

Infinite Women
Infinite Women
Tune in for women's stories from throughout history, and check out our website, infinite-women.com, for bios, recommendations and more!
Episodes
Mentioned books

Oct 23, 2023 • 52min
Sara Hardy on Edna Walling
Sara Hardy, author of The Unusual Life of Edna Walling, joins us to talk about the iconic, queer English-Australian landscape designer.Buy the book: https://www.allenandunwin.com/browse/book/Sara-Hardy-Unusual-Life-of-Edna-Walling-9781741142297Read the interview transcript: https://www.infinite-women.com/wp-content/uploads/Sara-Hardy-on-Edna-Walling-transcript.pdfRead more about Edna Walling on the Infinite Women site: https://www.infinite-women.com/women/edna-walling/

Oct 16, 2023 • 19min
Dr. Kaley Butten on Dr. Frances Oldham Kelsey
Dr. Kaley Butten, a Research Scientist with CSIRO, joins us to talk about pharmacologist and physician Dr. Frances Oldham Kelsey, who prevented thousands of birth deformities and whose work led to stricter safety regulations in the U.S. and beyond.Read more about Kelsey on the Infinite Women site: https://www.infinite-women.com/women/frances-oldham-kelsey/Read the interview transcript: https://www.infinite-women.com/wp-content/uploads/Kaley-Butten-on-Frances-Oldham-Kelsey.pdf

Oct 9, 2023 • 56min
Dr Shelley Stamp on Lois Weber
Dr. Shelley Stamp, a professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz, is the author of Movie-Struck Girls: Women and Motion Picture Culture after the Nickelodeon and Lois Weber in Early Hollywood. She joins us to discuss Lois's career and how her personal story reflects the history of early Hollywood, especially for women writers, directors and actors.Read more about Dr Stamp and her work: shelleystamp.netRead the interview transcript: https://www.infinite-women.com/wp-content/uploads/Shelley-Stamp-on-Lois-Weber.pdfRead a short biography of Weber on the Infinite Women site, writteny by Dr Stamp for the Women Film Pioneers Project: https://www.infinite-women.com/women/lois-weber/

Oct 2, 2023 • 1h
Loretta Smith on Alice Anderson
Loretta Smith, author of A Spanner in the Works: The extraordinary story of Alice Anderson and Australia's first all-girl garage, joins us to talk about Alice's incredible, but tragically short, life. Buy the book: https://www.hachette.com.au/loretta-smith/a-spanner-in-the-works-the-extraordinary-story-of-alice-anderson-and-australias-first-all-girl-garageRead the interview transcript: https://www.infinite-women.com/wp-content/uploads/Loretta-Smith-on-Alice-Anderson-transcript.pdf

Sep 25, 2023 • 1h 16min
Dr. Carrie Gibson on the stories of enslaved women
Dr. Carrie Gibson, author of Empire’s Crossroads: A History of the Caribbean from Columbus to the Present Day and El Norte: The Epic and Forgotten Story of Hispanic North America, joins us to talk about Mary Prince, subject of one of the earliest slave narratives. With Prince as a starting point, we delve into the complexities of how the stories of enslaved and formerly enslaved women like Sojourner Truth and Elizabeth Freeman were told - for better or worse - by white abolitionists, and how we can do justice to their stories today with questionable, scant documentation.Read more about Dr. Gibson: carriegibson.co.ukRead the interview transcript: https://www.infinite-women.com/wp-content/uploads/Carrie-Gibson-on-Mary-Prince-and-who-tells-black-womens-stories-.pdfImage: Sojourner Truth

Sep 18, 2023 • 1h 19min
Dr. Leah Redmond Chang on Catherine de' Medici, Mary, Queen of Scots and Elisabeth de Valois
Dr. Leah Redmond Chang, author of Young Queens: Three Renaissance Women and the Price of Power, joins us for a conversation about the lives and relationships of Catherine de' Medici, her daughter-in-law Mary, Queen of Scots and her daughter Elisabeth de Valois, and how these women's experiences reflect larger patterns for royal women and women in general, even today.Read the interview transcript

