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Novel Research: 5 Books Offering Social Critiques of Past-Century China

Novel Research 5 Books Offering Social Critiques of Past-Century China
Novel Research 5 Books Offering Social Critiques of Past-Century China

Novel Research: 5 Books Offering Social Critiques of Past-Century China

Social novels are a strong literary tradition in China, and many Chinese satirists – from Yu Hua to Qian Zhongshu to Lu Xun – accompanied me while I was writing my debut novel, River East, River West. The books on this list are often both wrenchingly funny and heartbreaking, using a mix of absurdism and social realism to convey scathing critiques of the societies that produced their characters.

To Live
Yu Hua

to live yu hua

Yu Hua (whose nonfiction book China In Ten Words is published by Duckworth!) earned international acclaim with this epic, decade-spanning tale on the life of Fugui, a man whose life parallels the seismic changes of 20th century China.

From spoiled, gambling-addicted young scion to army conscript to ordinary citizen living under the Communist party regime in a new China, Fugui’s fortunes reflect the century’s wars, revolutions, and reforms, and are rendered in a deeply personal, heart-wrenching story of familial joys and losses.

to live yu hua

This novel was a major inspiration for how I structured the narrative of my protagonist, Lu Fang, and made his personal fortunes track China’s political and economic upheavals at the millennium’s turn–to show how individual fates and a nation’s political fate can rise and fall in tandem. To Live has been adapted into an excellent 1994 movie by Zhang Yimou, starring Ge You and Gong Li.

Brothers
Yu Hua

brothers yu hua

The two volumes of the “Brothers” series were books I remember seeing everywhere in Chinese bookstores growing up. This bawdy, frenetic social satire was an enormous success with the Chinese public when it was published in 2005-6 (and, remarkably, was not banned).

The tale follows two step-brothers, the enterprising Baldy Li and the upstanding Song Gang, growing up in the fictional Liu Town. Characteristically, Yu Hua does not hold back from plots weaving the personal misfortunes of the townspeople into the era’s political changes, but this

brothers yu hua

book is also preoccupied with the rabid economic opportunism overtaking all echelons of Chinese society post reform and opening. Absurdist schemes abound as Baldy and Li navigate factory work, entrepreneurial campaigns, beauty pageants, conmen, and plenty of farcical side-stories that put Liu Town on the national map.

This book is laugh-out-loud funny and bitingly satirical.

Fortress Besieged
Qian Zhongshu

Fortress Besieged Qian Zhongshu

Published in 1947, Fortress Besieged is a social satire about academia, the wealthy intelligentsia, and the pull of Western ideas in the first half of the 20th century.

Protagonist Fang Hongjian returns from a European study abroad with nothing to show but a fake degree, only to find Shanghai under the looming shadow of Japanese occupation. Fang accepts a dodgy teaching offer at the rural San Lü University and undertakes a perilous wartime trip there with several other academics, all entangled in competing romances and jealousies.

Fortress Besieged Qian Zhongshu

On campus, Fang navigates preposterous academic politics as the newly-established university succumbs to ideological fashions increasingly dissonant with the wartime reality outside, all while juggling a complicated courtship and eventual marriage with a colleague.

Whip-smart and cynical, this novel is a riveting example of a campus satire and work of cultural commentary preceding the establishment of the People’s Republic.

Running Through Beijing
Xu Zechen

running through beijing xu zechen

Known in China as a “京飘” – ”drifting in Beijing” – novel, this slim volume is packed with zany energy and social realism.

The protagonist, Dunhuang, is a young man who just served jail time for selling fake IDs in 2000s Beijing: a wily and big-hearted hustler, he charms and fights his way into securing shelter and subsistence day-to-day, with each looming night the precarious possibility of being out on the street. He turns to selling the pornographic DVDs his erstwhile lover, Xiaorong, refuses to peddle, he dodges plainclothes police and tries to carve out a living in the cacophonous capital.

running through beijing xu zechen

This could easily be a bleak book about outsiders to Beijing falling prey to its heartless, capitalist fervor, but there is deep humanity in how Dunhuang and his buddies always look out for each other – a fight there, a scam there, but also always a helping hand, forgiveness, and a line for survival.

The Real Story of Ah Q
Lu Xun

Lu Xun is a canonical writer of the 20th century every schoolchild in China has studied; his prose, both elegant and merciless, adeptly unveils the social realities of the turbulent pre-WWII China he inhabited.

The story of Ah-Q was first serialized in 1921-1922, and is set in the aftermath of the 1911 Xinhai revolution, which overthrew the Qing Dynasty and helped establish the Republic of China.

Ah Q is a satirical character representing the backwards, conservative thinking plaguing the country at the turn of the century: he kisses up to the more

powerful and abuses those weaker than him, and every humiliation he suffers, he finds a way of mentally contorting into a personal triumph through his “spiritual method of victory.”

Ah Q is an everyman that reflects the corrosive powers of the competing ideological currents tearing through Chinese society at the time; his mental gymnastics offer a poignant critique of the “follower mentality” enabling self-anesthetization, self-justification, and cognitive dissonance for collaborators in an oppressive regime.

This, and any of Lu Xun’s fiction and nonfiction, is well worth a read for anyone interested in the foundational influences on modern Chinese social criticism.

Discover Aube Rey Lescure's work

Aube Rey Lescure is a French-Chinese writer who grew up between Provence, northern China and Shanghai. She worked in foreign policy before turning to writing fulltime. Her writing has appeared in Guernica, Best American Essays, Litro and elsewhere. River East, River West is her debut novel.

