Friday, December 30, 2011

Episode 9: Dames Mathematica

Ada Lovelace and Emmy Noether - Dames of Mathematics








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Further Reading:
Ada Lovelace
"Ada: The Enchantress of Numbers" by Betty Toole (2010)
"The Calculating Passion of Ada Byron" by Joan Baum (1986)
"Ada, Countess of Lovelace, Byron's only Legitimate Daughter" by Doris Langley Moore (1977)
"Ada: A Life and Legacy" by Dorothy Stein (1985)
Sketch of the Analytical Engine by L. Menebrea. Notes by Ada Lovelace. (1843)
Great comic on Hark a Vagrant
Unbelievably thorough historiography of Ada Lovelace on Victorian Geek, invaluable resource on who said what when about Ada's much-contended legacy.
An Archetypal Bad Death: The Case of Ada Lovelace from Death in the Victorian Family by Patricia Jailand (2000)


Emmy Noether
"Modern Mathematicians" by Harry Henderson. (1996).
"The Mother of Modern Algebra" by M.B.W Tent (2008).
Great video lecture with Ransom Stephens:


Music: "Don't Make me Prove it" - Veruca Salt

Monday, December 12, 2011

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame to Joan Jett: By rock and roll, we mean Madonna, sorry, hun.

Interesting item on Salon decrying Joan Jett not getting into Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
Ha, my favorite line in here comparing Joan Jett to  Guns N Roses "Still tours constantly not as a pathetic parody of her old self"

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Episode 8: Dames of Philosophy

Simone de Beauvoir and Hannah Arendt: Logical ladies possessing giant intellects.
Forget the teachings which say that women are solely emotional creatures, incapable of sophisticated reasoning. The fact is that females have repeatedly proved throughout history that they're just as logical as their male counterparts. Listen up.


Note: Apologies on the delay, we had some sound quality/technical issues while recording.

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Further Reading:
Simone de Beauvoir:
"A Dangerous Liaison: A Biography of Simone de Beauvoir and Jean-Paul Sartre" by Carole Seymour-Jones (2008). The Overlook Press, Peter Mayer Publishers, Inc., New York. (2009)
"The Second Sex." (1949) translated by H M Parshley, Penguin (1972); published by Jonathan Cape in 1953.
"Memoirs of a Dutiful Daughter." by Simone de Beauvoir
"The Prime of Life."  By Simone de Beauvoir
"Philosophy as Passion" by Simone de Beauvoir
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy - Simone de Beauvoir 
Hannah Arendt:
Origins of Totalitarianism by Hannah Arendt
Eichmann in Jerusalem by Hannah Arendt
The Human Condition by Hannah Arendt
Men in Dark Times by Hannah Arendt
Reflections on Violence by Hannah Arendt
Reflections on Little Rock by Hannah Arendt
Hannah Arendt and Martin Heidegger by Elzbieta Ettinger
Fembio on Hannah Arendt
Arendt's Judgment by Mark Greif, Dissent Magazine
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy - Hannah Arendt
Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy - Hannah Arendt

Music: Beethoven Kreutzer Sonata

*Pictures done up by LP*
Thanks to Sasha for audio help.

Friday, October 21, 2011

Episode 7 Addendum

Hmm looks like Texas Guinan's grave and former speakeasy sites are not the only destinations from this podcast I could pay a visit to.Per this awesome blog post from The Bowery Boys, (much recommended) I could go see the bar where famed boxer John L Sullivan was too chicken to let little old lady Carrie Nation in. Though according to Google Street View, it currently seems to be a perfume shop. How anticlimactic.
-LP

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Episode 7 - Dames of Prohibition

Texas Guinan and Carrie Nation: Rabble-rousers!

(I didn't alter the Carrie picture. I didn't have to.)



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Further Reading:
Carrie Nation:
"Retelling the Life: Carrie Nation" by Fran Grace (2001)
"Vessel of Wrath" by Robert Lewis Taylor (1966)
"The Use and Need of Carry A. Nation" by Carry A. Nation (1904)


Texas Guinan:
"Hello, Sucker!" by Glenn Shirley, Austin, Texas. (1989)
"Steppin' Out." University of Chicago Press. (1981 by Lewis A. Erenberg)
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0347345/bio

**Pics of the ladies are done up fancy by LP**

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Episode 3 Follow-up: Was Mary Shelley a dirty liar?

