The voices of early modern women have long been silenced by historical record, but historical fiction gives us new ways of understanding and even relating to these colourful characters from centuries past! This discussion will examine literary representations of women in a patriarchal period; women in power and women with power, heroes and villains, girlhood, queerness and sexuality, transgression and rebellion! Join Amy and Cody as they delve into the fascinating world of historical fiction. In this discussion, Cody will explore the dark, Gothic tale of the Pendle witches, and Amy will talk all about women in charge, Queen Henrietta Maria and Queen Christina of Sweden. What do witches and queens have in common? Watch to find out more!
There is a file sleeping on the shelves of the British Library on the Euston Road. It is a document from the India Office, the administrative heart of British rule in India, one of the files of Indian Political Intelligence. Close attention was paid to enemies of the Raj and a network of informer...
1918 is hailed by all as one of the most significant years in providing democratic citizenship for the people of the United Kingdom, when Parliament approved that women could vote in a general election for the first time. Of course, this was a limited success since only certain women aged 30 and ...
Psychiatric Asylums were the main form of mental healthcare in the UK for over a century. These large buildings located on the urban fringe were set up as places of refuge, only to become urban legends of maltreatment and abuse, reviled by many. From the 1960s there was a policy of mass asylum cl...