Available Formats
Trailblazer: The First Feminist to Change Our World
By (Author) Jane Robinson
Transworld Publishers Ltd
Penguin (Transworld)
20th March 2025
20th February 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Feminism and feminist theory
Elections and referenda / suffrage
Individual artists, art monographs
305.42092
Paperback
416
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 26mm
299g
Acclaimed historian, Jane Robinson brings out of the shadows one of Victorian Britain's most influential but forgotten women. First wave feminist, founder of Girton College, Cambridge, and connected to everyone, from Florence Nightingale to Gertrude Jekyll, George Eliot to DG Rosetti. 'Jane Robinson is brilliant at putting the women back into history and her biography of Barbara Leigh Bodichon, a Victorian feminist we should all be grateful to, is as entertaining as it is necessary.' - Daisy Goodwin You have probably not heard of Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon but you certainly should have done. Name any 'modern' human rights movement, and she was a pioneer- feminism, equal opportunities, diversity, inclusion, mental health awareness, Black Lives Matter. While her name has been omitted from too many history books, it was Barbara that opened the doors for more famous names to walk through. And her influence owed as much to who she was as to what she did- people loved her for her robust sense of humour, cheerfulness and indiscriminate acts of kindness. This is a celebration of the life of the founder of Britain's suffrage movement- campaigner for equal opportunity in the workplace, the law, at home and beyond. Co-founder of Girton, the first university college for women, a committed activist for human rights, fervently anti-slavery, she was also one of Victorian England's finest female painters. Jane Robinson's brilliant new book shines a light on a remarkable woman who lived on her own terms and to whom we owe a huge debt.
Jane Robinson is brilliant at putting the women back into history and her biography of Barbara Leigh Bodichon, a Victorian feminist we should all be grateful to, is as entertaining as it is necessary. -- Daisy Goodwin
As a long-serving head of the pioneering College for Women I thought I had the measure of our flamboyant co-founder. I was wrong. Barbara Bodichon, artist, educator, influencer and more, was a driving force for an age of reform. Full of fab facts and inspiring incidents this book tells the remarkable story of a social outsider whose clear-sighted vision, disregard for convention, selfless support for others, and relentless pursuit of justice was game-changing for women's inclusion in political, professional and public life. -- Susan J, Smith FBA, Mistress of Girton College, Cambridge 2009-2022
Lively and well researched ... [Bodichon] was a vital cog in the wheel of social change for women. Her energy is contagious. -- Ysenda Maxtone Graham * The Times *
Stylishly written, and rich with entertaining anecdotes, Robinsons biography reanimates this almost forgotten, generous and visionary woman. -- Rebecca Wallersteiner * The Lady *
Through skillful storytelling and a warm-hearted narrative style, she makes high-mindedness, endeavour and idealism seem both compelling and, in its deep and intellectual friendships even romantic ... One of the many engaging features of her book is the affection in which she holds her characters ... What a lot we have to thank Barbara Bodichon and her circle for. She was a charismatic but self-effacing woman so she would at the very least have been perplexed by the idea of being a role model. But I can't think of a better one for today. -- Lucy Lethbridge * Literary Review *
Jane Robinson is also the author of Bluestockings- The Remarkable Story of the First Women to Fight for an Education and Ladies Can't Climb Ladders- The Pioneering Adventures of the First Professional Women. She was born in Edinburgh, grew up in North Yorkshire and read English at Somerville College, Oxford. She has worked in the antiquarian book trade and as an archivist, and is now a full-time writer and lecturer, specializing in social history through women's eyes. She is a Fellow of the Royal Historical and Royal Geographical Societies, a Hawthornden Fellow, and a Senior Associate of Somerville College. In her spare time she collects books and designs pop-up Escape Rooms. She lives in Buckinghamshire with her husband and two feline assistants, Emmy and Mrs Chippy. Trailblazer is her thirteenth book.