Who’s Who. Adam and Charles Black, 1849–2024, Annual Volumes.
Oxford University
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Reception | Naomi Mitchison | |
Residence | Barbara Pym | |
Residence | Rhoda Broughton | The move, undertaken so that RB
might be closer to her publisher, and on the assurance of Matthew Arnold
that they would receive a warm welcome, Wood, Marilyn. Rhoda Broughton: Profile of a Novelist. Paul Watkins, 1993. 50 |
Textual Features | Georgiana Craik | In this novel Hugh Ludlow, handsome, healthy, and the only son of a rich man, whose fortune he would of course inherit Craik, Georgiana. Two Women. R. Bentley and Son, 1880, 3 vols. 1: 5 |
Textual Features | Margaret Forster | Like its rejected predecessor, it is based on recent actual experience. Morag Graham, who comes from an unsophisticated, working-class, northern background, has fixed her schoolgirl dreams and aspirations on entrance to Oxford
; she is... |
Textual Features | Joanna Cannan | High Table is an Oxford University
novel, whose protagonist, Theodore Fletcher, grows up a child in a loveless family and feels a sudden, blank dreariness which . . . swamped his mind, when, lying awake... |
Textual Features | Q. D. Leavis | QDL
's review constitutes a personal and professional attack on Woolf, based primarily on three fronts: education, domesticity, and class. A footnote asserts that Woolf commenting on women's institutional education is voicing an opinion on... |
Textual Features | Beatrice Harraden | They wanted, they said, to build up and develop in the very heart of the British Empire the opportunities offered to all women students of all nations. “The Times Digital Archive 1785-2007”. Thompson Gale: The Times Digital Archive. (29 March 1906): 8 |
Textual Features | Mary Jones | Between poems and letters come essays, of which the first contains a fantasy in which a woman studies in the Bodleian Library
and gets an honorary degree from Oxford University
. Kennedy, Deborah. Poetic Sisters. Early Eighteenth-Century Women Poets. Bucknell University Press, 2013. 169 |
Textual Features | Jennifer Dawson | The title (not the one under which it was first submitted) strikingly anticipates that of Sylvia Plath
's The Bell Jar, 1963, with its image of an invisible barrier separating the protagonist from the... |
Textual Features | Queen Elizabeth I | Her speeches in general are models of grand and persuasive rhetoric; they are designed to inspire patriotism and loyalty, while refusing to be pinned down on policy detail. Elizabeth's frequent references to her gender combine... |
Textual Features | Anna Kavan | Let Me Alone is the book which introduces the orphan protagonist Anna Kavan, whose name the author later adopted as her persona. This novel of feminist protest is considered autobiographical, since Kavan's Aunt Lauretta is... |
Textual Features | Cecily Mackworth | Arriving in Israel just after a Jewish terrorist attackCM
reports how she found the streets of Jerusalem full of tense, trigger-happy young British soldiers. Gershon Agronsky
, editor of the Palestine Post, Mackworth, Cecily. The Mouth of the Sword. Routledge and K. Paul, 1949. 34 |
Textual Features | Anita Desai | The first part of Fasting, Feasting, set in a middle-class household in Delhi, focuses on Uma and Aruna struggling with their role as dutiful daughters. Whereas Aruna leaves the family home for a... |
Textual Features | Seamus Heaney | In these lectures SH
again concerned himself closely with the poet's obligations to society and to humankind. The first lecture, from which the 1995 volume is titled, sets out to show how poetry's existence at... |
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