A darkly glittering literary debut that traces a mixed family’s troubled trajectory through developing China.

river east river west

Literary fiction
Hardback
25 January 2024
ISBN 9780715655399

‘Poignant and propulsive, thoughtful and moving’ – Jean Kwok, bestselling author of Searching for Sylvie Lee

A mesmerising reversal of the east–west immigrant narrative set against China’s economic boom, River East, River West is a deeply moving exploration of race, identity and family, of capitalism’s false promise and private dreams.

Shanghai, 2007: feeling betrayed by her American mother’s engagement to their rich landlord Lu Fang, fourteen-year-old Alva begins plotting her escape. But the exclusive American School – a potential ticket out – is not what she imagined.

Qingdao, 1985: newlywed Lu Fang works as a lowly shipping clerk. Though he aspires to a bright future, he is one of many casualties of harsh political reforms. Then China opens up to foreigners and capital, and Lu Fang meets a woman who makes him question what he should settle for…

Inspirational wisdom for each month of 2024

a book of your own and pencils

Inspirational wisdom for each month of 2024

By Anne Dickson
2 January 2024

It’s easy to feel overwhelmed with words: conversations, advertising, tweets, instructions, demands and even the endless messages in our own heads sometimes.

My book A Book of Your Own offers a minimum of words – one for each day of the year – but with maximum impact: a phrase, an idea or a thought that may resonate personally, make you smile or simply remind you of a truth that you’d lost sight of.

Below, I have cherry-picked twelve snippets for each month of the year, to reassure and occasionally to give you a needed pause for reflection.

January

Really good friends are those who interrupt your usual pattern with a reminder to be gentle on yourself and take the easier option.

friends hugging

February

It’s never too late to awaken a dormant talent.

waking up

March

The longer you wait to take the initiative, the greater the risk that your anxiety will get the better of you.

hourglass

April

We cannot be held responsible for what we feel – only for how we choose to act on our feeling.

May

It is impossible to be creative with your life and to worry about what people think of you – so the choice is which one to give up.

light bulb lying on its side

June

Listen attentively to what your body, in its wisdom, tells you.

July

A good cry can be a great release.

women crying

August

Short-term compromises have a habit of becoming long-term prisons.

woman trapped

September

Next time you catch sight of yourself in the mirror, blow yourself a little kiss – before the self – criticism starts!

woman looking in mirror

October

If there’s a stone in your shoe, you can remove it – or continue to walk, hoping the pain will eventually go away.

high-heeled shoe

November

A hairline crack in a relationship easily grows into an unbridgeable chasm.

broken heart

December

A simple, heartfelt appreciative comment is the best gift of all.

two women talking

The essential daily companion to boost your confidence and energy

Pop it in your bag or nightstand and draw on it to boost your self-belief, awareness, energy and assertiveness each day – or gift it to friends and family to help them confront life’s everyday challenges.

a book of your own anne dickson

Quotations, proverbs and sayings
Paperback
£6.99
224 pages
ISBN 9780715655108

‘Anne Dickson’s tenets of assertiveness are about going for what you want without leaving anyone else humiliated or belittled’ Daily Mail

Drawing on the author’s decades of experience as a psychologist, trainer and advocate for women, this small but perfectly formed, pocket-sized book contains bite-sized snippets of insight and inspiration on communication, relationships, work, body image, overwhelm, emotional trials and more.

In Case You Missed It – 2023

In Case You Missed It 2023
In Case You Missed It 2023

In Case You Missed It – 2023

2023 was a stellar year for Duckworth. Our 125th Anniversary year, we republished classics from our catalogue with wonderful new covers and had a delightful anniversary party, had titles shortlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction, the Wolfson History Prize, the Wilbur Smith Prize, and welcomed new teams members in sales, editorial and publicity.

In case you missed any of our amazing 2023 titles, we made a handy list for you to check them out.

Our 125th Anniversary reissues

china in ten words

China in Ten Words
Yu Hua

The powerful personal stories of the Chinese experience from the Cultural Revolution to the 2010s, told by one of China’s greatest living writers.

david bowie made me gay

David Bowie Made Me Gay
Darryl W. Bullock

The definitive book on the influence of LGBTQ performers on modern music.

the nordic theory of everything

The Nordic Theory of Everything
Anu Partanen

An optimistic account of how the Nordic countries can teach us to live easier, healthier, happier lives.

the ten thousand things

The Ten Thousand Things
John Spurling

The Walter Scott Prize-winning, riveting historical novel set in fourteenth-century China.

through two doors at once

Through Two Doors at Once
Anil Ananthaswamy

The clearest, most accessible explanation yet of the amazing world of quantum mechanics.

tiger woman

Tiger Woman
Betty May

The fearless tale of the original ‘Party Girl’ told in her own frankly scurrilous words.

Fantastic Fiction

Black Butterflies
Priscilla Morris

In 2023, Black Butterflies was shortlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction, the RSL Ondaatje Prize, the Authors’ Club Best First Novel, The Wilbur Smith Prize and Nota Bene Prize.

Inspired by real-life accounts of the Siege of Sarajevo, only thirty years ago, Black Butterflies is a heartrending and utterly captivating portrait of disintegration, resilience and hope.

The Messenger of Measham Hall
Anna Abney

The second in the enhanting Measham Hall series. As England slides towards invasion by the Protestant forces of Prince William of Orange, Nicolas becomes entangled in conspiracies within King James’s court – and soon learns that both truth and love come at a high price.

The Man Who Didn’t Burn
Ian Moore

A hard-boiled crime thriller from author of The Times-bestselling Death and Croissants.

