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This Slavery
This Slavery | Scarlett Rickard
3 posts | 1 read | 1 to read
Adapted from a novel by the radical feminist poet and author Ethel Carnie Holdsworth, this compelling, multilayered, and sumptuously designed dramatic romance plays out against the starkly observed realities of what it was to grow up female in prewar industrial Britain When the Lancashire cotton mill that employs them burns to the ground, sisters Rachel and Hester Martin are each forced to find their own way to survive in the harsh realities of prewar industrial Britain. The contrasting paths they take in their quest for domestic autonomy form a subtly strident allegory of the all-but-insurmountable barriers of class and gender that then enslaved half the population. Part compelling narrative epic, part fiery Marxist-feminist polemic, this faithful, sumptuous, and revelatory adaptation by the award-winning Rickard Sisters reclaims a lost classic by holding it up as a mirror to our own hard times, and as a gloriously flaming beacon to future communities to offer strength, hope, and dignity.
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charl08
This Slavery | Scarlett Rickard
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Portrait of the original author in the back of the book.

Fascinating re-imagining of a late 19/ early 20th century novel about class and gender inequalities in a northern (English) town dominated by one industry.

Afterword explains what Holdsworth was trying to do and how, like many successful women writers, she has been written out of lit history.

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charl08
This Slavery | Scarlett Rickard
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I'm out of work and I don't intend to find any... until I've got through Marx.
............

Well the reading bit I id with, not so much Marx after a painful attempt for a history course many years ago.

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charl08
This Slavery | Scarlett Rickard
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Eh Rachel!