Author: Sera
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Enola Holmes 2 & The Match Girls Strike of 1888
The writers of the film have Enola solve an actual, real-life crime that took place in 19th century London and eventually led to the Match girls strike of 1888, the first industrial revolution by women for women.
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Visit London In Books This November
From classic chick-lits to adventurous coming of age stories and even a little bit of mystery, we hope that this month’s literary travel guide takes you on an amazing journey into every nook, cranny, art, culture and people of London.
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Netflix’s Luckiest Girl Alive: On Sexual Trauma & True Healing
The cracks begin to form when the director of a true crime documentary persuades her to tell her own side of the story concerning an infamous, extremely school shooting that took place years ago at her prestigious preppy high school.
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Visit Senegal in Books This October
For October, join us as we explore the streets and river banks of West Africa’s architecture and fashion haven, Senegal.
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The Woman King vs History
Who needs this brutal history in a film when we can all just enjoy the hype of an all female Military force that saved the day?
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Dreamers of a New Day: Women Who Invented the Twentieth Century
The book offers an impressive scope on a wide range of subject matters that still affect women even today, fashion, sex, bodily agency, sexuality, joining free unions, childbearing, abortions, birth control, domestic labour etc.
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Dreamers of a New Day: Women Who Invented the Twentieth Century
The book offers an impressive scope on a wide range of subject matters that still affect women even today, fashion, sex, bodily agency, sexuality, joining free unions, childbearing, abortions, birth control, domestic labour etc.
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Celebrating Five Decades of Ama Ata Aidoo
Today we celebrate the impact Our Sister KillJoy has sparked over the years in shaping critical discussions on feminism and colonialism in the 20th century and its ripple effects on feminist African literature in our time.
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Celebrating Five Decades of Ama Ata Aidoo
Today we celebrate the impact Our Sister KillJoy has sparked over the years in shaping critical discussions on feminism and colonialism in the 20th century and its ripple effects on feminist African literature in our time.