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Leah Thalman and Diana Proudfoot interviewed by Sarah Learmonth

This folder includes the recorded audio of the interview along with a transcript of the recording.
Leah left a job as a social worker to stay at Greenham in 1983, by which time she was in her mid-fifties, and Diana joined the camp in 1984. They learned how to build benders, were arrested and imprisoned numerous times around the country and Diana remembers being asked by one prisoner if she was from Greenham because 'You've got that liberated look'. They describe Greenham as a 'university of the open air' where the women-only, non-violent environment made space for creativity in resistance.
Leah and Diana were interviewed by Sarah Learmonth in 2019.

Last features meeting 2020/2021

Submitted by: Beatriz Tiago Fernandes Marques Da Silva
Date: 31 March 2021
Location: LSE Library

Despite the academic year having been incredibly difficult for our student newspaper The Beaver, the features team still met every week to share our ideas for articles and enjoy some time venting about how busy our week had been so far. Our last meeting felt bittersweet as some of our friends in the team were graduating soon without us having properly hang out in person all together. I still could not be prouder of our team effort. We made memories over Zoom that won't be easily forgotten.

Kiba: male dancer performing a solo with pipe players in the background

Personal author: James, Deborah
Personal author: Mofokeng, Santu
From the Series: Songs of the women migrants [Archive catalogue reference: LSE ANTHROPOLOGY PHOTOS/JAMES/2].
Photographs taken in Sekhukhuneland, Nebo and Johannesburg by Santu Mofokeng and Deborah James for her' book "Songs of the Women Migrants: Performance and Identity in South Africa" 1999, Edinburgh University Press.

Kiba: male dancer performing a solo with pipe players in the background

Personal author: James, Deborah
Personal author: Mofokeng, Santu
From the Series: Songs of the women migrants [Archive catalogue reference: LSE ANTHROPOLOGY PHOTOS/JAMES/2].
Photographs taken in Sekhukhuneland, Nebo and Johannesburg by Santu Mofokeng and Deborah James for her' book "Songs of the Women Migrants: Performance and Identity in South Africa" 1999, Edinburgh University Press.

Keeping the Grimshaw spirit alive

Submitted by: Beatriz Tiago Fernandes Marques Da Silva
Date: March 2021
Location: At home in London

Grimshaw [LSE's oldest student society, supported by the International Relations Department but open to students of any subject with an interest in international affairs] held an online event on the Western Sahara conflict on the 5th of March with three speakers. The event was very popular and an opportunity to continue to host insightful conversations within our community at LSE despite the pandemic.

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