A. E. Lowan submitted a new blog post:
It Was a Woman’s World, Too: Christine de Pizan
by A. E. Lowan
As speculative fiction authors, writers of science fiction, fantasy, and horror have the opportunity to create entirely new worlds for their readers. We can create new species, invent systems of magic, and imagine humanity traversing the galaxy. Yet very often these adventures exclude women. It is too often said that readers will reject women in speculative fiction stories, especially those set in low tech settings or fantasies that resemble medieval Earth, because there is a notion that women did not take on public or adventurous lives in Earth’s history.
In this series, we’d like to introduce you to women who did just that. From writers to soldiers to pirates, we will tell you the stories of amazing women who led lives of public importance. We hope that the lives of these women encourage you to reach beyond the expected and to give voices to extraordinary women in your own stories.
Meet Christine de Pizan (1364 – c. 1430)
Christine de Pizan was born in 1364 in Venice. When she was a small child, Christine moved with her family to Paris. Her father, Thomas de Pizan, had taken a position at the Court of Charles V of France as the king’s astrologer, alchemist, and physician.
Thomas de Pizan believed in educating his daughter and had Christine tutored not just in music, dance, and theology, but also in rhetoric, logic, and philosophy.
When Christine was...
Continue reading the Original Blog Post.
It Was a Woman’s World, Too: Christine de Pizan
by A. E. Lowan

As speculative fiction authors, writers of science fiction, fantasy, and horror have the opportunity to create entirely new worlds for their readers. We can create new species, invent systems of magic, and imagine humanity traversing the galaxy. Yet very often these adventures exclude women. It is too often said that readers will reject women in speculative fiction stories, especially those set in low tech settings or fantasies that resemble medieval Earth, because there is a notion that women did not take on public or adventurous lives in Earth’s history.
In this series, we’d like to introduce you to women who did just that. From writers to soldiers to pirates, we will tell you the stories of amazing women who led lives of public importance. We hope that the lives of these women encourage you to reach beyond the expected and to give voices to extraordinary women in your own stories.
Meet Christine de Pizan (1364 – c. 1430)
Christine de Pizan was born in 1364 in Venice. When she was a small child, Christine moved with her family to Paris. Her father, Thomas de Pizan, had taken a position at the Court of Charles V of France as the king’s astrologer, alchemist, and physician.
Thomas de Pizan believed in educating his daughter and had Christine tutored not just in music, dance, and theology, but also in rhetoric, logic, and philosophy.
When Christine was...
Continue reading the Original Blog Post.