Unlike the main character of the book The Artificial Silk Girl, Augusta was not fleeing the police, but her own mother. And this would not have been too outside the boundaries of reality. As Augusta explains on Facebook:
Augusta reading at the public library in the 1920s Berlin Project. |
I was educated at home by a series of governesses and tutors. I had wanted to attend finishing school in Switzerland after visiting my best friend Sophie at Château Mont-Choisi in Lausanne. Mamma would have none of it, of course, as this would have meant that I would learn French. I would spend hours in Pappa's library, reading books on all subjects. When the last tutor left, he told my parents that I was well-read and very opinionated, which I took to be a compliment.
Augusta is therefore in a situation where she is obviously different than others in Berlin, but in many way, she is the same as well. We are all products of our history, both individual and collective, which are concepts that I teach to students in my RL history classes. Trying to establish the identity of a character in a dynamic immersive role play has really deepened my understanding of both.