Mayyybe not. Well at least it is possible that the moon was shining on her window if she had the vision of the creature when she said she did.

Cool article on io9 here

Ya know? When it comes to various kinds of nerding out, astronomy nerding out is definitely in my top 10, couple of notches below history nerding out of course. But gotta love the combo here.

-LP

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Episode 6: Dames of the Occult

Mina Crandon and Madame Blavatsky: Celebrities in spiritualism; trailblazers of esoteric and occult knowledge.
*WARNING* This one contains some grossness. Faking being a medium can involve some bodily mutilation that you might not want to hear about if you don't have a strong stomach.







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Further Reading:
Mina Crandon
"Spook" by Mary Roach
"The Secret Life of Houdini: The Making of America's First Super Hero" by William Kalush and Larry Sloman
and if you can find it, for the love of God tell me what he says she was thinking : 
"Margery" by Thomas Tietze

Madame Blavatsky:
"The Esoteric World of Madame Blavatsky: Insights into the Life of A Modern Sphinx." Collected by Daniel Caldwell. Quest Books, Theosophical Society in America. Wheaton, Illinois. (2000) 
http://www.blavatsky.net/blavatsky/madame-blavatsky.htm
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ZWtN6AkDXo
"Isis Unveiled." by Madame Blavatsky. (1877).
"The Secret Doctrine." by Madame Blavatsky, edited and annotated by Michael Gomes. 
*Lindsay's Disclaimer for this Episode: It was my first week back in Russia, drinking Russian beer. That being said, I don't soberly agree that rigging one's body to "give birth" to rabbits is a good idea even if your government is paying you a great pension to do so.


Big Thanks to Sasha for cleaning up our audio! 

**Pics are done up fancy by LP.**

Monday, September 5, 2011

Pirating Honorable Mention: Sadie the Goat


The trouble with pirates is only the most famous leave behind some documentation.
 

This here's an honorable mention. Sadie the Goat, who I decided not to go with since the consensus seems to be that since the only documentation on her shows up in Herbert Asbury's Gangs of New York that she could be fictional.

Gangs of New York is 
an entertaining and vivid read but far from an indisputable source. In the words of Russell Shorto in the foreword to the edition that I read, Asbury "wasn't writing history - there are no footnotes in the book, no evidence of cross-referencing of sources - but popular entertainment. And he was working with material that would be hard to verify even if you were getting it as events unfolded."

So while some parts are heavily specific about this patrolmen dying in the Draft Riots on this and such streetcorner on this day, there are also accounts of 8-foot tall gangleaders related as fact. So it's hard to tell what is legend, and it's just got a bibliography at the end, with some of those sources agreed upon as being more folklore than fact.

So barring a discovery of Sadie's galley, or daguerreotype of a dangerous looking one-eared lady shipboard, her existence will remain unconfirmed.

That all aside, should Sadie have existed, she was a badass of high caliber.

There were pirates in New York City well into the nineteenth century. All that waterfront, all that shipping, all those cops on the take, it seems inevitable. One of those in on this burgeoning industry was the Charlton Street Gang, but they had only limited success until they were taken over by a lass called Sadie the Goat.

Sadie had previously kept her base of operations in the Fourth Ward. She gained her nickname of Sadie the Goat because her preferred method of robbery was to lie in wait for a well dressed looking gentleman, then headbutt him in the stomach to surprise and incapacitate him. Then, as he was reeling from that, her accomplice would come up from behind him and whack him across the head. They could then rob the unconscious dupe at their leisure.

But then she made the mistake of tangling with Gallus Mag, a six-foot bartender and bouncer in the Fourth Ward. If you gave her trouble while being tossed from her bar (and one wonders, just what in those bad old days, would get you kicked out of a bar) you lost your ear to her jaws, and she gained a new ornament in her collection. For you'd be tossed from the bar, but that little part of you would stay behind, pickled in a jar, as a warning.

Well, Sadie must have given her trouble. She wound up fleeing, sans one ear, to the West Side to hide out. This was around 1869, and the Charlton Street Gang were in need of some leadership. An ambitious woman, she stole them all a small sloop, raised the Jolly Roger and paced the deck as they robbed ships and farmsteads all up and down the Hudson all the way to Poughkeepsie.

Occasionally, they branched out into kidnapping as well, holding men, women and children for ransom. She was also known to make her enemies walk the plank.

