To mark Anna Dobrowolska’s visit to Lisbon, we are hosting a discussion on her book "Polish Sexual Revolutions: Negotiating Sexuality and Modernity behind the Iron Curtain" at Tigre de Papel. Anita Buhin and Giulia Strippoli will be debating the book with Anna.

ℹ️ https://ihc.fcsh.unl.pt/en/events/polish-sexual-revolutions/

#Histodons #Poland #GenderStudies #Communism #Sexuality #SocialHistory

📙 Assinalando o lançamento da edição impressa de "Escrever vinculações", fruto da investigação do #VINCULUM, Maria de Lurdes Rosa vai apresentar a conferência "Garcia Velez de Castelo Branco: a toga, a pluma e a espada. Um grande autor arronchense do século XVI e a sociedade do seu tempo" em Arronches, no próximo Domingo, 26 de Abril.

ℹ️ https://ihc.fcsh.unl.pt/events/garcia-velez-arronches/

#Histodons #SocialHistory #Entails #HistóriaSocial #HistóriadePortugal #MastoLivros #FediBooks #Arronches

WALES RISING! Up in the hills of Yorkshire and Wales, rebellion stirs. The desperation that led to the Luddite rebellion mybook.to/BreakItDown the Merthyr rising mybook.to/GiveUsThisDay and mybook.to/LetUsPass the Rebecca Riots #protest #socialhistory #Welshhistory

Running the Farm, the Shop, and the Family Alone

The American Civil War: Civic Life Series (Part 4 of 18)

By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News
Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines
April 21, 2026

When the men left, absence was immediate. What followed was endurance.

Across the North and South, households discovered that the work did not divide itself neatly along gendered lines once war removed half the labor force. Farms still needed planting and harvest. Shops still had to open. Accounts still had to balance. Children still needed feeding, clothing, and discipline. There was no single role to assume—only many to juggle at once.

For women left behind, the war did not arrive as ideology. It arrived as logistics.

The Triple Burden

Running a household during the Civil War meant carrying three overlapping responsibilities: economic production, domestic care, and emotional management. A woman might spend the morning overseeing field labor, the afternoon bargaining with suppliers or customers, and the evening tending to children while managing correspondence from the front.

These roles were not sequential; they collided. A sick child could derail a day’s work. A late shipment could mean hunger. A missed payment could threaten foreclosure. The margin for error narrowed sharply.

What had once been shared labor became solitary decision-making.

Learning Without Instruction

Few women were formally trained to manage businesses or farms at scale. Skills were acquired through necessity and observation. Ledgers were deciphered. Contracts were negotiated. Tools were repaired or repurposed. Decisions that had once been deferred now had to be made—and lived with.

Letters and diaries from the period show a recurring pattern: early uncertainty followed by grim competence. Pride is rare in these accounts. Fatigue is common. So is the quiet recognition that there was no alternative.

Mistakes carried consequences, but paralysis carried worse ones.

Markets That No Longer Made Sense

Economic conditions shifted unpredictably. Inflation eroded savings. Credit tightened. Prices fluctuated based on rumor as much as supply. In the Confederacy, currency devaluation compounded scarcity; in the North, industrial demand distorted local markets.

Women running shops and farms navigated these changes with limited information. News traveled slowly. Official assurances meant little when goods failed to arrive. Many adapted by bartering, downsizing operations, or prioritizing subsistence over profit.

Commerce became improvisation.

Children as Co-Workers

Family labor expanded downward. Children assumed tasks earlier and more fully than before the war. Older daughters learned to manage households. Sons took on physical labor. Education, where it continued, became secondary to survival.

This shift altered family dynamics. Authority became practical rather than traditional. Respect followed competence. Childhood shortened, not by decree, but by necessity.

The war reshaped not only who worked, but when life stages began.

Emotional Labor Without Relief

Beyond physical and economic demands lay the work of holding families together emotionally. Letters from the front brought reassurance one week and dread the next. Silence stretched into months. Each day required steadiness in the face of uncertainty.

Women were expected to remain strong—not as a slogan, but as a function. Panic would ripple outward. Grief had to be managed privately. Children needed calm explanations for dangers adults barely understood themselves.

This emotional containment was exhausting, and largely invisible.

Community Support, Limited and Conditional

Neighbors helped where they could. Informal networks formed to share labor, tools, and information. But these networks were fragile. Everyone was strained. Aid was uneven. Old resentments surfaced. Political divisions complicated cooperation.

Community resilience existed, but it was thin—stretched across too many needs with too few resources.

The Cost of Holding Everything Together

By war’s midpoint, many households were operating beyond sustainable limits. Exhaustion accumulated. Illness went untreated. Deferred maintenance became permanent damage. The ability to “make do” masked a slow erosion of health and stability.

The war demanded competence without rest and responsibility without recognition.

Looking Back

The Civil War is often framed as a test of armies and governments. It was also a test of households—of how much strain ordinary people could absorb before something gave way.

Women who ran farms, shops, and families alone did not do so to prove a point. They did it because the alternative was collapse. Their labor sustained communities long enough for the war to continue, even as it consumed the foundations of everyday life.

