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0:00.0 | This is the BBC. |
0:02.0 | Thanks for downloading this episode of In Our Time. |
0:05.0 | There's a reading list to go with it on our website, |
0:07.0 | and you can get news about our programs if you follow us on Twitter |
0:10.0 | at BBC In Our Time. |
0:12.0 | I hope you enjoyed the programs. |
0:14.0 | Hello, I'm Fribane who is a prolific playwright for the Restoration stage, |
0:18.0 | a poet, a writer of fiction, and a sometimes spy, |
0:21.0 | and a life-spaned one on the most turbulent times, |
0:24.0 | turbulent times in English history. |
0:26.0 | She is born as a civil war-sited in 1640, |
0:29.0 | flourished under the restored steward, monarchy, and stayed loyal to James II |
0:33.0 | after the glorious revolution, right up to her death in 1689. |
0:37.0 | And she was the first English woman to make her living from writing. |
0:41.0 | As tests changed, she was dismissed as two-body, |
0:44.0 | but Virginia Woolf wrote, |
0:46.0 | all women together, or to let flowers fall upon the grave of Afraben, |
0:50.0 | but it was she who earned them the right to speak their minds. |
0:53.0 | We need to discuss Afraben, our Janet Todd, |
0:56.0 | former President of Lucy Cavendish College Cambridge University, |
1:00.0 | Ross Ballester, Professor of 18th Century Literature and Mansfield College University of Oxford, |
1:05.0 | and Claire Bodeach, Professor Doctoral Research Associate in English and Drama |
... |
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