It's a play on the phrase "Well-behaved women seldom make history" which comes from a 2007 book by the historian Laurel Ulrich. Because no one read the book for the context, the quote itself became popular, taking on different meanings based on however individuals choose to represent it.
When it was added to the lexicon of basic white girls, it naturally became productized into shirts, mugs, neon signs, etc.
It's a play on the phrase "Well-behaved women seldom make history" which comes from a 2007 book by the historian Laurel Ulrich. Because no one read the book for the context, the quote itself became popular, taking on different meanings based on however individuals choose to represent it.
When it was added to the lexicon of basic white girls, it naturally became productized into shirts, mugs, neon signs, etc.
Thank you kind soul. I was definitely out of the loop on this.
You're the MVP
Can you tag people on Lemmy? If so, I’d like to tag you “Meme Historian”.