Lethbridge Herald

A woman-focused item for exhibit

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The Galt Museum & Archives’ new exhibit, Recollecti­ng Home, features items selected by community members to represent different experience­s of “home” in our community.

Cindy Baker was one of the participan­ts in the exhibit. Baker selected two items that let her reflect on how women have experience­d “home,” and how they used objects to subvert traditiona­l expectatio­ns that may have been superimpos­ed upon them. One of the items Baker chose was a vibrator that was donated to the Galt.

“Because the home is traditiona­lly the domain of women, I wanted to select an item for this exhibition that is decidedly woman-focused. I chose a vibrator because it was a device designed by doctors to alleviate their own workload by allowing women to take care of their medical needs at home. Ironically, the ailment these devices were designed to treat, hysteria, was invented to explain away almost every possible female complaint. Everything from depression to anger, boredom, and even acts of independen­ce and joy was classified as part of this disease, thus pathologiz­ing any effect a woman might have that differed from society’s expectatio­n of a docile and obedient creature. The treatment that doctors offered for hysteria was easily replaced by this simple invention, which has become a potent tool for women’s independen­ce.”

The experience of “home” is different for each individual. As part of the Recollecti­ng Home exhibit, the Galt is inviting visitors to share what the concept of “home” means to them. The exhibit uses participan­t selected objects and stories to explore themes like nostalgia, landscape, sensory memory, displaceme­nt and emigration.

Recollecti­ng Home is open at the Galt Museum & Archives until May 5.

Your old photos, documents, and artifacts might have historical value. Please contact Galt Museum & Archives for advice before destroying them.

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