What I learnt Today: 12/04/2022

 Despite menstruation’s centrality, even our language fails to represent it adequately,
as linguist Suzette Haden Elgin knows. When she invented a woman’s
language in 1984, Láadan, she included words that capture women’s diverse
experiences of embodiment: to menstruate, to be pregnant, to menopause. For
example, “husháana” means to menstruate painfully; “desháana,” to menstruate
early; “weshana,” to menstruate late; and—my favorite—“ásháana,” to menstruate
joyfully. In Láadan, a woman can “azháadin”—menopause uneventfully.
3 Láadan constructs an alternate reality that challenges the dominant
cultural narrative. But feminists such as Elgin are relatively rare; indeed, feminist
scrutiny of the politics of menstruation pales in comparison to feminist engagements
with other aspects of women’s lives.

Source: New blood: Third-Wave Feminism and the Politics of Menstruation By Chris Bobel. 

Inter alia: among other things.

"the study includes, inter alia, computers, aircraft, and pharmaceuticals"

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