Trapped History
Trapped History

Trapped History

trappedhistory

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Trapped History is a history reboot for all of us. Telling the stories of the forgotten – of hidden heroes who have been ignored by the history we were taught in school. We take our name from something the writer James Baldwin said: “People are trapped in history and history is trapped in them.” We want to break people free from those stories. Women's history, Black history, hidden history, forgotten history – trapped history. And so we give you a history podcast for the curious, with inspiring tales of unsung heroes, people who broke the mould with their courage and defiance. Co-hosts Oswin and Carla are joined by special guests who help bring those stories to life. People like Mishal Husain, Jeremy Corbyn, Michaela Strachan, Sathnam Sanghera – even Zippo the Clown and Jet from Gladiators! Anyone with a new and different perspective on history. Rebooting history one story at a time. Follow us on Instagram and Facebook, and subscribe to the award-winning history podcast at our website for bonus episodes and more: www.instagram.com/trappedhistory www.facebook.com/trappedhistory www.trappedhistory.com

Recent Episodes

Hall of Fame: Throwing Stones, Winning the Vote and Changing Women's History
SEP 16, 2025
Hall of Fame: Throwing Stones, Winning the Vote and Changing Women's History
Join us for Helen Lewis' nominee for the Trapped History Hall of Fame: Constance Bulwer-Lytton, daughter of a Viceroy, sister to an Earl – but one of the bravest suffragettes of them all.In changing women's history, she was imprisoned four times for campaigning for the vote, carved "V" for votes on her breast, went on hunger strike and was force-fed by prison guards.In Constance's own words, which can stand for so much political action:"People say, what does this hunger strike mean? Surely it is all folly. If it is not hysteria, at least it is unreasonable. They will not realise that we are like an army, that we are deputed to fight for a cause, and for other people, and in any struggle or any fight, weapons must be used . . . These women have chosen the weapon of self-hurt to make their protest, and this hunger strike . . . involves grave hurt and tremendous sacrifice, but this is on the part of the women only, and does not physically injure their enemies. Can that be called violence and hooliganism?"Constance celebrated women winning the vote in 1918, a milestone in women's history – but she did not live to see women wield the vote in true equality with men. Because it was only at the 1929 general election that men and women aged 21 and over entered the voting booth as equals. But Constance, fatally weakened by her treatment in prison, had already died six years earlier in 1923, at the age of 54.Hers was a bright short life in women's history: forgotten, unsung and hidden – but it is one captured beautifully by Helen here.
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7 MIN