The Mutual Admiration Society: How Dorothy L. Sayers and her Oxford Circle Remade the World for Women, by Mo Moulton. Hachette Book Group, 2019
Dorothy Sayers
and her college circle of women friends were a high achieving group. Sayers is
the best known of them as the author of the Lord Peter Whimsy mysteries, but she
was not the only one to achieve a great deal- and the Whimsy stories were by no
means her only writing. One of the group, a historian, discovered a cache of
Tudor era letters, which she translated into modern English and published over the
course of 40 years. One was in a long term lesbian love triangle. One became a
birth control advocate, a parenting expert (she wrote much on those subjects),
and midwife.
They met
at Oxford, where they were a group of some of the few women to be admitted in
that time. At the time, a few women were allowed to attend, but they could not
receive degrees. This came later (in 1920); some of the group were given
retroactive degrees. Sayers wrote an essay titled “Are Women Human?”, which, it
seems, women really weren’t in those days. The MAS was a female equivalent of
The Inklings; a university group of writers and scholars with common interests.
This group
biography covers the women’s lives from Oxford to their deaths. It’s extremely
well researched (the notes and bibliography take up almost 60 pages) and
detailed. It’s not fast reading, but I found it fascinating.