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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

Inspirational women in history - who's yours?

256 replies

HecateTrivia · 08/06/2012 13:58

My son has to research and do a biography of an inspirational woman in history. I wondered who you feel inspired by?

OP posts:
MammaBrussels · 11/06/2012 09:47

Illiberal unintellectual North Britain? Like Grantham in Lincolnshire, where Maggie was from?

PattyPenguin · 11/06/2012 10:09

My daughter (19) has just asked for the facsimile of the autobiography of Christian Davies. She's on Wikipedia - dressed as a man and fought as a soldier, amongst other things, in the late 17th and early 18th century. A bit violent perhaps, but still an extraordinary woman.

HecateTrivia · 11/06/2012 12:38

As a northerner, I must object most strongly to "illiberal, unintellectual North Britain" as though everyone north of Watford Gap is an idiot.

That is unfair and untrue.

And an intelligent/intellectual person is not determined by whether or not they like margaret thatcher.

yes, she was the first woman prime minister, great achievement without a doubt. Doesn't mean that you have to agree with the policies and actions of her government or like what you understand of her as a person and that if you don't - you're thick. That's really offensive.

OP posts:
NarkedRaspberry · 11/06/2012 12:51

Yes. Those reactionary northeners. Like those who created The (Manchester) Guardian. Like those Panhhursts who created the WSPU ...

skippingdolefully · 11/06/2012 13:21

Katherine Swyneford, Grandmother to the Tudors and long time mistress of John of Gaunt.

ClaireDeTamble · 11/06/2012 13:26

Jasvinder Sanghera - founder of KarmaNirvana

It takes some guts to stand up to your family and your community, to go against a lot of your upbringing and do it publicly, on an international stage in order to help the vulnerable.

MrsGuyOfGisbourne · 11/06/2012 13:27

Mary Seacole is hardly forgotten seems the kids do a project to her every year ...
Definitley Eleanor Of Acquitaine and Margatert Thatcher (tho' MT still alive, but obviously will be)
Bettany Hughes - fabulous scholarship whilst being highly readable. (again still alve, but is inspirational in history...)

MrsGuyOfGisbourne · 11/06/2012 13:28

Alison Hargreaves - NOT inspirational!

Pr1mr0se · 11/06/2012 14:57

Margaret Thatcher - grocers daughter who lead the country as our first female prime minister.

wheelsonthebus · 11/06/2012 15:18

Elizabeth Garret Anderson - first female doctor. Inspired because I recently read her biography and when the General Medical Council refused to admit her, she went to Paris and took her exams there IN FRENCH!!!

FrothyDragon · 11/06/2012 15:33

Lucy Stone; First woman in Massachusetts to earn a degree, first woman in US to keep her surname after marriage. Her biography is quite awe-inspiring

marriedinwhite · 11/06/2012 16:37

A little more up to date:

Anita Roddick for being an inspirational business woman and spear heading the environment before it was fashionable.

Erin Pizzey for establishing the first women's refuge and bringing domestic violence to the fore.

Jill Saward for having the guts to stand up and be counted to change rape laws.

Sara Payne for championing Sarah's Law and helping protect children

Notwithstanding Doreen Lawrence.

AbsofAwesomeness · 11/06/2012 17:08

Golda Meir. Read her autobiography and my WORD that woman was inspirational. Came from literally nothing, was incredibly tough (was a single mother for a number of years, while heavily involved in politics and government so having to travel) but also so so humble.

AbsofAwesomeness · 11/06/2012 17:10

and, she was generally lovely. For e.g. when she was working for histadrut (which was kind of the predecessor of the union movement) she decided that she should earn less than the janitor, as she only had 2 children to support, whereas he had 8. I don't see David Cameron at any point in his life deciding that someone should earn more than him because of greater need.

WidowWadman · 11/06/2012 17:59

"Sara Payne for championing Sarah's Law and helping protect children"

Except that this law doesn't protect anyone.

WidowWadman · 11/06/2012 18:01

MrsGuy - why not?

ProfessorSunny · 11/06/2012 18:13

an elderly relative of mine, now into her 80s, who worked her way round the world in her 20s.