When an English expat is brutally murdered, his charred corpse left on a Loire Valley hillside, the police turn to juge d’instruction Matthieu Lombard to find the perpetrator.

Notable Non-fiction

The Case for Nature
Siddarth Shrikanth

A deeply informed, radically hopeful manifesto for regenerating our economies and societies through the power of nature and natural capital.

Described by the Sunday Times-bestselling author of Wilding, Isabella Tree, as ‘eloquent, informed and inspiring: a must-read for all those who care about the planet.’

It's Too Late Now
A. A. Milne

The classic autobiography of the beloved author of Winnie the Pooh, as he recalls a blissfully happy childhood in the company of his brothers, and writes with touching affection about the father he adored.

‘A funny book, beautifully written’ – Neil Gaiman

A Book of Your Own
Anne Dickson

Drawing on the Anne Dickson’s decades of experience as a psychologist, trainer and advocate for women, this small but perfectly formed, pocket-sized book contains bite-sized snippets of insight and inspiration.

From the author of the assertiveness bible, A Woman in Your Own Right.

Last Minute Christmas Gift List

Last Minute Christmas Gift List

The festive season has come around again. Here at Duckworth, we are decking the halls, hanging stockings above the fireplace, and putting together this last minute Christmas gift list for the bookworms in your life.

The Possibility of Life by Jaime Green

The truth is out there in The Possibility of Life by Jaime Green. A dazzling scientific and cultural adventure through our ideas about extraterrestrial life, this is the perfect read for fascinated by what might live beyond our galaxy and how our pop culture has shaped our perceptions of Alien life. Live long and prosper by buying this book for Christmas!

Sinners of Starlight City by Anika Scott

A sumptuous, page-turning historical novel of revenge and redemption set during the glittering 1933 Chicago World’s Fair, Sinners of Starlight City by Anika Scott is the perfect companion for these cold winter nights. Pour yourself a mulled wine or a hot chocolate, get cozy with a blanket and immersive yourself in a story that asks who decides who we are and where we belong?

Scheisse! We're Going Up! by Kit Holden

While you are waiting for the traditional Boxing Day fixtures, read the extraordinary story of Union Berlin, the German Bundesliga’s most spirited football club, interwoven with a witty history of contemporary Berlin, in Scheisse! We’re Going Up! by Kit Holden. A book that would look amazing peeking out the top of any stocking.

Great Minds on Small Things by Matt Qvortrup

Swap cracker jokes for funny philosophy at the Christmas table this year with Great Minds on Small Things by Matthew Qvortrup. From Wollstonecraft to Wittgenstein, Laozi to Locke, Aristotle to Arendt, Great Minds on Small Things brings together their varied observations, alongside delightful black and white illustrations, in a highly entertaining and eye-opening miscellany that is guaranteed to make life’s mundanities suddenly seem a lot more highbrow.

Vet at the End of the Earth by Jonathan Hollins

If the frosty temperatures are getting to you, take a trip to St Helena with Jonathan Hollins in Vet at the End of the Earth. Hugely entertaining and affectionate, Jonathan Hollins’s tales are full of wonderful creatures and steeped in the unique local history, cultures and peoples of the South Atlantic islands, far removed from the hustle of continental life.

My favourite books by fellow Irish writers – Carmel Mc Mahon

carmel mc mahon

My favourite books by fellow Irish writers – Carmel Mc Mahon

carmel mc mahon

By Carmel Mc Mahon
14 November 2023

Here are some favourite books by fellow Irish writers. This list changes and evolves, but at the moment, these are the books that are still resonating with me.

Academy Street by Mary Costello

I had just started writing In Ordinary Time when Academy Street was published.

I happened to be living in the Inwood neighborhood of Manhattan where the novel is set. While she never lived the emigrant experience herself, Costello captures it in pitch-perfect tone. In all of her writing, a spare and precise prose carries the weight of complex emotions.

I am very much looking forward to her forth-coming short-story collection, Barcelona.

Are You Somebody?: A Memoir by Nuala O’Faolain

Nuala O’Faolain was born in 1940, and she was raised in the stifling Catholic Ireland of the following years.

Her memoir speaks of an oppressive society, and of a Dublin that was still very much in tact when I was a child. In addition to being a self-portrait, this book paints a picture of a time and place. Through O’Faolain’s personal lens, I could see, in a new way, how social forces shaped my mother’s generation, and so, mine.

While living in New York, I worked for a novelist who introduced me to Nuala. She and I met a few times for tea and chats. She died before I got sober, and there is so much more I would have liked to talk to her about, though she remains with me, through this book, a kind of literary ancestor and guide.

Milkman by Anna Burns

This is a singular book. A masterpiece.

Set in an unnamed city during a troubled time, Burns translates in fiction, better than any history, the claustrophobic atmosphere of a community at war, and the hopes, dreams and humor of its individual inhabitants.

I often think about the opening sentence and only hope I live long enough to construct one so utterly perfect.

Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan

I read Small Things Like These in one sitting and have re-read it a few times since.

The thematic concerns of the book, the Magdalene Laundries and the complicity of Irish society in their maintenance, are concerns of many Irish artists of my generation.

Keegan takes a local story and makes it universal. Every sentence is concentrated to its essential form, imbuing the overall affect with immense power and beauty.

A Ghost in the Throat by Doireann Ní Ghríofa

Ní Ghríofa sets out looking for the life of an erased eighteenth-century poet, Eibhlín Dubh Ní Chonaill, and in so doing, she finds herself.

The lives of these two Irish women, mothers and poets, reverberate with each other across time.

A Ghost in the Throat is an inspiring example of what literary life-writing can do.

