Washerwoman

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Bronze sculpture by Renoir, 1916

A washerwoman or laundress is a woman who takes in laundry. Both terms are now old-fashioned; equivalent work nowadays is done by a laundry worker in large commercial premises, or a laundrette (laundromat) attendant.

Description

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The annual dance of the washerwomen in one district of Paris, 1872

As evidenced by the character of Nausicaa in the Odyssey, in the social conventions depicted by Homer and evidently taken for granted in Greek society of the time, there was nothing unusual or demeaning in a princess and her handmaidens personally washing laundry. However, in later times this was mostly considered as the work of women of low social status. The Magdalene asylums chose laundering as a suitable occupation for the "fallen women" they accommodated.

In between these two extremes, the various sub-divisions of laundry workers in 19th-century France (blanchisseuse, lavandière, laveuse, buandière, repasseuse, etc.) were respected for their trade. A festival in their honour was held at the end of winter (Mi-Careme, halfway through Lent, i.e. three weeks after Mardi Gras or Shrove Tuesday).[1] This festival has now been revived as Mi-Carême au Carnaval de Paris.

The wet nurse to George III of the United Kingdom, who was born two months prematurely, was so valued by the king when he grew up that her daughter was appointed laundress to the Royal Household, "a sinecure place of great emolument".[2]

In many cultures, laundry was seen as "women's work", so the village wash-house (lavoir) acted as a space for women to gather and talk together as they washed clothes. While having a significant social function in various human cultures over thousands of years, the spread of washing machines and self-service laundries has rendered washerwomen unnecessary in much of the contemporary world.

In culture

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The Huaso and the Washerwoman by Mauricio Rugendas (1835)

The subject of laundresses or washerwomen was a popular one in art, especially in France,[3] see WikiCommons.

In literature, the washerwoman may be a convenient disguise, as with Toad, one of the protagonists of The Wind in the Willows (1908), in order to escape from prison; and in The Penultimate Peril story of the Lemony Snicket book series A Series of Unfortunate Events, Kevin the Ambidextrous Man poses as a washerwoman who works in the laundry room at the Hotel Denouement.

Also, washerwomen serve as characters depicting the working poor, as for example in A Christmas Carol: when the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come showed Ebenezer Scrooge his future where he is dead, the laundress assists the charwoman Mrs. Dilber and the unnamed undertaker into stealing some of Scrooge's belongings and selling them to a fence named Old Joe.

One of the most famous Irish jigs is known as The Irish Washerwoman, although due to its age the origin of this title is not well known.[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Monjaret, Anne (1995). "La Fete de la Sainte-Catherine a Paris dans les Annees Folles". Ethnologia Europaea: Journal of European Ethnology. 25 (1): 150.
  2. ^ George the Third, his Court, and family, Volume 1. 1820. p. 73. Retrieved 17 January 2019.
  3. ^ Malcolmson, Patricia (1986). English laundresses : a social history, 1850-1930. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. p. 6. ISBN 0-252-01293-3. OCLC 12808522.
  4. ^ "Annotation:Irish Washerwoman (1)". The Traditional Tune Archive. 2023-10-28. Retrieved 2024-04-30.