BoffinMum · 11/06/2012 19:01

Maria Montessori.
Millicent Garrett Fawcett.
Clara Schumann.
Angela Merkl.

omarlittlest · 11/06/2012 20:00

Hannah Arendt
Mary Robinson
Emma Goldman
Marie Curie
Marie Stopes
Every single woman on here who's had the courage to change an untenable situation and all of these amazing other women on MN and in RL who have supported her

nevertidy · 11/06/2012 20:09

Rosalind Franklin. Her work contributed significantly to the discovery of the double helix. She was not recognised, something Crick and Watson did nothing to rectify despite drawing on her work without her knowledge or permission. She underpinned the understanding of DNA - an amazing scientist who died young and was forever too female to be given the credit she deserved.

MammaTJ · 11/06/2012 20:32

Many of the women I have looked after in my career as a carer, including the lady who was an opera singer but I looked after in the very last stages of her dementia. The lady who is 101 1/2 that I look after now. She is amazing though becoming more poorly.
The lady who wrote this...............
What do you see, Nurses, what do you see?
What do you see when you are looking at me?
A crabbit old woman, not very wise,
Uncertain of habit, with far away eyes,
Who dribbles her food and makes no reply,
When you say in a loud voice, 'I do wish you'd try.'
Who seems not to notice the things that you do
And forever is losing a stocking or shoe,
Who unresisting or not, lets you do as you will
With bathing and feeding the long day to fill.
Is that what you're thinking? Is that what you see?
Then open your eyes nurse, you're not looking at me.
I'll tell you who I am as I sit here so still,
As I move at your bidding, as I eat at your will.
I'm a small child of ten with a father and mother;
Brothers and sisters who love one another;
A young girl of sixteen with wings at her feet
Dreaming that soon now a lover she'll meet;
A bride soon at twenty my heart gives a leap
Remembering the vows that I promised to keep;
At twenty five now I have young of my own
Who need me to build a secure happy home;
A woman of thirty, my young now grow fast,
Bound to each other with ties that should last,
At forty, my young sons now grown, will be gone,
But my man stays beside me to see I don't mourn;
At fifty once more babies play around my knee,
Once more we know children, my loved one and me.
Dark days are upon me, my husband is dead;
I look to the future, I shudder with dread.
My young are all busy rearing young of their own.
And I think of the years and the love that I've known.
I'm an old woman and nature is cruel,
'Tis her jest to make old age look like a fool.
The body, it crumbles, grace and vigour depart.
There is now a stone, where there once was a heart.
But inside this old body a young girl still dwells
And now and again, my battered heart swells,
I remember the joys, I remember the pain,
And I'm loving and living all over again.
And I think of the years all too few-gone too fast
And accept the stark fact that nothing will last.
So open your eyes, nurse, open and see
Not a crabbit old woman, look closer- SEE ME.

It was found in her locker after her death.
I never met her, was told about this when I first started care work!

LurcioLovesFrankie · 11/06/2012 20:52

Emmy Noether again, and Mary Somerville and Ada Lovelace. And Emilie, Marquise du Chatelet, translator and commentator on Newton's work. And Caroline of Brunswick as patron of science, for setting up the Leibniz-Clarke correspondence.

Alison Hargreaves - inspirational when I started climbing in the 80s and sexism was rife - seeing a poster of her on the Right Unconquerable on the walls of Stoney Caff made me think I could be a climber too, and doing the North Face of the Eiger 6 months pregnant (ok, not the classic route, but even so) was just such a splendid two fingers to the women-as-incubators view of pregnancy.

And while on the subject of female climbers, Lynn Hill (first person of either sex to free el Capitaine in Yosemite), Julie Tullis (fantastic Himalayan mountaineer, also died on K2), Lucy Walker (1st woman to climb the Matterhorn).

YYY to Elizabeth 1 and Eleanor of Acquitaine. Also (pinko lefty that I am) reluctant inclusion of Margaret Thatcher, and enthusiastic inclusion of Barbara Castle.

And finally, Barbara Strozzi, 17th century composer, who single-handedly supported 4 children from her work as a composer.

LurcioLovesFrankie · 11/06/2012 21:00

Oh,and thinking of Elizabeth 1, surely I can't be the only one who hated that bloody awful film version? Take the early years of a woman who, as a child, wrote compositions in Greek and Latin and a treatise on military strategy, and turn them into "Bridget Jones: The early modern years"? Not many films where you can say that the comedy cameo role by Eric Cantona is the highspot of the film.

ProfessorSunny · 11/06/2012 21:03

Rosalind Franklin was who I had in mind, and Marie Stopes (much as I am against abortion, she has done so much) and Margaret Thatcher - can't stand her as a woman but have to admire some of what she achieved.