Constellations: Reflections from Life by Sinéad Gleeson

The essays in Constellations are collected around the theme of the body with its earthbound struggles and star-dust ancestry.

It was published in 2019 just after the repeal of Ireland’s abortion law and carries so much of the socio-political climate of the preceding years.

Through stories of her own experience of illness, giving birth, and the deaths of loved ones, coupled with insights from music, art and literature, Gleeson captures the unique privilege of inhabiting a body on this planet, if only for a brief moment in time.

Solar Bones by Mike Mc Cormack

I read this book in grad school in New York in a class on the Cultural Productions of Ireland’s Boom and Bust. It was taught by Mary Mc Glynn, a brilliant professor and a lover of Irish literature.

Solar Bones shook me to my core. It seems to compress time, the past, present and future into a single instant. This feat is achieved, perhaps, through the book’s unusual construction, the story of a life told in a single sentence, by a ghost returning to his home on the feast of All Souls.

It glides along a fine line, one that alternates between the real and unreal, the living and the dead.

Black Butterflies by Priscilla Morris

Black Butterflies by Priscilla Morris, who has been living and teaching in Ireland for many years, is set during the siege of Sarajevo in 1992.

It is a book, if not “the book” for our time of escalating armed conflicts. The narrative centers on Zora, a middle-aged artist and teacher, trapped in the siege.

It is a carefully researched work of fiction and a beautifully-written testament to the enduring power of art as an act of resistance and survival.

Juno Loves Legs by Karl Geary

Karl is an old pal from New York. We did a book event together in Dublin where we were to discuss the similarities in our recent publications, his fiction, mine, non-fiction. We had recognized reflections in each other’s work.

He had written about the Dublin he knew before he emigrated to the US, the details of which had been preserved in him, and he wrote them into Juno Loves Legs. This was the Dublin I knew too, and it was a delight to find it again in the pages of this novel, because it no longer exists, for the better and worse, today.

The Gathering by Anne Enright

No one writes family, with its stifling secrets, betrayals and alliances like Enright. Her characters are living, breathing presences, and I know them all.

This book is about a family gathering in Dublin to wake a dead brother. Every line grounds you, firmly, in time and place, so you feel like you are watching a film, one that you would like, at times, to avert your eyes from. But you keep on watching because the rewards are there, a nourishment for the mind, emotions and spirit.

Discover Carmel Mc Mahon's work

Carmel Mc Mahon grew up in County Meath, and lived in New York City 1993–2021, when she returned to Ireland’s west coast. A graduate of CUNY, her writing has been published in the Irish Times and shortlisted for the Hennessy Literary Award. In Ordinary Time is her first book.

A highly acclaimed multi-layered exploration of trauma, grief and addiction, In Ordinary Time is perceptive, intimate and utterly compelling Irish life writing from an electrifying new voice.

in ordinary time carmel mc mahon

Memoir

Hardback
Available now
ISBN 9780715654477

Paperback
February 2024
ISBN 9780715655184

‘Absolutely gripping…’ Irish Times

In 1993, aged twenty, Carmel Mc Mahon left Ireland for New York, carrying two suitcases and a ton of unseen baggage. It took years, and a bitter struggle with alcohol addiction, to unpick the intricate traumas of her past and present.

From tragically lost siblings to the broader social scars of the Famine and the Magdalene Laundries, Mc Mahon mines the ways that trauma reverberates through time and through individual lives, drawing connections to the events and rhythms of Ireland’s long history

High steak situation: the cow that got stuck in a tree

a cow stuck in a tree
The headless-cow-tree.

High steak situation: the cow that got stuck in a tree

Jonathan Hollins has experienced some odd animal encounters as overseas vet on the South Atlantic Islands of St Helena, Tristan da Cunha and Ascension. But none top the time when he faced a cow that got stuck in a tree…

‘Crikey! How in hell…?’

It’s not every day a vet is forced to discard his scalpel and operate with a chainsaw, but my day had come.

We all – farmer, farm workers and vet team – gawped in bemused astonishment.

south atlantic islands map
Map showing the South Atlantic Islands of St Helena, Tristan da Cunha and Ascension.

The cow that stood before me had done something I would never see again in a host of lifetimes, and created a spectacle that would enthral the whole island of St Helena.

Refusal as a vet is not considered an option

I was still working on the text for my memoir Vet at the End of the Earth with my fabulous editor Rowan Cope, when my mobile, that duplicitous friend and foe, had trilled in my pocket.

It had been the police station.

Could I go and attend to a cow stuck in a tree at Mount Pleasant? A rhetorical question politely put since refusal as a vet is not considered an option.

Mount Pleasant is owned by merchant Greg Cairns-Wicks and his conservationist wife Becky, a well-run farm set in beautiful scenery with Napoleonic connections.

I knew it well, not least because I had bought the adjacent land, complete with ruined Georgian mansion and coffee plantation throttled by dense jungle.

This meant that, fortuitously, my Land Rover was stashed with forestry equipment, and I’d become a pretty dab hand with a chainsaw.

view from mount pleasant st helena
The view from Mount Pleasant, St Helena.

The weirdly puzzling sight stopped me dead in my tracks

I had clambered up the steep field towards the waiting group, ballasted with axes, sledgehammers and wedges, and rounded the grey amorphous trunk of a huge thorn tree, expecting to find the cow jammed in a branch.

The weirdly puzzling sight stopped me dead in my tracks.

Sure, cows get their heads stuck: in discarded feed containers, railings and fences. But this trumped them all. It was a headless-cow-tree.

a cow stuck in a tree
The headless-cow-tree.

