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In "Shakespeare was not there" Isabel Medarde addresses the topic of women from two encounters. On the one hand, she makes a close approach through the autobiography of her own mother and on the other hand, in a more formal interview with Raquel de la Varga, student of the Master in Spanish and Comparative Literature at the ULE, about the role of women throughout the history of literature. Raquel defends with all her might that "a woman has to tell herself," with her own language and vision of the world and not through what "others" have told us about her. Marisa, the author's mother, strives to construct her own story through a written text and the revision of old photographs.