Trailblazing Women You May Not Know (But Should): Mourning Dove
Each week, the Lean In tumblr will spotlight women who made a lasting mark on the world — yet didn’t always end up in the history books. This week we celebrate Mourning Dove, the...

Trailblazing Women You May Not Know (But Should): Mourning Dove

Each week, the Lean In tumblr will spotlight women who made a lasting mark on the world — yet didn’t always end up in the history books. This week we celebrate Mourning Dove, the Founding Mother of Native American literature and one of the first Native women to publish a novel.

According to her own retelling, Christal Quintasket was born in a canoe crossing the Koontenai River in Idaho. It was a fitting start for a woman who would travel the country throughout her life to collect Native stories.

Quintasket grew up on the Kettle Falls reservation in the 1890s, learning her tribe’s history from her maternal grandmother. When she grew older she worked as a housekeeper and fruit picker to support herself and eventually, to save up for a typewriter. In 1927 she released her first book, Cogewea, The Half-Blood, about ahalf-blood girl caught between the worlds of Anglo ranchers and full-blood reservation Indians, under the name Mourning Dove. It was one of the first known novels ever published by a Native American woman. 

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Trailblazers Mourning Dove Native American Indian Writer Author Novel History Art Literature Books Culture

For the cost of a ticket, children in Beijing can test out dozens of possible careers at the I Have a Dream theme park. 

But even in this imaginary world, they don’t break the rigid gender stereotypes: the most popular attraction for girls is dressing up as a flight attendant while the boys choose work as customs agents or security guards. 

“Some jobs are really inappropriate for women. If they force their way into these jobs, they will waste energy that can be better used elsewhere,” says Professor Shu, who teaches at a mining and technological school that’s only open to men. 

The jobs Chinese girls can’t do (BBC)

china girls education Gender Roles gender stereotypes career education chinese culture Chinese Women culture bbc 100 women theme park

“There’s something about jumping for a bouquet that reflects the era, not so long ago, when getting married was seen as the pinnacle of a woman’s existence. Despite what rom-coms might have us believe, most women who are old enough to have C-suite...

“There’s something about jumping for a bouquet that reflects the era, not so long ago, when getting married was seen as the pinnacle of a woman’s existence. Despite what rom-coms might have us believe, most women who are old enough to have C-suite jobs and mortgages don’t relish the opportunity to catch airborne hydrangeas.”

A Game of Bouquet Catch, or Hot Potato? (NY Times)

(Source: jessbennett)

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