Sep 11, 2023 • 31min
Morgan Gilbert on ancient women physicians
CSIRO Communications Officer Morgan Gilbert joins us for a chat about women doctors of the ancient world, and how CSIRO's Mother app is helping pregnant people today.Learn more about the Mother app: https://vimeo.com/770947091Read the interview transcript: https://www.infinite-women.com/wp-content/uploads/Morgan-Gilbert-on-ancient-doctors-transcript.pdfRead more about Agdonice on the Infinite Women site: https://www.infinite-women.com/women/agnodice/

Sep 4, 2023 • 49min
Dr. Gwendolyn Collaço on the artistry of Ottoman wedding trousseaus
Dr. Gwendolyn Collaço, Collections Curator at MIT's Aga Khan Documentation Center, joins us to talk about wedding trousseaus as curated collections that were meticulously displayed and evaluated before they were ever used in a household. Women played the part of artist, curator and performer in the creation and presentation of the trousseaus.Read the interview transcript: https://www.infinite-women.com/wp-content/uploads/Gwen-Collaco-on-Ottoman-wedding-trousseaus.pdfImage: Wedding procession on the Bosphorus, by Jean Baptiste Vanmour, Istanbul, c. 1720 - c. 1737. Rijksmuseum, SK-A-2000. (Photo: Public Domain)

Aug 28, 2023 • 3min
Legal battles: Elizabeth Freeman
Elizabeth Freeman, also known as MumBet, fought a legal battle for her freedom from slavery in 1700s Massachusetts.
Elizabeth had been born into slavery around 1744, and was given to her owner’s daughter when she was just seven years old, remaining in that woman’s household for almost 30 years. In 1780, Elizabeth heard the newly ratified Massachusetts State Constitution, which included that “All men are born free and equal, and have certain natural, essential, and unalienable rights.” With that in mind, she approached a lawyer and abolitionist, Theodore Sedgewick, who agreed to represent her in court. According to his daughter, Catherine, Elizabeth told him, "I heard that paper read yesterday, that says, all men are created equal, and that every man has a right to freedom. I'm not a dumb critter; won't the law give me my freedom?”
That same year, she reportedly prevented her mistress from striking a servant girl with a heated shovel, receiving a deep wound on her own arm as she shielded the girl. She refused to hide the wound as it healed, displaying the evidence of abuse for all to see. Catharine Maria Sedgwick quotes Elizabeth as saying: "Madam never again laid her hand on Lizzy. I had a bad arm all winter, but Madam had the worst of it. I never covered the wound, and when people said to me, before Madam,—'Why, Betty! what ails your arm?' I only answered—'ask missis!' Which was the slave and which was the real mistress?"
In 1781, Elizabeth and another slave in the household, named Brom, became the first African-Americans to file and win a freedom lawsuit in Massachusetts. The county court found slavery to be inconsistent with the new State Constitution, granting them their freedom. Their case was cited as a precedent later that year when another freedom suit, Quock Walker v. Jennison, came before the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. Elizabeth and Brom’s case laid the legal foundation for that court to essentially end slavery in the state.
After gaining her freedom, Elizabeth took the name Elizabeth Freeman, chose to work as a paid and respected servant in Sedgewick’s home and earned a reputation as a healer, midwife and nurse. After she died at age 85, she was the only non-family member interred in the Sedgewick family plot, where the inscription on her tombstone included “She could neither read nor write, yet in her own sphere she had no superior or equal.”

Aug 21, 2023 • 16min
Dr. Jess Bugeja on Dr. Marian Diamond
Dr. Jess Bugeja, a CERC postdoctoral fellow in the CSIRO’s Australian eHealth Research Centre, Neurodevelopment and Plasticity team, joins us to talk about neuroplasticity pioneer Dr Marian Diamond, one of the founders of neuroscience. Read the interview transcript: https://www.infinite-women.com/wp-content/uploads/Interview-notes_-Jess-Bugeja-on-Dr-Marian-Diamond.pdf