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Wild Hope

English

By (author): Marisa Bate

Retracing my mothers footsteps in search of womens freedom

1974. A 22-year-old Jacqui French stands for a photograph in Omaha, Nebraska, thousands of miles from home.

Behind a carefree smile lies a fierce hope, fuelled by the promise of a new beginning and the tapestry of opportunity an America of Gloria Steinem, Dorothy Pitman Hughes, and the newly passed Roe v. Wade, appeared to offer.

The world was changing, and womens fortunes seemed to be changing with it.

It was this photo of her mother, discovered by accident decades later, that set Marisa on the path to writing this book. The face echoed one she knew intimately, yet the image revealed an untold story. Marisas memories of her mother are of a woman shorn of that same carefree energy, a mum worn down by the direct actions of men in her life, still resolutely determined to show Marisa and her brother a world wider than their own. Generous with what little time single motherhood and a full-time job afforded her. An inspirational sharer of stories. But tired. Always tired. The photo offered a glimpse of something different, of what came before.

Today this story of promise similarly seems at risk of being written over, as women around the world suffer in the face of populism, a politics that thrives on divisiveness, and a determined assault on womens rights. Meanwhile, the women for whom this all feels disturbingly familiar are being lost to time. That same tapestry of opportunity now feels threadbare. Did hope, for Marisas mother and women like her, get left in 1974?

The answer lies in what happened in between.

Following a great feminist tradition of sharing womens stories, and with a keen understanding of the principal the personal is political, Marisa will attempt to fill in the gaps. In Wild Hope, Marisa traces her mothers story across decades, following in her footsteps to discover what happened next. In doing so, a much bigger story of women across that same period will be told, as she seeks context for the events that shaped her mothers life.

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Original price €21.99
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Product Details
  • Weight: 480g
  • Dimensions: 141 x 222mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Jun 2023
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9780008392413

About Marisa Bate

Marisa Bate was the first member of staff at the Webby-winning The Pool and has built a respected and trusted name as a feminist journalist writing for amongst others the Guardian the Times The Telegraph the i Paper the Independent Glamour Marie Claire Cosmopolitan PORTER Grazia Stylist Red and Vogue.co.uk. She is the author of The Periodic Table of Feminism (Ebury 2018) which was published in the US by Seal Press and included in Bustles best books of the year. Marisa is a regular commentator on feminist issues with recent appearances across TV radio including BBC Radio 4s The World Tonight and Womans Hour. Marisa holds an MA in Twentieth Century Literature and its Intellectual Contexts from Goldsmiths London. Her piece about Doria Ragland single mothers and her own mother was The Pools highest performing piece of content ever.

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