Wildly different

How five women reclaimed nature in a man’s world

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Sarah Lonsdale
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Humans came from the wild. But as soon as societies began to build permanent settlements, women’s presence amidst both the dangers, and beauties, of wild nature was controlled. For men the wild is a place for heroic questing, myth making and exploration. For women, both in storytelling and in reality, they are warned to stay indoors, within the city walls, imprisoned by patriarchy. Women, however, have always challenged for their place in the wild realm beyond human statute, and this book tells the stories of five of them, their lives spanning more than 100 years. Mina Hubbard took on her dead husband’s unfinished task, to find the source of the Naskaupi River in northern Labrador, witness the great caribou migration and make contact with First Nation Americans in their homeland. Evelyn Cheesman, the first woman Keeper of Insects at London Zoo, travelled across the Pacific searching for exhibits, and in doing so helped unlock the ancient secrets of the earth. Dorothy Pilley, the mountaineer, sought spiritual union with nature, as well as freedom from society’s strictures, on the high peaks of the Alps, Snowdonia and the Rockies. Ethel Haythornthwaite’s quiet and insistent campaigning helped make the Peak District the UK’s first National Park in the face of fierce resistance from the grouse-shooting aristocracy. The Nobel Prize winner Wangari Maathai’s Green Belt Movement helped plant 30 million trees in Kenya, to reverse the environmental destruction caused by both colonial settlers and the corrupt and extractive government of Daniel arap Moi.

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