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Women and Writing – Their Words Made History

Tags: women woman book

Seven stories of women whose books changed English literature

In this history podcast we meet an anchorite who became the “mother of English prose”. A passionate pilgrim known as first female autobiographer, two Women who can both claim to have written the first-ever science fiction novel, an enslaved woman who was sold four times, and the only female journalist on the WW1 trenches.

In this month's podcast Marc and Laura tell the stories of seven women whose writings have influenced English literature.

Julian of Norwich was an ancorite who spent 30 years in one room and recorded her life in Revelations of Divine Love - the first book in English by a woman.

Margery Kempe lived in the East Anglian town of Lynn during the early 1400s, following a series of visions, she went on pilgrimages across Europe, and recorded her life in The Book of Margery Kempe - the first autobiography by a woman in English.

Margaret Cavendish was an extraordinary 17th-century woman. A cross between Madonna (the singer) HG Wells and Germaine Greer, she wore outrageous costumes, wrote futuristic fiction, and essayed on women's equality.

Mary Prince was born in 1788 in Bermuda the daughter of slaves. She was sold four times before travelling to England with her enslavers. Her autobiography is the first British book by a black women.

Mary Wollestonecraft wrote first book to demanding real equality between men and women. At that time a married woman could not legally own property, or money - which always belonged to her husband.

Wollestonecraft's daughter, Mary Shelley, wrote the definative horror/science fiction story: Frankenstein

The heroic, but tragic, story of Dorothy Lawrence follows a journalist to the trenches in WW1.

LIsten to these stories in our British history podcast:



This post first appeared on Blog For History Podcast, please read the originial post: here

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