For several months, this was a very successful venture, but then the farmers began to arm themselves, and match her raiding party's firepower. So Sadie abandoned her sloop, and went back to the Fourth Ward. She made a truce with Gallus Mag, declaring her queen of the waterfront.

Gallus Mag was so touched by this that she gave Sadie back her ear, though I'm not sure that it would have been so identifiable after months in the pickling jar. Sadie wore the ear around her neck on a locket for the rest of her life. And if I were an author of children's books, I'd make the touching final page, a drawing of that huge ogre of a woman and her one-eared pirate pal with that bit of macabre jewelry around her neck walking arm and arm down the filthy streets of the Fourth Ward. This is probably why I am not the author of any children's books.

So honorable mention, dear Sadie, should you have existed. I raise my glass to you. 

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Episode 5: Dames a Pirating

Lai Choi San and Grace O'Malley: Pirates. Need we say more?




      

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Further Reading:

Lai Choi San
I Sailed With Chinese Pirates, written by American journalist, Aleko Lilius. Oxford University Press. (1930)

Grace O'Malley
Ireland's Pirate Queen, The True Story of Grace O'Malley by Anne Chambers 
Pirate Queen, the life of Grace O'Malley by Judith Cook
The Pirate Queen: In Search of Grace O'Malley and other Legendary Women of the Sea by Barbara Sjoholm


Friday, August 12, 2011

Episode 4: Dames of Espionage

Virginia Hall and Melita Norwood: Wily spies.



Norwood in her cottage garden in Bexleyheath, England after finally being exposed as a top KGB atom spy.

*Apologies on the audio quality, not as up to par as the others, had the wrong setting on when recording.*





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Further Reading:


Virginia Hall
"The Wolves at the Door : The True Story of America's Greatest Female Spy" Judith L. Pierson (2005) The Lyons Press
The People of the CIA: Virginia Hall 
"The Women who lived for danger" Marcus Binney (2003) Harper Collins


Melita Norwood
"Mistresses of Mayhem: The Book of Women Criminals." Francine Hornberger (2002) page 161.
"The Spy Who Came in from the Co-op." David Burke. (Woodbridge, UK: Boydell Press, 2008)
Overview of the Melita Norwood papers
Melita Norwood: The Intelligence Officer's Bookshelf
A brief history of the family of Mrs. Letty Norwood (March 2000) The Melita Norwood Papers.




***Pics of the ladies are done up fancy by LP***


Music: Nina Simone - Feeling Good

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Hacker Girl Scout?! Hell Yeah

Wow, I thought I was cool for a Girl Scout just cuz all we wanted to do was camp, listen to Green Day, and drink IBC root beer. I had, and let's face it, have nothing on this girl. Cyfi, I salute you!

Oh. Spies will be up soon. Lindsay, like Scruffy, has a schedule conflict. Then Pirates!

Monday, July 25, 2011

Episode 3: Dames Grotesquerie



Mary Shelley and Flannery O'Connor: Innovators of grotesque, macabre and religious literature; science-fiction.



**O'Connor with her cherished peacocks in Millidgeville, Georgia.**






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Further Reading:
Flannery O'Connor:
"O'Connor Collected Works." Library Classics of the United States, Inc., New York. (1988)
"O'Connor Letters." published by Regina O'Connor by arrangement with Farrar, Straus and Giroux.          (1979)
"Flannery: A Life of Flannery O'Connor." by Brad Gooch. (2009)
"Flannery O'Connor: A Life." by Jean W. Cash (2002)
For O'Connor's cartoons: http://www.gcsu.edu/flannerycartoons/
http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/nge/Article.jsp?id=h-498


Mary Shelley
"Mary Shelley" by Miranda Seymour
"Frankenstein" by Mary Shelley with critical essays
"The Last Man" by Mary Shelley
"Lives of the Most Eminent French Writers" by Mary Shelley
Cabinet Cyclopedia Volumes: 
Lives of the Most Eminent Literary and Scientific Men of Italy, Spain and Portugal, I, II,III 
(For Italy, Shelley Wrote : Petrarch, Boccaccio, Lorenzo de'Medici, Marsiglio Ficino, Giovanni Pico della Mirandola, Angelo Poliziano, Bernardo Pulci, Luca Pulci, Luigi Pulci, Cieco Da Ferrara, Burchiello, Bojardo, Berni, Machiavelli, Guicciardini, Vittoria Colonna, Guarini, Chiabrera, Tassoni, Marini, Filicaja, Metastasio, Goldoni, Alfieri, Monti, and Ugo Foscolo. For Spain and Portugal, she wrote all but Ercilla.)
Lives of the Most Eminent Literary and Scientific Men of France, I, II  
(Shelley wrote:Montaigne, Corneille, Rochefoucauld, Molière, Pascal, Madame de Sévigné, Boileau, Racine, Fénelon, Voltaire, Rousseau, Condorcet, Mirabeau, Madame Roland, and Madame de Staël)


