4.8 • 5.8K Ratings
🗓️ 15 July 2022
⏱️ 144 minutes
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“…a mad, wicked folly…” — Queen Victoria about the notion of women having the right to vote
“When I watched a policeman fell a girl to the ground and kick her across the platform, my only regret was that I had no weapon with which to strike him an effective blow.” — Eunice G. Murray
“£100 to any man who can defeat him. Notwithstanding the physical disadvantages against heavier men (for Tani weighs 9 stone only), Apollo will pay any living man twenty guineas who Tani fails to defeat in fifteen minutes: Professional champion wrestlers specially invited.” — Music Hall advertisement
“Physical force seems to be the only thing in which women have not demonstrated their equality to men, and whilst we are waiting for the evolution which is slowly taking place and bringing about that equality, we might just as well take time by the forelock and use ju-jitsu." — Edith Garrud
These days, pretty much any time I run into a movie or a book or a tv series with a strong woman among the lead characters, almost inevitably I run into comments by people whining about it, basically implying that strong women are a Hollywood invention created purely to satisfy some PC, affirmative action requirement. What we play with today is not that kind of a story. There’s nothing fictional about the rather intense ladies starring in this episode. One of them, in particular, Edith Garrud is Exhibit A when it comes to real life tough women from humanity’s past.
Our story takes place at the very beginning of the 1900s in England, and it weaves together some rather unlikely elements: how the upper classes’ fear of crime associated with urbanization led to the popularization of Asian martial arts, how the very legitimate request for women to have the right to vote unleashed some rather extreme violence… We’ll talk about suffragettes and terrorism, the early days of pro wrestling, Sherlock Holmes, and some Japanese expats (including that Mitsuyo Maeda destined to set in motion a sequence of events leading to the creation of modern MMA and the UFC.) And most of all, we’ll talk about Edith Garrud, one of the very first women to become a martial arts teacher and to star in the granddaddy of martial arts movies.
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0:00.0 | Whether you like history or not, if you care about bravery, wisdom, passion, |
0:04.7 | large-in-the-life characters and some of the most emotionally intense moments in the human experience, |
0:09.7 | then you've come to the right place. The Niela Bollelli is a history professor, writer, |
0:14.8 | and martial artist and he shall be your guide on a journey to the place where history and epic collide. |
0:44.8 | Hello ladies and gentlemen, I am back. I'm back in more ways than one as it turns out. I'm back in |
1:00.8 | the sense that this is the first episode that I published on a free feed since the last December. |
1:06.9 | I'm also back on a more substantial and permanent basis in the sense that my three-year contract |
1:15.2 | with Luminarias come to an end. And now I'm going to be out of a paywall and back to publishing |
1:23.8 | episodes on a regular basis on all the three feeds that I can get the podcasts on. |
1:30.3 | So that's a big change. If you have missed the podcast while it was on Luminaria, |
1:34.7 | here you go. Your prayers have been answered so to speak. Or at least I hope that you care about |
1:40.8 | the podcast enough to reserve a thought here and there and hoping it will come back on a free feed. |
1:45.8 | Well, either way, here it is. What's going to happen now? Well, first I guess, let me say, |
1:51.9 | I'm thankful for the time with Luminaria because the reality is that the reason why I went there |
1:57.2 | to begin with is because they made things so much easier for me in a way that their financial |
2:05.1 | support was extraordinary. It's made huge changes in my life for my family, so I don't really |
2:12.1 | regret that part. That was fantastic. Of course, behind the paywall means I'm going to miss a |
2:18.7 | whole lot of you guys. Especially people internationally who did at a harder time |
2:23.2 | signing up to Luminaria or people who simply didn't feel like signing up to a paywall. |
2:29.6 | Either way, that is all done. From now on, it's going to be free feeds. |
2:36.4 | Or rather, let me rephrase. For now on, I hope to be free feeds because I really don't want to |
2:44.0 | do paywalls anymore. I feel that I enjoy creating podcasts that then people get to year and clearly |
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