Introduction: A happy househusband
The novel Prey (2002), by popular novelist Michael Crichton (1942-2008) begins as follows:
Things never turn out the way you think they will. I never intended to become a househusband. Stay-at-home husband. Full-time dad, whatever you want to call it – there is no good term for it. But that's what I had become in the last six months. Now I was in Crate & Barrel in downtown San Jose, picking up some extra glasses, and while I was there I noticed they had a good selection of placemats. We needed more placemats; the woven oval ones that Julia had bought a year ago were getting pretty worn, and the weave was encrusted with baby food. The trouble was, they were woven, so you couldn't wash them. So I stopped at the display to see if they had any placemats that might be good, and I found some pale blue ones that were nice, and I got some white napkins. And then some yellow placemats caught my eye, because they looked really bright and appealing, so I got those too. They didn't have six on the shelf, and I thought we’d better have six, so I asked the salesgirl to look in the back and see if they had more. While she was gone I put the placemat on the table, and put a white dish on it, and then I put a yellow napkin next to it. The setting looked very cheerful, and I began to think maybe I should get eight instead of six. That was when my cell phone rang.
Imagine a reader from 1820 or one from 2120 reading this passage. It is obvious that many of the details, characteristic of early-twenty-first-century shopping culture, will not make much sense to people in other ages. The idea of a ‘cell phone’ would be science fiction to someone in 1820 whereas it will probably be a charming reference to ‘olden times’ for people a hundred years from now. In the future, the phenomenon of the ‘househusband’ doing the shopping may have become so common as to be unremarkable, but it certainly would have seemed weird to readers two hundred years ago.
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