My long train travels this month have been made considerably more interesting and informative by the second series (on the #BlackoutRipper ) of the Bad Women podcast.
Ignore the sensationalist wrapping, you won't find better explained feminist modern history or more sensitively analysed #TrueCrime than here. The nuanced exploration of the pressures of the home front is a useful counter to the uncritical hagiography of remembrance season too..
#BadWomen
#podcast
https://open.spotify.com/episode/0fy4hs7RLFrHuMQIab1qCM?si=8r35eF33SiOhgA7HUJb_3w
S2 E1: Murders in a City Without Light
Listen to this episode from Bad Women: The Blackout Ripper on Spotify. London's West End - once a glittering Mecca of nightlife - is pitch black. The lights are off to hide the city from waves of Nazi bombers - but in the darkness a merciless killer is hunting down the women of this district. Join hosts Hallie Rubenhold and Alice Fiennes as they walk those bomb-damaged streets to tell the stories of the women targeted by this "Blackout Ripper" over the course of just one week in 1942. You'll glimpse inside the theaters, jazz joints and dive bars of Piccadilly and Soho; witness deadly air raids; and criss cross the blacked out streets where a serial killer lurks. You'll learn too of the hardships that blighted the lives of many women in wartime, and the extent of the violence they faced at the hands of men from their own side in the conflict. Sources: Bone, James. London Echoing (London: Jonathan Cape, 1948) Caddick-Adams, Peter. Sand and Steel: A New History of D-Day (London: Penguin Random House, 2019). Cederwell, William. Reading London in Wartime: Blitz, the People and Propaganda in 1940s Literature (New York: Routledge, 2018). Farson, N. Bomber’s Moon (London: Victor Gollancz Ltd, 1941). See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