This is the fourth truth of civic breakdown: when institutions remove support, survival shifts inward. Families become systems. Homes become economies. And endurance becomes the quiet currency of war.

McPherson, J. M. (1988). Battle cry of freedom: The Civil War era. Oxford University Press.

Faust, D. G. (1996). Mothers of invention: Women of the slaveholding South in the American Civil War. University of North Carolina Press.

McCurry, S. (2010). Confederate reckoning: Power and politics in the Civil War South. Harvard University Press.

Mitchell, R. B. (2007). The vacated chair: The northern soldier leaves home. Oxford University Press.

Library of Congress. (n.d.). Civil War diaries and letters. Manuscript Division. https://www.loc.gov/collections/civil-war

Library of Congress. (n.d.). Chronicling America: Historic American newspapers. https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov

#AmericanCivilWar #civicLife #civilianEndurance #familySurvival #homeFront #householdEconomy #socialHistory #wartimeScarcity #womenSLabor

The domestic production of confectionery remains a significant cultural touchstone for communal celebrations and intergenerational bonding. 🏛️📜

"Homemade Candy for Birthdays That Kids and Adults Will Love." For those interested in culinary history and the preservation of domestic arts, this is an excellent resource.

Full article here:
🔗 https://www.onecaregiversjourney.com/homemade-candy-for-birthdays/

#CulinaryArts #EleanorGaccetta #SocialHistory #HomeCooking #PublicInterest #Tradition

Homemade Candy for Birthdays That Kids and Adults Will Love - Eleanor Gaccetta

Create homemade candy for birthdays that everyone loves. Easy ideas, fun flavors, and simple steps for sweet party treats. Read more!

Eleanor Gaccetta

Sumptuary laws in medieval Europe aimed to enforce social hierarchy through clothing restrictions. 👗👑

In practice, they often produced imitation, resistance, and creative circumvention—revealing the limits of regulating status through law.

#Brewminate #MedievalHistory #FashionHistory #SocialHistory

https://brewminate.com/medieval-sumptuary-laws-unintended-consequences/

Medieval Sumptuary Laws and Their Unintended Consequences

Explore how medieval sumptuary laws failed, fueling desire, social mobility, and economic disruption instead of enforcing class boundaries.

Brewminate: A Bold Blend of News and Ideas

📕 O livro "Memórias Dissidentes. Repressão e resistências quotidianas de homossexuais e lésbicas nas ditaduras ibéricas" é o resultado da investigação de doutoramento de Raquel Afonso, cuja investigação foi desenvolvida no IHC.

👉 https://tigrepapel.pt/loja/historia/memorias-dissidentes-repressao-e-resistencias-quotidianas-de-homossexuais-e-lesbicas-nas-ditaduras-ibericas/

#Histodons #Anthropodons #SocialHistory #QueerHistory #LGBTQIA #Dictatorships #IberianPeninsula #Portugal #Spain #España #HistóriaSocial #Ditaduras #Antropologia #MastoLivros

Thought I'd share some of the vintage/antique book finds from the last ~6 months. ​

Left to right, top to bottom:

In a glass darkly by Sheridan Le Fanu from 1948 — I had been looking for a vintage copy of Carmilla with no luck until I realised it had originally been published in a short stories collection. It's a blue clothbound under the paper slipcover.

Consult Me — undated but from at least 1904 going by the inscription inside. The entry on how to ride a bicycle is hilariously unhelpful.

Modern Cookery by Eliza Acton from 1851 — the spine is missing so will need to do a repair job, otherwise in really good condition for its age.

The Best Way Book 3 — undated but this was originally published sometime around WWI possibly 1915. I now have all three Edwardian volumes in my collection!

Dracula by Bram Stoker — undated but most probably from 40s or 50s as per some research. I had been looking for a 'pocket sized hardback' clothbound edition for a long while now. And this one was also within my budget (most antique/vintage editions of the book go for at least a couple hundred quids at the cheapest).

Now, the only book I am actively looking for is a 'pocket sized hardback' clothbound edition of
Frankenstein. It has the same issue as Dracula. It's gonna be a luck thing to find one. ​

#LowSpoonsHistorian #History #AntiqueBooks #VintageBooks #BookLover #BooksOfTheFediverse #Dracula #ModernCookery #BestWayBook #ConsultMe #InAGlassDarkly #SheridanLeFanu #ElizaActon #BramStoker #SocialHistory #HistoryFromBelow
'D'Absinthe' by Kees van Dongen, 1902. A cruel but no doubt accurate depiction of the effect the narcotic wormwood-derived liquor had on the working population of continental Europe. I suppose the London equivalent would have been gin. #artsky #findesiecle #socialhistory #Edwardian #skull

🆕 Yvette Santos has begun a stint as a Visiting Researcher at the Laboratoire des Études Romanes at Paris 8 University. Until August, the IHC researcher will be moving her research on Portuguese emigration to France.

👉 Find out more at https://ihc.fcsh.unl.pt/en/yvette-santos-paris/

#Histodons #Migrations #PortugueseMigrants #France #SocialHistory #EmigraçãoPortuguesa #HistóriaSocial #França