Music: Bottom Below by Holly Golightly



***Pics of the ladies are done up fancy by LP***

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Episode 2: Dames of Incest and Political Prowess

Agrippina the Younger and Queen Semiramis of Assyria/Babylon: Political savoir faire; incest

**Semiramis is said to be the inspiration for the
Starbucks symbol and the statue of liberty.**







Further Reading:

Queen Semiramis: 
"The Two Babylons" by Alexander Hislop (1853). 
"Famous Women" by Giovanni Boccaccio (1361). 
Pergamon Museum Babylon: Myth and Truth 
The Legend of Semiramis
Semiramis - Queen of Babylon
*For more about the myth of Semiramis (Shamiran) here's an enlightening video 


Agrippina the Younger:
Agrippina: Sex, Power and Politics in the Early Roman Empire by Anthony A Barrett
Representing Agrippina: Constructions of Female Power in the Early Roman Empire by Judith Ginsburg
Annals by Tacitus
The Women of the Caesars by Guglielmo Ferrero 
Twelve Caesars by Suetonius
Roman History by Cassius Dio

Music: Gloria Jones - Tainted Love

Dame is a Four Letter Word would like to take this moment to acknowledge that incest is not psychologically or biologically healthy, no matter what ancient Babylon, ancient Rome or Return of the Jedi would have you believe.

***Pics of the ladies are done up fancy by LP***

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Badass Physicist: Lisa Randall

So, Lisa Randall is this physicist doing pretty interesting work at Harvard. Her articles are pretty fascinating. I suggest having a gander.


Here's a post of hers I found called "The Beauty of Branes."

Friday, July 15, 2011

"Sisterhood of Spies"

Just an awesome article I stumbled across. Nothing like two sweet-looking old ladies telling stories that involve grenades as a practical joke.


The Adventures of Doris and Betty


And oh yes, there will be a spy episode soon. 

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Episode 1: Dames with a Heater and a Dream

Fanya Kaplan & Lolita Lebron: Armed insurrectionists.


*Credit where credit's due* 

Now, you've heard of the Black Hand gang and John Wilkes Booth, but when it comes to ladies....




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For Further Reading:

Fanya Kaplan:
www.j-grit.com/radicals-fanya-kaplan.php
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/RUSkaplan.htm

Lolita Lebron:
The Ladies Gallery by Irene Vilar
La Prisoneria by Federico Ribes Tovar
News Coverage of incident, and trial
Remembering Lolita Lebron - NPR
"Lolita Lebron Would Rather Die in Prison" by Anne Nelson, The Nation 8/11/1979
"The National Security Council during the Carter Administration and the liberation of the Puerto Rican Nationalists in 1979." by Francisco Ortiz Santini, Centro Journal, Fall 2007.

Music: Patti Smith - Smells Like Teen Spirit

For clarification on what we're about with this idea, check out the intro:
http://dameisa4letterword.blogspot.com/2011/07/intro-tiiiiime.html

**I'd like to add that the idea of 'subjunctive history' that I mention in the podcast is unoriginal. Its an idea which has been made in various forms by historians but is one which I was fortunate to be introduced to by the character of Dacon in Alan Bennett's play "The History Boys."**

***Pics of the ladies are done up fancy by LP***

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Episode 0: Introduction Tiiiiime!

So this here is our quick statement of purpose as to what it is we're hoping to do with this blog/podcast.

Basically we're saddened that we spent a huge chunk of our lives ignorant of all the cool women historical figures we could have had as role models. Queens and scientists and philosophers, insurrectionists, imaginers, and spies, all going unreported because we were too busy hearing about Betsy Ross or Laura Ingalls Wilder. Oh dears, there's so much more to it than that.



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So here it is. We're gonna tell you about those ladies. And forget whatever your mama told you about the things a woman should or shouldn't do, because, and it's been true for a while, dame is a four letter word.