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  Let Genius Burn
Louisa May Alcott may be best known for the beloved book Little Women, but her story doesn’t begin or end with her famous novel. On Let Genius Burn, we separate the layers of Louisa’s life to learn more about who she really was--and all the ways her legacy continues to resonate today. We’ll explore the traumatic year of her childhood spent in an experimental utopian community, her service as a Civil War nurse, her final years of wealth and celebrity as a children’s author--and more intimate details and little-known stories of Louisa’s life. Instead of a retelling of Louisa May Alcott’s biography, each episode in the 8-part series examines Louisa's life through a different lens--Louisa as a celebrity, writer, activist, daughter, and more-- highlighting her complexity as a person, woman, and historical figure. Ahead of her time, Louisa railed against the limitations of her gender and fought for women’s suffrage. She craved literary greatness, but was weighed down by the financial needs of her family. Through writing scandalous Gothic thrillers, she found a way to voice her own inner turmoil. In the end, she achieved extraordinary financial success, but creative fulfillment remained elusive.We’ll examine all of this and more on Let Genius Burn. Find more on Instagram and Facebook @letgeniusburn or at letgeniusburn.com.
Let Genius Burn
Louisa and Lydia
Lydia Olsson (1874-1958) was the daughter of Swedish immigrants, born in Kansas in the late nineteenth century. She moved to Illinois and attended Augustana College, where she kept diaries the documented her experience as a young woman coming of age in an exciting time, one where education and access was opening to women.
During this time, Olsson turned to one book in particular for comfort and direction: Little Women. As she navigated relationships, college, friendship, sisterhood, grief, she saw her own experiences reflected in Alcott's seminal work. Today, we can read Lydia's diaries as a time capsule of the 1890s, but we also see they have extraordinary resonance with our own experience as readers of Little Women.
In this episode, we discuss:
- Lydia Olsson's relationship to Little Women and Louisa May Alcott and the passages she chose to capture in her diaries
- How Little Women played a role in one immigrant-family's experience of assimilating into American culture and understanding what it meant to be American in the late 19th century
- Marriage, spinsterhood, queerness, female friendships, and emotional fulfillment in relationships, and how these were evolving and changing in Lydia's time
- The power of fiction in the lives of women across centuries
More about Rebecca: https://rebeccahopman.com/
More about Lydia: https://lydiaolsson.wordpress.com/
Rebecca Hopman is an archivist and historian who specializes in women’s history and life writing, American culture, and the history of entertainment. Currently, she serves as the Genealogy Services Librarian at the Wisconsin Historical Society, where she helps people discover their family stories. Prior to her work as a genealogy librarian, she specialized in topics as varied as the history of physics (at the American Institute of Physics); the art, science, and technology of glass (at the Corning Museum of Glass); and the groundbreaking career of Barbara Walters (at Sarah Lawrence College). She has a BA in History, English, and German from Augustana College (IL), an MLIS in Archives & Records Management from the University of Maryland, College Park, and an MA in Women’s History from Sarah Lawrence College.