EQUALITY FOR WOMEN: FROM MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT TO THE SUFFRAGETTES AND BEYOND

Bee Rowlatt

27/04/2019

Audio from Chalke Valley History Festival 2018.
“I do not wish women to have power over men, but over themselves” wrote the philosophical daredevil who changed the course of women’s rights, but paid the ultimate price. Find out how Mary Wollstonecraft’s legacy was annihilated for over a century, rediscovered with the suffrage movement, and still resonates today, with the woman who retraced her most notorious journey: Bee Rowlatt.

Related Contents

The original suffragette: the extraordinary Mary Wollstonecraft

11.06.18

Her argument – outrageous at the time – was that women were capable of reason, and deserved to have that recognised. Now it’s our turn to recognise her contribution to women’s rights.

Read More
Interview with Kate Adie – Chalke Valley History Festival 2014

25.06.14

Veteran war correspondent and reporter Kate Adie talks on Day One at CVHF 2014, discussing with Xander Drury her glittering career in journalism as well as her latest book 'Fighting on the Homefront: The Legacy of Women in World War One'.

Read More
Interview with Kate Adie – Chalke Valley History Festival 2014

25.06.14

Veteran war correspondent and reporter Kate Adie talks on Day One at CVHF 2014, discussing with Xander Drury her glittering career in journalism as well as her latest book 'Fighting on the Homefront: The Legacy of Women in World War One'.

Read More
The Criminal Conversation of Mrs Norton

13.03.14

Critically-acclaimed author Diane Atkinson tells the story of one woman’s fight for the rights of women everywhere. On the morning of 22nd June, 1836, crowds were gathering at the Court of Common Pleas to witness the case of Caroline Sheridan who had been accused, by her violent bully of a husband, of having a ‘criminal conversation’ (an affair), with the Prime Minister, Lord Melbourne. The woman accused was not only a talented poet and songwriter but beautiful and notoriously flirtatious as well. But although she was acquitted, her husband’s revenge was savage. Having become a laughing stock, he cut her off (as was his legal right), refused to let her see her children and left her destitute. This is a fascinating insight into Victorian morals, prejudice and hypocrisy as well as Sheridan’s campaign for women’s rights.

Read More

Sign up to our Newsletter

Keep up to date on all the festival news, including the latest line up announcements.

YOUR EMAIL