The cow seemed melded with the very wood itself, like some ghastly hybrid from H. G. Wells’ Island of Dr Moreau.

Not one gap marked how she had managed to force her skull through an impossibly meagre hole in the hollow trunk of this Tolkienesque giant, but a wide arc of paddled mud indicated she’d been there some time.

If she stumbles even once, she’ll hang

I squeezed my hand along the cow’s throat and felt around her neck. It was as tight as a gargantuan cork in an absurdly large bottle.

‘Can you sedate her?’ suggested Greg. ‘Then we can drag her out.’

‘No chance. Her neck is tightly baled. We’d hang her. In fact, if she stumbles even once, she’ll hang.’

Greg was holding an electric chainsaw and I reached out for it.

‘No, I’m afraid not,’ he said, shaking his head and drawing it back. ‘I started it up and she went crazy.’

‘It’s the only option, Greg. And frankly if I gash her, I’ll just have to stitch her up. Otherwise, she’s going to die.’

A brutally accurate assessment.

I’ve never used a chainsaw so delicately and precisely as on that day.

chainsawing tree to free the cow
High steak situation: Chainsawing the tree to free the cow.

The chainsaw had indeed become my titanic scalpel blade

‘First, make a bold incision’ is the classic imperative of the older, respected surgical texts because if made with a tremulous and hesitant hand, that incision will end up with tramlines and crossroads.

But given a steady hand, I love the definite and purposeful accuracy of a sharp scalpel, cleanly incising to the correct depth, length and angle with controlled and focussed dexterity – sometimes demanding nerves of steel and a dash of composure.

The chainsaw had indeed become my titanic scalpel blade, parting wood from flesh. The ‘boldness’ here was of the refined variety: virtually no pressure on the chain less I performed what the lumberjacks call a ‘plunge cut’ – which would literally be a bloody disaster and paint my face red.

St Helena from the air
The remote island of St Helena from the air.

I was going to nick her – it was just a question of where and how deep

All my senses were on high alert, legs braced, frog-like, to leap back when she swung towards the speeding chain, which she did on several occasions, and with sang-froid pouring copiously through my veins to steady my hands.

After an initial frantic reaction, the cow settled, the vibration of the saw seeming to be in some way soothing or even hypnotic. It was as well; on the horizontal slice I worked the chain to within a thumbnail’s distance of her bulging neck.

Here the wood was a perilous and challenging six inches deep and I could only stare at the print on the chainsaw’s bar to estimate progress.

I was going to nick her – it was just a question of where and how deep.

Hollins with the now cowless tree
Me with the now cowless tree.

Now covered in sappy sawdust, I worked the tip of the chainsaw into the hollow interior where I thought her head was probably clear, feeling minutely for the give of less resistance, and leaving the neck until last.

It was going to hurt. Closer, deeper… any moment now…

The cow bucked as I skimmed her hide. The block came free.

She backed out, blinking in the sunlight.

It looked as if she was choosing a victim; we all backed off in comical slow motion

The backs of her ears were raw from her efforts to escape and she was sporting a neat souvenir graze on her neck.

For a moment she stood stock-still, eyeing each of us up in turn with a quizzical expression, almost as if to say: ‘Well what on earth was all that in aid of?’

It looked as if she was choosing a victim; we all backed off in comical slow motion. But Greg’s cows are well handled, and with an ungrateful snort of disgust, she finally turned away and sauntered off to join the herd.

St Helena scenery
St Helena scenery.

The atmosphere was euphoric. ‘I have to say, Joe, you held your nerve there,’ Greg said, through his relieved laughter. ‘And thanks. I’m immensely grateful. She was pregnant – a valuable animal.’

‘Pleasure Greg. That’s the first time I’ve swapped a scalpel for a chainsaw!’ In all honesty, I had enjoyed every moment.

When we put the story in the local paper, it was a sensation. The people of St Helena have seen a thing or two, but a headless-cow-tree? Now that’s something new.

Enjoy more adventures with animals on the South Atlantic Islands

As you have witnessed with the headless-cow-tree, Jonathan Hollins has a vet’s life with a difference.

His tales are full of wonderful creatures and steeped in the unique local history, cultures and peoples of the South Atlantic islands, far removed from the hustle of continental life.

You can enjoy them all in his hugely entertaining and affectionate memoir, Vet at the End of the Earth – out now.

vet at the end of the earth

Memoir
Hardback
368 pages
ISBN 9780715654866

‘A delightful, fascinating and entertaining book’ – Dr Hilary Jones MBE

The role of resident vet in the British Overseas Territories of the Falklands, St Helena, Tristan da Cunha and Ascension encompasses the complexities of caring for the world’s oldest land animal – a 200-year-old giant tortoise – and MoD mascots at the Falklands airbase; pursuing mystery creatures and invasive microorganisms; relocating herds of reindeer; and rescuing animals in extraordinarily rugged landscapes, from subtropical cloud forests to volcanic cliff faces…

More reading

Great Minds on Small Things

great minds on small things

Great Minds on Small Things

The patter of philosophers usually leans towards epistemology, metaphysics, ethics, logic and trifles like the meaning of life.

But, just occasionally, the great minds stray from their usual turf and write about, for example, farting, cheese and dancing…

Aristotle on Farting

Aristotle suggested that ‘farting is breath from the lower stomach’.

Sometimes even geniuses talk out of their arse.

aristotle

Nietzsche on The Horn

Friedrich Nietzsche – who had very little success with women – was so terrified and flummoxed by the whole business of sexual attraction that he pondered:

‘Is it not better to be in the hands of a murderer than to be on a horny woman’s mind?’

