Sarah Lonsdale
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Introduction
It is a quiet place, cold and beautiful
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Why is it that in myth, and reality, women’s presence in wild nature has been controlled, limited and, in some cultures, forbidden by men? Since the very first story ever written down, the Epic of Gilgamesh, inscribed on tablets thousands of years ago, stories imagine the wild as a site of men’s heroic myth making whereas women are kept behind the city’s thick walls. Only monstrous, transgressive or supernatural women are found in the wild, to be feared, or consulted, or punished. In reality, practices such as Purdah, and foot-binding, chaperoning and religious banishment of women from sacred places, as well as practical constraints such as restrictive clothing, have all conspired to limit women’s presence in the wild and keep them bound to the hearth and home. Nineteenth-century western science only reinforced ideas of women’s helplessness and intellectual inadequacy. When women, like Mary Kingsley, did travel and explore, their narratives were very different from the masculine ideal of man-versus-nature, the hero that must conquer often feminine landscapes in order to reach his true self. The five women subjects of this book represent five different phases of our modern encounters with the wild, from exploration, to scientific research, to sport and leisure, and latterly, to conservation and rewilding, as we begin to understand the damage we have done to this fragile planet.

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Wildly different

How five women reclaimed nature in a man’s world

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