Women’s History Blog | „Clio Talks Back“

Women’s History Blog „Clio Talks Back“ launched last week!

I.M.O.W.’s debut blog, Clio Talks Back, will change the way you think about women throughout history! Check back on April 4 to be informed and transformed by Clio Talks Back, written by the museum’s resident historian Karen Offen.

Inspired by Clio, the Greek muse of History, and the new global online exhibition on Women, Power and Politics, Ms. Offen takes readers on a journey through time and place where women have shaped and changed our world. Look back in history to meet the first woman blogger or to learn about the earliest women’s organizing. Be inspired to create your own legacies and transform our world.

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Be Inspired by Clio, the Muse of History

In the mythology of the ancient Greeks, Clio is the Muse of History. She was one of the nine daughters born to Mnemosyne, the goddess of Memory, and Zeus, the most powerful of the Olympic Gods.

Of course, Clio’s role then was to inspire male historians to record heroic and memorable actions – by kings and warriors. It is doubtful that Greek women played any part in the invention of the Muses, except to personify them. However, we women historians (or in the French feminine form historiennes) can now reappropriate Clio for our own purposes. „Herstory“ now challenges „History.“

Women historiennes prefer that Clio speak for herself. So I am inaugurating this „blog“ where Clio can present what women of the past have said about their own lives, can critique historical accounts that have left women out. Here we can highlight the important things we now know from exploring the past in new ways, worldwide. You are invited to join in – to ask Clio questions (as I will also), to comment, to add what you know, and to show, as the sociologist Jesse Bernard once put it, that „so much of what is happening is at the margin between history and news.“

Our International Museum of Women thinks that featuring women’s history is a vital component of our mission. For our 2008 theme and on-line exhibit, „Women, Power, and Politics,“ this blog will highlight women’s stories, their overlooked and forgotten deeds, and what women’s historians have learned about women’s history (some prefer calling it „herstory,“ but this doesn’t work in translation) on this theme. We will explore the notions of women’s power and its complicated relationship to women’s entry into political decision-making. I find inspiration and draw energy from learning about women’s history and I’m sure you will too.

Please join Clio and me in conversation coming April 1

In the spirit of invitation,
Karen Offen
I.M.O.W. Resident Historian

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