No, Friedrich, it is not. Try losing the tash, lad.

nietzsche

Arendt on Dancing

Hannah Arendt associated dancing with freedom, and she thought we must push through our inhibitions, as she explains:

‘Anyone who wishes to dance the fandango and ceases in the midst of it from awkwardness or lack of strength, has not carried out an act of freedom.’

Scaramouche! Scaramouche!

arendt

Baldwin on Smoking

James Baldwin was rarely pictured without a cigarette in his hand, but he knew it wasn’t an admirable habit.

When invited for dinner at the house of Nation of Islam leader Elijah Muhammad, he ‘felt guilty about the cigarettes’ in his pocket.

We wonder what he would think about vapes.

baldwin

Wollstonecraft on Cheese

Mary Wollstonecraft, it seems, wasn’t the biggest fan. She wrote that those who have lived at sea on a diet of ‘Cheese [were] feeling uncommon pains’ and reported from her travels in Sweden ‘that cheese was the bane of this country’.

Mary’s memo clearly didn’t reach fellow philosopher Immanuel Kant. He loved the stuff so much that he reportedly died of a surfeit of cheese sandwiches.

Don’t cheddar tear over him.

wollstonecraft

Enjoying these magnificently mundane musings?

Well, we have plenty more for you in Great Minds on Small Things…

Wollstonecraft to Wittgenstein, Laozi to Locke, Aristotle to Arendt, this beautifully crafted, illustrated collection brings together the varied observations of history’s most celebrated philosophers.

The perfect gift for the armchair philosopher in your life!

great minds on small things cover

Popular philosophy
Hardback
£12.99
224 pages
ISBN 9780715654965

Three centuries ago, Voltaire published his Dictionnaire philosophique, taking in such idiosyncratic topics as adultery, mountains, nakedness, and others besides. In 1957, another French philosopher of more recent vintage, Roland Barthes, mused in his Mythologies on the masculine pursuits of wrestling, striptease and the Citroën DS. Since the dawn of philosophy, the world’s great thinkers have been unable to resist the lure of applying their formidable brains not only to the meaning of life, but also to the meaning of coffee, trapped wind or efficient boiler installation…

Black Victorians: Hidden in History

black victorians hidden in history
black victorians hidden in history

Black Victorians: Hidden in History

Beyond the patrician vision of Victorian Britain traditionally advanced in our textbooks, there always existed another, more diverse Britain, populated by people of colour marking achievements both ordinary and extraordinary.

Black lives were visible, present and influential.

William Cuffay

A Black working-class radical who protested and plotted for democratic reform. His efforts saw him exiled to Tasmania.

William Cuffay

Sarah Forbes Bonetta

A West African orphan who became goddaughter to Queen Victoria and was feted in society circles.

Sarah Forbes Bonetta

Fanny Eaton

A Jamaican-born artists’ model who helped shape the now-famous Pre-Raphaelite aesthetic.

Fanny Eaton

Ira Aldridge

A star of the stage who won acclaim for his defining role in Othello.

ira aldridge

Henry 'Box' Brown

Having earned his sobriquet in an extraordinary escape from slavery, Brown joined the popular abolitionist speaking circuit in Britain.

Pablo Fanque

A circus impresario who transformed popular entertainment in Britain and later inspired a Beatles song.

pablo fanque

Ida B. Wells

A powerful anti-racist orator and Black feminist who called time on white supremacy.

ida b wells

Want to find out more about these remarkable figures?

Read Keshia N. Abraham and John Woolf’s landmark history exploring and celebrating the lives of Black Victorians.

History
Paperback
£12.99
378 pages
ISBN 9780715654880

In this deeply researched and dynamic history, Woolf and Abraham reach into the archives to recentre our attention on marginalised Black Victorians, from leading medic George Rice to political agitator William Cuffay to abolitionists Henry ‘Box’ Brown and Sarah Parker Remond; from pre-Raphaelite muse Fanny Eaton to renowned composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor. While acknowledging the paradoxes of Victorian views of race, Black Victorians demonstrates, with storytelling verve and a liberatory impulse, how Black people were visible and influential, firmly rooted in British life.

#BlackHistoricalLivesMatter

black historical lives matter

Union Berlin in the Champions League: ‘Soon all of Europe will know our songs’

union berlin in the champions league socials
© @fcunion_en (Twitter/X).

Union Berlin in the Champions League: 'Soon all of Europe will know our songs'

Union Berlin
in the Champions League: 'Soon all of Europe will know our songs'

Kit Holden reflects on Union Berlin in the Champions League and the draw which will see them face Portugal’s Braga, Italian champions Napoli and 14-time winners Real Madrid.

Kit Holden

By Kit Holden 15 September 2023

A few years ago, East German minnows Union Berlin were battling relegation in the second division. Now, they are preparing to face Real Madrid in the Champions League.

The Soviet tanks can’t stop them this time. Nor, one would hope, can Al-Qaida, Covid-19 or the mayor of Leuven.

There have been many things over the years which have stopped Union Berlin fans from watching their team in Europe.

But this autumn will be different. This autumn, they are playing Real Madrid, and they are not going to miss it for the world.

Champions League Group C: SSC Napoli (Italy), Real Madrid CF (Spain), SC Braga (Portugal), 1. FC Union Berlin (Germany)
Champions League Group C: SSC Napoli (Italy), Real Madrid CF (Spain), SC Braga (Portugal) and 1. FC Union Berlin (Germany). © @fcunion_en (Twitter/X).

