Here’s an (intermittently!) corroborating link. This week’s lateral thinking puzzle was contributed by listener Jeremy Vander Munnik. “A Short History of the Sydney Harbour Bridge,” New South Wales Government (accessed June 4, 2020).ĭamien Murphy, “Sydney Harbour Bridge Celebrates 85th Anniversary,” Sydney Morning Herald, March 16, 2017.Īlex Hern, “Anti-Porn Filters Stop Dominic Cummings Trending on Twitter,” Guardian, May 27, 2020. Wikipedia, “Sydney Harbour Bridge” (accessed June 4, 2020). “Central Chancery of the Orders of Knighthood,” Supplement to the London Gazette, April 20, 1945, 2166. Martin Gienke, “Film Interviews With Leading Thinkers: Ursula Graham Bower,” University of Cambridge, Nov.
“The Nagas: Hill Peoples of Northeast India,” Cambridge Experimental Videodisc Project. Neha Kirpal, “Ursula the ‘Jungle Queen’: The Extraordinary Story of the Englishwoman Who Led Naga Soldiers in WWII,” Scroll, Jan. Melissa van der Klugt, “Warrior Queen Ursula Graham Bower’s Is Staged for Her Tribal Comrades,” Sunday Times, Dec. “Blond Englishwoman, Naga Queen, Helped Fight Japs,” Wilmington Morning Star, Dec. Mary Johnson Tweedy, “A Troubled, Far-Off Land,” New York Times, Oct. “Rays of a New Dawn in Nagaland,” Assam Tribune, Nov. Ved Mohendra, “A Bloody Battle to Remember,” New Straits Times, June 28, 2014, 16.
12, 2017.Įsha Roy, “My Mother, The Naga Warrior,” Indian Express, Oct. Stuart Blackburn, “Colonial Contact in the ‘Hidden Land’: Oral History Among the Apatanis of Arunachal Pradesh,” Indian Economic & Social History Review 40:3 (October 2003), 335-365.Ĭharles Allen, “Spirit of Roedean,” Spectator, April 14, 2012.ĭipanita nath, “Woman Who Came in From the Wild,” Indian Express, Aug. Paul Cheeseright, “Queen Without a Throne: Ursula Graham Bower and the Burma Campaign,” Asian Affairs 45:2 (June 2014), 289-299.Ījailiu Niumai, “Rani Gaidinliu: The Iconic Woman of Northeast India,” Indian Journal of Gender Studies 25:3 (August 2018), 351-367. Cook, ed., Women and War: A Historical Encyclopedia From Antiquity to the Present, 2006. Margaret MacMillan, History’s People: Personalities and the Past, 2015.Īndrew Jackson Waskey, “Bower, Ursula Graham,” in Bernard A. Montgomery McFate, Military Anthropology: Soldiers, Scholars and Subjects at the Margins of Empire, 2018.Īnnamaria Motrescu-Mayes and Heather Norris Nicholson, British Women Amateur Filmmakers, 2018.Īlex Lubin, Romance and Rights: The Politics of Interracial Intimacy, 1945-1954, 2009. Nicholas van der Bijl, Sharing the Secret: The History of the Intelligence Corps 1940–2010, 2013. Vicky Thomas, Naga Queen: Ursula Graham Bower and Her Jungle Warriors 1939-45, 2011.Ĭhristopher Alan Bayly and Timothy Norman Harper, Forgotten Armies: The Fall of British Asia, 1941-1945, 2005. Sources for our feature on Ursula Graham Bower: Gracely offered a dilemma regarding a flight from hell. In 1822 the Yorkshire Observer published the schedule of a bachelor’s life. We’ll also consider a self-censoring font and puzzle over some perplexing spacecraft. In this week’s episode of the Futility Closet podcast we’ll describe Bower’s efforts to organize the Nagas against an unprecedented foe. She was living among them when World War II broke out and Japan threatened to invade their land. In 1937, Englishwoman Ursula Graham Bower became fascinated by the Naga people of northeastern India.