorite episodes, “Them.” (Bonus: “Them” also features Jon Ronson of men-who-stare-at-goats fame reading an excerpt from his book Them: Adventures With Extremists). For anyone who has tried to fathom the holiday celebrations of an unfamiliar culture: this essay is for you.

*dutch for “happy st. nicholas eve”
**Image credit: Susan Seals @ The St. Nicholas Center.

have a restful thanksgiving

26 Thursday Nov 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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addie, family, holidays, michigan, photos


Hanna and I are planning to enjoy the day sans things academical and plus Charles Shaw merlot and a Tofurky roast from our local Trader Joe’s.

Bonus Radical Feminist Link: Women Postpone Thanksgiving Dinner to Meet Militant Feminist! a 1909 news story via Sociological Images.

And a Happy (belated) Birthday to Dad!

18 Saturday Jul 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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fun, holidays, photos, travel


I totally spaced this week and forgot my dad celebrated his 58th on Friday. He’s home alone right now while Mom is traveling and us youngsters are scattered to the four winds — hope he found some time to celebrate doing one or another of his favorite outdoor activities such as bicycling or taking the new puppy out hiking at the late. Not forgetting, of course, the importance of German chocolate cake!

Many happy returns of the day.

*the photo is from a very rainy bike ride around Loch Katrine in Scotland — an outing I got cajoled into during Dad’s visit in May/June 2004.

Happy Birthday Rachel!

14 Tuesday Jul 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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domesticity, fun, holidays

I am always amused, Rachel, that your birthday happens to fall on Bastille Day. Hope you get that nap you were looking forward to and have fun playing with your new Kindle (despite the fact I am professionally obligated to be suspicious).

Thanks for all the years of friendship, good cooking, and a healthy dose of feminist outrage!

Mother’s Day (Un)observed

11 Monday May 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in think pieces

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

domesticity, family, holidays, michigan

My mother, from whom I seem to have inherited an allergic reaction to formal, mainstream holidays/occasions of any sort, has never been very interested in celebrating Mother’s Day. It was such a non-event in my childhood that I suggested a few days ago we take Hanna’s parents out to lunch on Sunday and couldn’t understand why she nearly had a heart attack: I had forgotten that everyone and their mother (not to mention their third cousin twice removed) would probably have the same idea, on account of the holiday.

But of course, the fact that the holiday itself hasn’t meant a lot to me, or my parents, doesn’t mean that we don’t mean a lot to each other. So in a celebratory spirit (hey! it’s the end of the semester!), I thought I’d give my mom a shout out for a few of the things that (in my opinion) make her a great parent.

5. Good art supplies. My mother, who got her start in education working with preschoolers in the Greenville, Michigan, Headstart program during the 1960s, has always appreciated the importance of decent materials for creative endeavors. One of my memories from early childhood is the regular trip to the art store to replace the heavily-used colors in our Prismicolor pencil set. We always had scissors that cut, glue that stuck, pens that weren’t dried out, and enough paper for whatever projects we had a mind to pursue.

4. Sharp knives. In some ways the same principle as above: my mother’s argument was always that rather than remove sharp objects from the reach of children, you helped them learn how to use them safely. Hence the swiss army knives we all got the Christmas we were six years old. And the lessons in using the microwave, stove, kitchen knives, washer and dryer, and the power tools. More broadly, I appreciate that Mom and Dad were focused on helping us acquire the skills we wanted or needed to be independent actors in the world, from the days when we were very, very small.

3. Books. There’s a reason that the sound of someone reading aloud, whether in person, on the radio, or a book on tape, has an instantaneously soothing effect almost regardless of what it is they are reading — as Hanna says, “they could be reading the phone book and I’d still be happy to listen to them.” Thanks, Mom, for reading, reading, reading, and surrounding us with books. My life is so much the richer for it.

2. Never asking what I planned to do with a Women’s Studies or Library Science degree. Majoring in Women’s Studies as an undergrad, I got to hear lots of colleagues tell stories about parents who didn’t understand what possible use the degree would be in the “real world.” I have always been grateful that I never had stories of my own to swap in this regard. Likewise, it’s amazing to me how many folks I’ve met since moving to Boston whose parents were skeptical about the utility of a library science degree — or even more simply, of their child’s desire to go into the field and spend their life with books, manuscripts, etc. My parents (closet librarians at heart, I feel) never blinked at the decision, and at times express more enthusiasm than I can muster at the possibilities for my future career!

1. Trust. Above all, I’m incredibly grateful for the way in which my parents have trusted all of us kids to find our way in the world, and to find (and create) living spaces, new relationships, and learning and work environments in which we will, ultimately, thrive. That confidence is humbling and the older I am, the more I appreciate how rare a gift it has been.

(Apologies to Mom and sister Maggie for re-using this tongue-in-cheek photograph; it was taken on Mother’s Day, 2005, incidentally the same day I graduated from Hope College.  The card was a joke from Maggie to Mom. The scarf my mother is wearing is, in my opinion, one of her more lovely fashion accessories).

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