“Today was a day which made me and many other Unioners very happy,” beamed club president Dirk Zingler after the Champions League draw two weeks ago, which pitted Union against Spanish giants Madrid, Italian champions Napoli and Portuguese side Braga in this year’s group stage.

The East Berlin club had qualified for Europe’s biggest competition back in May, but it was only now that it began to feel real.

Union in the Stadio Diego Armando Maradona. Union in the Santiago Bernabeu.

Santiago Bernabéu Stadium
Union Berlin will face 14-time Champions League winners Real Madrid at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium.

To put this in context: Five years ago, Union were trying to stave off relegation in the second division.

Fourteen years ago, their were celebrating promotion from the third division as if it were a miracle, having volunteered in their thousands to help the club rebuild the stadium. A few years before that, they were playing Falkensee-Finkenkrug in the fifth tier.

This is a club which has risen from the very bottom to the very top, without the help of an oligarch or an oil state.

When Union were promoted to the Bundesliga in 2019, most people thought it was the pinnacle.

“Scheisse! We’re going up!” joked the fans as they worried what this dizzying success would do to their little community club.

Nobody could have dreamed they would soon qualify for Europe three years in a row, and eventually come up against Real Madrid.

But then Union had never had much luck with Europe. In 1968, when they qualified for the European Cup Winners’ Cup as East German cup winners, the Prague Spring and its brutal suppression by the Soviets led to a boycott of the tournament by all eastern bloc nations, denying Union the chance to compete.

In 2001, they got back into Europe on a technicality after reaching the German cup final. But as a third division no-name, there was little hope of success. Their first Europa League game against Haka Valkeakosi of Finland was delayed after UEFA cancelled all games in the wake of the 9/11 attacks. In the next round, they were knocked out by Bulgarian side Litex Lovech.

Prague Spring
Union Berlin qualified for the 1968 European Cup Winners’ Cup but a Soviet boycott – following the Prague Spring protests in the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic (above) – prevented them from taking part. © Hadtorteneti Muzeum.

In 2021, when Union reached the Conference League, the Covid pandemic prevented many fans from seeing their team in European action.

Even in last year’s Europa League, there were hurdles: a game in Belgium was held behind closed doors after fan trouble, leading the Leuven city authorities to briefly ban any German citizen from entering the town on matchday.

The dream continued nonetheless. As their side notched up famous victories over Malmö, Braga and Ajax, Union fans drank it all in, and were careful to stay true to their roots.

Union Berlin fans at the Johan Cruyff Arena, Amsterdam, for their Europa League Round of 32, 1st leg tie with AFC Ajax on 16 February 2023. © @fcunion_en (Twitter/X).

At away games, they styled themselves as the “Reisekader” or “travel cadre”, a term ironically borrowed from the bureaucracy of the old communist East Germany.

On the terraces, they sang of their team’s remarkable rise in recent years: “Back then, the second division with Damir Kreilach / Soon all of Europe will know our songs!”.

And so they will. In the coming Champions League season, Union will have to play their home games in Berlin’s Olympiastadion, as their beloved Alte Försterei home ground in East Berlin is too small for the biggest stage.

There, and in Naples and Madrid, they will sing the roof off. Union are in the big time, and there is nothing which can stop the party now.

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Forward, backward, and forward again for women’s rights

Forward, backward, and forward again for women’s rights

Guest post

Forward, backward, and forward again for women’s rights

Joanna Scutts

By Joanna Scutts
7 August 2023

Joanna Scutts reflects on the long and complicated fight for women’s suffrage in the twentieth century and how we can find hope for the future in their story.

The fight for suffrage was a long, complicated story

My book Hotbed took root in an exhibition of the same name, conceived to mark the 100th anniversary of women gaining the right to vote in New York State in 1917, three years before it became law nationwide.

I was working with a small team to launch a new, dedicated center for women’s history inside the New-York Historical Society, the oldest museum in New York City, and we knew we had to mark the moment, but how?

The fight for suffrage was a long, complicated story, stretching back to the mid-19th century, but everyone knows the ending. Was there a way to tell it in a new, surprising way?

Dorothy Newell and 'Votes for Women'

We found the seed of our answer in a photograph dating from 1915, in which a young woman, an aspiring Broadway actress named Dorothy Newell, turned her naked back into a billboard blaring ‘VOTES FOR WOMEN’.

At once elegant and risqué, this piece of political performance art went viral, 1910s-style, landing Dorothy on the front pages of local newspapers across the country.

dorothy newell votes for women
Dorothy Newell and 'Votes for Women'

Her prescient blurring of politics and entertainment, the bold use of her body to titillate and persuade, struck us as startlingly modern.

She was a symbol of a new, modern suffrage movement that harnessed the power of celebrity and mass media to push its ambitious agenda: a constitutional amendment that would grant every woman in the country the vote, all at once.

A new kind of activist and a new kind of woman

Although Dorothy’s mark on history was as fleeting as the words on her back, she represented a new kind of activist and a new kind of woman, who was fighting for freedoms above and beyond her right to participate in vote, and who increasingly, embraced the new label feminist.

A 1914 invitation to public meetings that encouraged people to discover what the new term 'feminism' was all about
A 1914 invitation to public meetings that encouraged people to discover what the new term 'feminism' was all about (Credit: New-York Historical Society)

We took Dorothy’s photograph as inspiration for an exhibition that would celebrate those women and their involvement in a kaleidoscopic array of battles for social justice.

Women’s rights were inextricable from workers’ rights, which were entwined with the battle against racism and segregation, and the push for peace against an impending world war.

At a time of extreme social inequality, rampant racism, and the concentration of power in the hands of a tiny minority, the need for change felt urgent.

