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Mutual Admiration Society, Mo Moulton

Label
Mutual Admiration Society, Mo Moulton
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 299-356) and index
resource.biographical
collective biography
Illustrations
portraitsillustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Mutual Admiration Society
Nature of contents
bibliography
Responsibility statement
Mo Moulton
Summary
Dorothy L. Sayers (1893-1957) was a renowned crime novelist who achieved fame and fortune during a period that historian Mo Moulton calls 'the day after the revolution'. In a time when just as many doors were closed to women as open, Sayers found professional success with her Lord Peter Wimsey novels. Yet she never could have done it without the cohort of remarkable women she met at university -- all of whom would go on to challenge societal norms and fight for equality of opportunity in their own way. In 1912, Dorothy L. Sayers and five friends founded a writing group at Somerville College, Oxford; they called themselves the 'Mutual Admiration Society'. Smart, bold, serious, and funny, these women were also sheltered and chaperoned, barred from receiving degrees despite taking classes and passing exams. But within a few short years, World War I rapidly expanded the rights and opportunities available to women, including the right to vote (1918) and access to the professions (1919). In October 1920, members of the MAS returned to Oxford to receive full degrees. Mutual Admiration Society follows these six women as they navigate the complexities of adulthood, work, intimacy, and sex in Interwar England. Bringing these women to vivid life, Moulton reveals how Dorothy L. Sayers was intimately intertwined with the members of the MAS -- and how, together, they fought their way into modernity
Target audience
adult
resource.variantTitle
Mutual Admiration Society, how Dorothy L. Sayers and her Oxford circle remade the world for women