Yesterday morning on the way to work, NPR was broadcasting an interview with Sheryl Sandberg and her new book Lean In was mentioned and discussed. Then, when I arrived home, she was on the cover page of the weekly Time magazine that I receive in mail. At night, I saw Piers Morgan had a piece on her and 60 Minutes a program on her. How is it that everyone has a program or release about her on the same exact date? Did they all want to be the first and that was the only way to avoid their content being out dated? But how do they learn about the timeline and schedule of other competitive media. Today, TED reshared an old video of her famous talk, "Why we have too few women leaders", on facebook too. It is as if over night, the world decided to concentrate on her. What happened? How does it work?
Was her book released yesterday?
Showing posts with label women. Show all posts
Showing posts with label women. Show all posts
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Saturday, May 12, 2012
Manto y saya
I went to a Peruvian restaurant with some friends on Saturday. Among us was a lady from Peru who was helping us with the dishes. I enjoyed a sweet juice of red corn, and saw how Peruvian corns are bigger than those in the U.S. and taste like lima beans. But more importantly I learned about part of the history of Peruvian women, that I had no idea about; that was surprising; and I did not expect it there from all places in the world.
I learned that Peruvian women used to cover themselves, from head to toe, with something called "manto y saya". It was black, and they would hold it with their hands and only reveal one of their eyes! Sound familiar? Is that where/how Iranians got the idea for black chadors/veils? Is there any relationship between the name of their attire and what Iranians refer to as Manto (long over coats women wear)?
For more information read the views of Flora, Tristan, in Lima, Peru in 1838:
http://www.womeninworldhistory.com/lesson19.html
More here (apparently my guess about the origins of chador is valid):
http://inmemoryoflatapada.blogspot.com/2010/08/theories-of-origin-of-la-saya-y-el.html
I learned that Peruvian women used to cover themselves, from head to toe, with something called "manto y saya". It was black, and they would hold it with their hands and only reveal one of their eyes! Sound familiar? Is that where/how Iranians got the idea for black chadors/veils? Is there any relationship between the name of their attire and what Iranians refer to as Manto (long over coats women wear)?
For more information read the views of Flora, Tristan, in Lima, Peru in 1838:
http://www.womeninworldhistory.com/lesson19.html
More here (apparently my guess about the origins of chador is valid):
http://inmemoryoflatapada.blogspot.com/2010/08/theories-of-origin-of-la-saya-y-el.html
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