Greenwich Village – a radical hotbed of new ideas

In New York, the most daring and freethinking men and women were gathering in the shabby downtown neighborhood of Greenwich Village—a radical hotbed of new ideas.

The social calendar was crowded with social and political gatherings, experimental theater and wild fancy-dress balls. Men and women sat up late into the night plotting intersecting revolutions in art, society, literature, and life.

Patchin Place, one of Greenwich Village's most iconic streets, was home to several Village radicals
Patchin Place, one of Greenwich Village's most iconic streets, was home to several Village radicals (Credit: Jessie Tarbox Beals, New-York Historical Society)

They spent their time writing and giving speeches, acting in plays, marching at rallies, publishing each other’s poetry, and hopping in and out of each others’ beds.

At the heart of it was a club called Heterodoxy

At the heart of it was a club called Heterodoxy, a gathering of feminist women who were famous or notorious in some way, whether for their writing, their activism, their professional accomplishments or simply the way they lived their lives.

Beginning in 1912, in the heart of Greenwich Village, the club met every other week, forging friendships that kept them entwined for more than 25 years.

Although it was official policy not to keep a record of their meetings—the better to allow for free discussion and debate—the club left a powerful mark on the lives of its members.

Heterodoxy members Doris Stevens, Alison Turnbull Hopkins, and another elite suffragist, Eunice Dana Brannan, dressed in their prison uniforms, photographed during their detention at Occoquan Workhouse, Virginia
Heterodoxy members Doris Stevens, Alison Turnbull Hopkins, and another elite suffragist, Eunice Dana Brannan, dressed in their prison uniforms, photographed during their detention at Occoquan Workhouse, Virginia. (Credit: Library of Congress)

In 1915, they saw a fight they could win

For the women of Heterodoxy, suffrage was the beginning of the fight, not the end. Nevertheless, in 1915, they saw a fight they could win.

A statewide referendum was being held in New York, the first in a major East Coast state, and a bellwether for the national fight.

The campaign was a joyous, ubiquitous one: suffragists pasted up posters, made films, and took over Broadway theatres; they marched in the streets; scattered leaflets from biplanes and limousines; sold placards, pins, banners, badges, pencils, fans, jewelry—anything that could carry a Votes for Women logo.

A suffragette parade in New York in the lead up to the referendum, 23 October 1915
A suffragette parade in New York in the lead up to the referendum, 23 October 1915

They went to factories to persuade the men that women’s suffrage would increase workers’ political power, and they threw lavish fundraisers in ballrooms garlanded in sunshine yellow, the color the state organizers adopted for this push. It was three solid months of pageantry and optimism. And then, they lost.

Suffrage was the beginning of the fight, not the end

In late 2016, as our team of curators and designers mapped out the narrative and the look of our exhibition, we were cautiously optimistic that our opening would be buoyed by another historic victory: the election of the United States’ first woman president.

Heterodoxy’s Lou Rogers was a political cartoonist influential in the suffrage and birth control movements. This cartoon was published in the Woman’s Journal, the newspaper of the National American Woman Suffrage Association, 2 December 1911
Heterodoxy’s Lou Rogers was a political cartoonist influential in the suffrage and birth control movements. This cartoon was published in the 'Woman’s Journal', the newspaper of the National American Woman Suffrage Association, 2 December 1911 (Credit: Schlesinger Library, Harvard Radcliffe Institute)

Hillary Clinton accepted her nomination in an all-white pantsuit, a nod to the visual style of the movement that had laid the groundwork for her nomination a century before.

Despite misgivings about the ability of one person to tackle the country’s innumerable challenges, we still felt, as those campaigners must have a century before, as though we were about to take a big step forward.

And then, of course, we lost too. That glass ceiling we’d cheered when it digitally shattered at the convention held firm, after all, and it hit us like concrete.

I remember sitting with my colleagues at lunch the next day, a grey November day when the whole city seemed to be walking around in shock, and asking ourselves whether there was any point in our work, in trying to tell true stories about American history when lies and myths held so much power.

History is a mass of untold stories

But the truth is, history is a mass of untold stories, especially if you are looking for the marginalized people, those elbowed off the simple, straight, masculine-heroic paths.

Heterodoxy member Inez Milholland, on horseback, led the 1913 suffrage parade in Washington DC, which was attacked by an angry mob
Heterodoxy member Inez Milholland, on horseback, led the 1913 suffrage parade in Washington DC, which was attacked by an angry mob (Credit: Library of Congress)

And there is hope in those stories. I found hope in the way the women of Heterodoxy weathered setbacks and disappointments, persecution and ridicule, and kept going, together.

And there is hope in those stories. I found hope in the way the women of Heterodoxy weathered setbacks and disappointments, persecution and ridicule, and kept going, together.

There wasn’t space in our exhibition to tell the individual stories of this remarkable group of women who came together to dream of what might come beyond the vote, beyond equality, beyond anything they could see around them.

I hope that in my book, Hotbed: Bohemian New York and the Secret Club that Sparked Modern Feminism, I’ve done justice to those dreams—and ours.

hotbed joanna scutts

History of feminism
Paperback
£12.99
416 pages
ISBN 9780715655085

The dazzling story of the early feminists who blazed a trail for the movement’s most radical ideas

In downtown Manhattan in 1912, a group of women gathered, all fired by a desire to change the world.

This was the first meeting of ‘Heterodoxy’, a secret social club whose members were passionate advocates of women’s suffrage, labour rights, equal marriage and free love.

Hotbed is the never-before-told story of the club whose audacious ideas and unruly acts transformed an international feminist agenda into a modern way of life.

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