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Published anonymously six years prior to Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park—yet largely ignored for two centuries—the Regency-era epistolary novel The Woman of Colour: A Tale is the only one of its kind to feature a racially-conscious Black heroine at its center. Dr. Leigh-Michil George, a lecturer in the English Department at Geffen Academy at UCLA, joins us to discuss the novel and its historical importance as well as its influence on Regency-era television adaptations of Sanditon and Bridgerton.
Discussed in this episode:
The Woman of Colour: A Tale by Anonymous (Broadview Press)
Dr. Leigh-Michil George
Mansfield Park by Jane Austen
Sanditon (PBS)
Bridgerton (Netflix)
Bridgerton series by Julia Quinn
Sanditon by Jane Austen
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
Elizabeth Bennett
Caroline Bingley
Netherfield Park
Jamaica
“Black People in Britain During the Regency” (National Portrait Gallery)
“The Abolition of Slavery in Britain” (Historic UK)
Olivia Carpenter (University of York)
Support the show
For episodes and show notes, visit:
LostLadiesofLit.com
Subscribe to our substack newsletter.
Follow us on instagram @lostladiesoflit.
Email us: Contact — Lost Ladies of Lit Podcast
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7373 ratings
Send us a text
Published anonymously six years prior to Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park—yet largely ignored for two centuries—the Regency-era epistolary novel The Woman of Colour: A Tale is the only one of its kind to feature a racially-conscious Black heroine at its center. Dr. Leigh-Michil George, a lecturer in the English Department at Geffen Academy at UCLA, joins us to discuss the novel and its historical importance as well as its influence on Regency-era television adaptations of Sanditon and Bridgerton.
Discussed in this episode:
The Woman of Colour: A Tale by Anonymous (Broadview Press)
Dr. Leigh-Michil George
Mansfield Park by Jane Austen
Sanditon (PBS)
Bridgerton (Netflix)
Bridgerton series by Julia Quinn
Sanditon by Jane Austen
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
Elizabeth Bennett
Caroline Bingley
Netherfield Park
Jamaica
“Black People in Britain During the Regency” (National Portrait Gallery)
“The Abolition of Slavery in Britain” (Historic UK)
Olivia Carpenter (University of York)
Support the show
For episodes and show notes, visit:
LostLadiesofLit.com
Subscribe to our substack newsletter.
Follow us on instagram @lostladiesoflit.
Email us: Contact — Lost Ladies of Lit Podcast
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