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Natasha Walter

Natasha Walter
Born (1967-01-20) 20 January 1967 (age 50)
Occupation Founder of Women for Refugee Women
Nationality British
Alma mater St. John's College, Cambridge, Harvard
Genre Non-fiction and fiction
Literary movement Feminism
Notable works The New Feminism
, Living Dolls: The Return of Sexism and A Quiet Life
Relatives Nicolas Walter (father)
William Grey Walter (grandfather)

Natasha Walter (born 20 January 1967) is a British feminist writer and human rights activist. She is the author of a novel, A Quiet Life (2016), two works of feminist non-fiction: Living Dolls: The Return of Sexism (2010, Virago) and The New Feminism (1998, Virago). She is also the founder of the charity Women for Refugee Women.

Her father was Nicolas Walter, an anarchist and secular humanist writer; and her mother Ruth Walter was a feminist social worker. Her grandfather was William Grey Walter, a neuroscientist. Her grandparents on her mother's side were refugees from Nazi Germany. Walter read English at St John's College, Cambridge, graduating with a double First, and then won a Frank Knox Fellowship to Harvard. Her first job was at Vogue magazine, and she subsequently became Deputy Literary Editor of The Independent and then a columnist for The Guardian. She went on to write for many publications and to appear regularly on BBC2's Newsnight Review and Radio 4's Front Row. In 1999 she was a judge on the Booker Prize and in 2013 she was a judge on the Women's Prize for Fiction (formerly the Orange Prize).

Walter was the founder in 2006 and director of the charity Women for Refugee Women which supports women who seek asylum. In 2008 Women for Refugee Women produced the play Motherland which Natasha Walter wrote based on the experiences of women and children in immigration detention. It was directed by Juliet Stevenson and performed at the Young Vic in 2008 by Juliet Stevenson, Harriet Walter and others. Women for Refugee Women subsequently worked in partnership with other organisations to campaign for the end to the detention of children for immigration purposes in the UK, a policy which the government announced it would end in 2010.


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