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Cranogwen in Victorian Wales

Woman on a Mission

Sheds light on the groundbreaking Welsh feminist Sarah Jane Rees.

During an age of extreme gender polarization when women were confined to the domestic sphere, Sarah Jane Rees (1839–1916) from Llangrannog, better known by her bardic name Cranogwen, won high esteem as a poet, lecturer, journal editor, preacher, and temperance campaigner. She also succeeded in her aim of inspiring other Welsh women to overcome class and gender barriers and enter the public sphere and was therefore hailed as a pioneering forerunner of the “New Woman.” Cranogwen in Victorian Wales follows her through the various stages of her career from her early years as a sailor, showing how an underprivileged woman succeeded in winning such influential renown. New light is also thrown on her homosexual love life and her progressive views on gender: “Gender difference is nothing,” she proclaimed in 1888. The Welsh-language version of this volume, entitled Cranogwen, won the Wales Book of the Year award for creative nonfiction in 2024.

336 pages | 5.43 x 8.5 | © 2026

Gender Studies in Wales

Biography and Letters

History: General History

Women's Studies:


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Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 ‘Daughter of the Rock’
2‘Daughter of the Sea’
3The Poet
4The Public Lecturer
5The Transatlantic Traveller
6‘My Friend’
7The Editor and her Contributors
8The Agony Aunt
9The Evangelist
10The Temperance Leader
Index

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