On the Hidden History of the Female Body with Erin Maglaque and Harriet Baker
Monday 22nd June, 7pm
Topping & Company Booksellers of Bath, York Street, Bath, Somerset BA1 1NG
6.30pm
7pm
A bold new history of the female body, combining memoir with archival research to reveal a hidden history of birthing, caring, and desiring – with radical implications for how we understand our bodies today
Sex and abortion, pregnancy, and birth, feeding and rocking and washing: these are embodied practices with a deep past. Yet the history of the female body remains largely unknown – even unimagined.
In this exhilarating book, Erin Maglaque explores the hidden history of the desiring, labouring, caring women of the pre-modern past. From fragments in medical texts, trial transcripts, legal treatises, prayer books, letters, and diaries, she assembles a chorus of women's voices. We encounter a vanished past both strikingly recognisable and strange, when ideas of the female body, sexuality, work, and pleasure were more varied, more unruly, and freer.
This is the invisible history of the female body – working, desiring, bleeding, rocking, spinning, dying. Reaching deeper into the shared history of women's lives, Presence points towards a new way of understanding our bodies today.
Erin will be joined by Harriet Baker of the bestselling Rural Hours.
Erin Maglaque is a writer and historian. She earned her PhD from the University of Oxford, and now teaches history at Durham University. Erin writes regularly about history, gender, and feminism for the London Review of Books, the New York Review of Books, the New York Times Book Review, and other publications.
Harriet Baker has written for the London Review of Books, the Paris Review, the New Statesman, the TLS, and the Apollo. She read English at Oxford and holds a PhD from Queen Mary University of London.