DiscoverOn HistoryWomen’s History Month 2025: Celebrating Women’s Voices in the IHR Collections
Women’s History Month 2025: Celebrating Women’s Voices in the IHR Collections

Women’s History Month 2025: Celebrating Women’s Voices in the IHR Collections

Update: 2025-03-31
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This blog was written by Sarah Admans, graduate trainee librarian at the Institute of Historical Research (IHR) Wohl Library 2024/25. It has been curated in celebration of Women’s History Month 2025.





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The IHR has a large collection of primary material focusing on women and their lived experience. This blog showcases a small selection of this exciting range of sources within the library. From memoirs and diaries to oral histories and collective community recollections, the works provide important platforms that uncover women’s voices within history. They are useful sources for new approaches to women’s history seen in the historiography of recent decades. For readers who are already interested in women’s history and those new to the topic, I hope this inspires you to visit our collections to discover more.





This blog aims to highlight the vast scope of women’s lived experience. It showcases women who had remarkable lives and achieved significant successes. It also acknowledges other lives which are more ‘ordinary’. Yet, the diversity of voices in this collection is intended to emphasise that, while many women have shared experiences, each one is an individual with a distinct and important life. The collection is a celebration for everything women have achieved and continue to aspire to. In an age when ‘feminism’ is increasingly depicted as a bad word, and women’s rights are simultaneously shrinking in many countries, these voices serve as an important reminder of why equality is so important and remains a goal worthy to strive for.













A bookshop of one’s own : how a group of women set out to change the world





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Author: Jane Cholmeley





Find in the Library: BL.650/Sil/Cho





Feminist | Business | Memoir





In this memoir, Jane Cholmeley details her experience as the co-founder of the feminist bookshop the Silver Moon in 1980s Britain. At a time when misogynistic and homophobic ideas were at the forefront, creating a safe place for female writers was vitally important. Cholmeley also includes the recollections of 18 past members—this range of voices gives us a greater sense of the impact this feminist bookshop had within society. This memoir emphasises the power of ideas and how a few women were able to create social change.














This is us : Black British women and girls






Author: Kafayat Okanlawon





Find in the Library: B.851/Oka





Prose | Intergenerational | Self-expression





This is a collection of poetry and prose by Black British women and girls aged 4 to 86. Kafayat Okanlawon has curated over 100 deeply personal pieces that highlight a significant range of different voices and experiences. The book provides a space for these stories to be heard, breaking them free from the censorship of the “Eurocentric-white-hetero-patriarchy”. It explores themes of “Womynness, Blackness, belonging and unbelonging, struggle, survival, healing, and resilience”. Marai Larasi encapsulates the importance of this work, describing it as, “a breathing archive, a speaking monument and a living memorial”.


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He reo wāhine : Māori women’s voices from the nineteenth century





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Authors: Angela Wanhalla and Lachy Paterson





Find in the Library: CLD.4315/Pat





Māori women | 19th Century | Own voices





He Reo Wāhine highlights the experience of Māori women in colonial New Zealand through their own words. From speeches, letters, memoirs, petitions, and more, Wanhalla and Paterson have drawn from over 500 texts to provide a much needed insight into Māori women’s lived experiences from their own perspectives. The sources are grouped into key themes: land sales, war, land confiscation and compensation, politics, petitions, legal encounters, religion, and other private matters. Utilising the colonial archives, this volume helps to redress the lack of scholarship on Māori women.














A long way from Hyderabad : diary of a young Muslim woman in 1930s Britain






Author: Muhammadi Begum, trans. Zehra Ahmad and Zainab Masud, ed. Kulsoom Husein





Find in the library: BC.7696/Muh





Migrant | 1930s Britain | Diary





This is the diary of Muhammadi Begum, a young Muslim woman who arrived in England from Hyderabad in the early 1930s to attend Oxford University. Begum provides a rare account of her everyday life and personal experiences: from her discussions with fellow intellectuals, to life with her husband, to having a child, and laments over poor British cuisine, we are able to gain a real sense for what her life would have been like. Within the wider context of the growing Indian independence movement, this primary source provides valuable insights into both social and colonial Indian histories.


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Oral histories of Tibetan women : whispers from the roof of the world





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Author: Lily Xiao Hong Lee





Find in the Library: CLC.4625/Lee





Tibetan | Oral histories | 20th Century





This collection includes a fascinating range of life stories which highlight the rich and diverse lived experiences of Tibetan women. The author strongly focuses on personal experience and uses interviews to present oral histories where Tibetan women are given space to tell their stories in their own words. We hear accounts from 20 women from different backgrounds, including a princess, a poor peasant single mother, an opera performer, and an Everest mountaineer. This collection provides valuable insights into the lives of Tibetan women and into social and cultural histories.














To my trans sisters






Author: Charlie Craggs





Find in the Library: E.7852/Cra





Empowering | Trans

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Women’s History Month 2025: Celebrating Women’s Voices in the IHR Collections

Women’s History Month 2025: Celebrating Women’s Voices in the IHR Collections

sarahadmans