
This book opens our eyes to this crucial area of prehistoric human culture. One could say she had been born and raised to write this book.īecause modern textiles are almost entirely made by machines, we have difficulty appreciating how time-consuming and important the premodern textile industry was. Barber, a professor of linguistics and archaeology, developed expert sewing and weaving skills as a small girl under her mother’s tutelage.

Her passionate interest in the subject matter leaps out on every page. The author, Elizabeth Wayland Barber, demonstrates command of an almost unbelievably disparate array of disciplines - from historical linguistics to archaeology and paleobiology, from art history to the practical art of weaving. 'Women's Work' tells the story of textiles in human history. Up until the Industrial Revolution, and into this century in many peasant societies, women spent every available moment spinning, weaving, and sewing. I was a little skeptical that it would appeal to a techie guy like myself, but soon I was absorbed in Elizabeth Wayland Barber's storytelling. And this work was done primarily by women. It probably consumed far more hours of labor per year, in temperate climates, than did pottery and food production put together. The textile industry is in fact older than pottery - and perhaps even older than agriculture and stockbreeding. Cloth making was an industry that consumed more time and effort, and was more culturally significant to prehistoric cultures, than anyone assumed before the book’s publication. Prehistoric Textiles made an unsurpassed leap in the social and cultural understanding of textiles in humankind’s early history. Using innovative linguistic techniques, along with methods from palaeobiology and other fields, it shows that spinning and pattern weaving began far earlier than has been supposed. This pioneering work revises our notions of the origins and early development of textiles in Europe and the Near East.
