2fast2furiosa:

That reminds me.

Objectification in feminist discourse has become synonymous with sexual objectification.

Yet, there are plenty of ways to objectify a woman non-sexually.
As a fat woman, I’ve often been objectified as an object of comfort. A soft bosom for my skinny friends to cry on. A blankie, more or less.

Women are often objectified as barometers of sexual attractiveness rather than objects of it. There are women who hang out with “less attractive” women to make themselves look better by comparison.

Any time someone ignores a woman’s personhood just to use her for a utilitarian purpose, they are treating her like an object. They are objectifying her. It happens to all of us, not just those deemed fuckable.

Slugs, snails and etymology (no puppydog tails, honest)

dduane:

audible-smiles:

queenshulamit:

renpai:

my gf is german and she just forgot the word for slug so she asked me “how do you call snails without homes” 

The German word for slug is Nacktschnecke, which means naked snail.

NOW ITS EVEN BETTER

And better still when you look at Nacktschnecke and realize that it preserves an old English usage that has been pretty much completely forgotten in our language over the last few centuries.

Once upon a time, more or less between the 1300s and the 1600s, the word “naked” was only very rarely an adjective (and essentially passive in nature). It was the past tense form of the active verb “nake”. To nake something was to strip it bare, divest it of some covering, reveal it, unsheathe it. “Naked” would have been pronounced as a single-syllable word, not always two syllables as we pronounce it now in English.

“Nake” turns up first in Old English / Anglo-Saxon (benacian) in the 1100s or thereabouts and becomes popular in the three or four centuries that follow. Then slowly the past-tense-adjectival form “naked” becomes more frequent and the verb form starts falling out of use, until the last we hear of it in active usage is around the 1600s. Nake’s last OED citation, in 1888, in a poetic work, is plainly meant as an archaic / obsolete usage: “He naked his sword, and swure he’d thole’t nae longer.”

So anyway. The German word for slug preserves the “nackt-” root, and tells us obliquely that not only is the poor slug shell-less, but that somebody came along and stripped that shell off and left the beastie unclothed and houseless against the cold harsh world.

A whole sad little story in one word. Poor wee sluggie.