Speranza, a.k.a Oscar Wilde’s Mom
Listen now
Description
In this week’s episode Kim and Amy discuss the life and work of “Speranza,” a.k.a Lady Jane Wilde, a.k.a. Oscar Wilde’s mom! An outspoken, rabble-rousing poet who championed Irish independence, she stirred up members of the Young Ireland movement while writing for Dublin’s radical newspaper “The Nation” in the 1840s. Oscar may have inherited his mother’s wit, intellect and larger-than-life personality, but his later legal troubles were also preceded by her own very public and scandalous libel case. Mentioned in this episode: The Rest is History podcast on the trials of Oscar Wilde The Nation “Jacta Alea Est” by Speranza “The Poet’s Destiny” by Speranza “The Famine Year” by Speranza Charles Gavan Duffy Melmoth the Wanderer by Charles Maturin William Wilde (Oscar Wilde’s father) “The Ballad of Reading Gaol” by Oscar Wilde “The Importance of Being Earnest” by Oscar Wilde The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde The Mary Travers libel case The grave of Lady Jane Wilde Support the show For episodes and show notes, visit: LostLadiesofLit.com Discuss episodes on our Facebook Forum. Follow us on instagram @lostladiesoflit. Follow Kim on twitter @kaskew. Sign up for our newsletter: LostLadiesofLit.com Email us: Contact — Lost Ladies of Lit Podcast
More Episodes
Dying by suicide shortly after her novel, Love and Silence, was rejected for publication in 1963, Egyptian writer Enayat al-Zayyat gained brief recognition when the book was finally published four years after her death. Discovering the novel in a Cairo market some 30 years later launched...
Published 04/23/24
Published 04/23/24
An eyewitness to monumental moments in the 20th century, author Kay Boyle hung out with Left Bank artists and literary giants, chronicled the ravages of WWII, was blacklisted in the 1950s and was jailed for her Haight-Ashbury activism in the late 1960s. An intrepid modernist committed to a...
Published 04/09/24