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A Dirty, Filthy Book
- Sex, Scandal, and One Woman’s Fight in the Victorian Trial of the Century
- Narrated by: Rachel Bavidge
- Length: 10 hrs and 25 mins
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Summary
Brought to you by Penguin.
Sex and Scandal in the Victorian 'trial of the century'
June, 1877: the petite 29-year-old Annie Besant stands motionless before the 75-year-old Judge towering over her in the Palace of Westminster. Lord Chief Justice Cockburn is presiding over the scandalous 'trial of the century' where Annie Besant and her confidante Charles Bradlaugh have been charged with the unforgiveable crime of publishing and selling a guide to birth control. Charged with obscenity, she argued—controversially and outrageously, for the time—that it was a woman's right to be able to choose to have children. The riveting trial over freedom of speech and the rights of women captivated the British public, caused outrage across the grey Victorian establishment and helped transform Annie Besant into one of the most famous women in the Empire.
Drawing on unpublished archives, private papers and court-room transcripts, and an incredible cast of characters including Queen Victoria, George Bernard Shaw, Charles Darwin, and JS Mill, A Dirty, Filthy Book tells a gripping story of double standards that will horrify and delight in equal measure. At its heart is one of the most fascinating women of Victorian society, a little-known pioneer who single-handedly refused to accept the role that the establishment assigned her. Annie's trial lit the flame of social change, free speech and women's rights that is still burning around the world almost 150 years later.
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What listeners say about A Dirty, Filthy Book
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- Peter Munro
- 09-04-24
Annie Besant
What a woman. She was always someone I had the deeepest respect for but now she is my absolute hero. Go Annie
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- jlc37
- 19-02-24
Superficial History
This book is oversold ("trial of the century"). It retells a familiar story, that of Annie Besant and Charles Bradlaugh's prosecution for obscenity in 1877. The trial transcript is well known and the key passages here lean upon it heavily with occasionally glib interjections. The beginning and end of the book squeeze in some other details of Besant's fascinating biography in double-quick time. This kind of book is very popular now: history books based on episodes buttressed by hyperbolic claims for importance and relevance. The tone is also familiar, holding the readers hand, breathlessly imagining its main subjects feeling the rain on their skin, hearing the cries of street vendors, seeing motes illuminated in the sun's rays and so on. It's fine. The reading is clear and competent.
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