Main content

Modern-day matriarchs

Poet Helen Knott from Canada and playwright Tanika Gupta from the UK on matriarchs in their culture, strong women in their families and the impact of their mothers' deaths.

Traditionally women often take on much of the responsibility for practical and emotional support for a family as well as passing on family knowledge and traditions. But is the role still relevant? Datshiane Navanayagam talks to women from Canada and the UK about being a modern matriarch.

All her life, Helen Knott has looked to the strong women in her indigenous community for guidance, absorbed their stories and admired their independence. When her mother and grandmother died she tried to step into the roles they'd held in community. Her book Becoming a Matriarch is a love letter to the eldest daughters of families who often carry invisible responsibilities.

Tanika Gupta is an award-winning playwright British playwright whose work celebrates her Bengali culture and often challenges gender and race stereotypes. She has worked across theatre, television, radio and film. Her latest play A Tupperware Of Ashes is about a restaurateur with dementia and the impact on her three children of looking after her. Tanika wrote the play after her own mother died from cancer. It will be screened internationally by the National Theatre later this year.

Produced by Jane Thurlow

(Image: (L) Tanika Gupta credit Oscar May. (R) Helen Knott courtesy Duckworth Books.)

Available now

27 minutes

Last on

Sun 25 Aug 2024 00:32GMT

Broadcasts

  • Mon 19 Aug 2024 03:32GMT
  • Mon 19 Aug 2024 12:32GMT
  • Mon 19 Aug 2024 17:32GMT
  • Mon 19 Aug 2024 21:32GMT
  • Mon 19 Aug 2024 22:32GMT
  • Sun 25 Aug 2024 00:32GMT

The best of The Conversation

Enlightening, inspiring, revealing: Some of our favourite Conversations so far

100 Women

Global experience on image, work, relationships, equality, migration and working lives

Podcast