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Woman's Hour

Anna Lapwood, Femicide research, June Almeida

Woman's Hour

BBC

Society & Culture

4.13K Ratings

🗓️ 6 May 2020

⏱️ 46 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Anna Lapwood is one of the UK’s few female concert organists. She was the first woman to be awarded an Organ Scholarship at Magdalen College, Oxford, in its 560-year history. She was then appointed the youngest ever Director of Music at Pembroke College at Cambridge University aged just 21. She has used this position to spearhead a number of initiatives including a choir for 11-18 year old girls and the Cambridge Organ Experience for Girls which encourages girls to take up the organ. We hear her Pembroke Chapel Choir performing Media Vita by Karensa Briggs. Anna's also making her presenting debut hosting BBC Four’s coverage of the BBC Young Musician 2020.

MPs are to try to outlaw the courtroom murder defence of “rough sex gone wrong” during parliamentary debates on the domestic abuse bill, as cases of domestic violence soar during the coronavirus lockdown. Elizabeth Yardley is Professor of Criminology and Director of the Centre for Applied Criminology at Birmingham City University. She tells us about her research into femicide in Great Britain in the 21st Century and what action she thinks needs to be taken to save women's lives and achieve justice for those killed.

In 1964, June Almeida identified the first human coronavirus at her laboratory in St Thomas' Hospital in London. Her paper to a peer-reviewed journal was rejected because the referees said the images she produced were just bad pictures of influenza virus particles. She died in 2007 and is only now getting recognition. Medical writer, George Winter explains more about how her research helps us in understanding COVID-19.

Inspired by the tradition of May Queens, the Queens of Industry represented industries like coal mining, railways, wool and cotton. The tradition began in the 1920s and took young women out of their day to day lives to promote their industry and represent their fellow workers. They were celebrated at an exhibition at Leeds Industrial Museum in 2018 and Louise Adamson talked to the exhibition’s curator, John McGoldrick; Deborah Barry, who was Northumbria Coal Queen in 1982 and Doreen Fletcher, née Kerfoot, who was Yorkshire Wool Queen in 1947.

Another in our series of interviews with women around the world who are sewing face masks at home for family, friends and sometimes health-workers to wear during the pandemic. Sara Fitzell is Maori and lives on the North Island of New Zealand.

Presented by Jenni Murray Produced by Jane Thurlow

Interviewed guest: Elizabeth Yardley Interviewed guest: George Winter Interviewed guest: Anna Lapwood Reporter: Louise Adamson Reporter: Maria Margaronis

Transcript

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0:00.0

Just before this BBC podcast gets underway, here's something you may not know.

0:04.6

My name's Linda Davies and I Commission Podcasts for BBC Sounds.

0:08.4

As you'd expect, at the BBC we make podcasts of the very highest quality featuring the most knowledgeable

0:14.3

experts and genuinely engaging voices. What you may not know is that the BBC

0:20.4

makes podcasts about all kinds of things like pop stars,

0:24.6

poltergeist, cricket, and conspiracy theories and that's just a few examples.

0:29.7

If you'd like to discover something a little bit unexpected, find your next podcast over at BBC Sounds.

0:36.2

Hello Jenny Murray welcoming you to the Women's Hour Podcast for Wednesday, the 6th of May 2020. Good morning. Anna Lapwood is a concert

0:47.5

organist presenter of the coverage of the BBC Young Musician 2020 and creator of the hashtag Play Like a Girl.

0:55.8

We'll talk and hear some of her music.

0:58.9

The woman who discovered the first human coronavirus in 1964 who was June Almeida. In our series of

1:07.9

women making masks for friends and family during the pandemic we meet

1:11.3

Sarah who's Maori and lives on New Zealand's North Island.

1:16.0

Queens of industry inspired by the tradition of the May Queen, the women who were chosen to promote coal mining, railways, wool and cotton, and with another

1:26.7

of your laughing babies sent to us by you after we discussed why babies laugh today, Luke, will cheer us up.

1:36.8

You may have seen in the papers yesterday that a husband in Ipswich had been charged

1:41.3

with the murder of his wife, She had been fatally wounded with a gun.

1:46.2

So far during the lockdown we know there were at least 16 domestic murders of women and children

1:51.9

between the 23rd of March and the 12th of April

1:55.2

according to a group called Counting Dead Women and clearly the numbers are going up.

2:02.3

Domestic violence has risen up the political agenda in recent weeks and months and the domestic

2:07.6

abuse bill currently being discussed in Parliament is looking to outlaw the defense of rough sex gone wrong which came to

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