Moffat, Gwen. Space Below My Feet. Houghton Mifflin, Riverside Press, 1961.
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Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Occupation | Ford Madox Ford | After months of negotiation, FMF
and Ezra Pound
persuaded patron John Quinn
to finance the new review. Quinn, who was angry with James Joyce
over issues involving manuscripts, demanded that Joyce should be excluded from... |
Occupation | Harriet Shaw Weaver | On 13 June 1913 HSW
submitted to the Board of Trade
an application to form The New Freewoman Company
, with herself, Marsden, Bessie Heyes
, and Grace Jardine
as its directors. Each director was... |
Occupation | Gwen Moffat | After years in the army she found she wanted adventure, freedom, rejection of authority. Moffat, Gwen. Space Below My Feet. Houghton Mifflin, Riverside Press, 1961. 1 |
Occupation | Harriet Shaw Weaver | When Marsden considered changing the journal's name, HSW
remarked, I quite like your suggestion of The Egoist. qtd. in Lidderdale, Jane, and Mary Nicholson. Dear Miss Weaver. Viking, 1970. 75 |
Occupation | Sylvia Beach | This was the first American bookstore in Paris. It became a focal point of French and American literary activities. In the summer of 1921 the bookstore moved to 12 rue de l'Odéon. Beach, Sylvia. Shakespeare and Company. Harcourt, Brace, 1959. 60 |
Occupation | Harriet Shaw Weaver | HSW
was fiercely loyal to her writers and their words. She changed printers many times because (fearful of prosecution for obscenity) they raised objections and cut passages. She was also tenacious about obtaining important material... |
Occupation | Sylvia Beach | Joyce
was having trouble getting his latest work, Ulysses, published because of the public outcry against it and the obscenity laws that penalized both the printer and the publisher of material deemed obscene. Harriet Weaver |
Occupation | Harriet Shaw Weaver | In November 1915, after Joyce
's novel had been rejected by various publishers, HSW
offered to publish it. But it was difficult for her to find a printer who was not frightened by the prospect... |
Occupation | Sylvia Beach | Harassed by customers and friends for their copies, SB
withdrew the window-copy until shipments arrived from the publisher
in Dijon. She and her assistant mailed out the books to subscribers in the United States... |
Occupation | Harriet Shaw Weaver | Writer and suffragist Iris Barry
, summarizing a general admiration for HSW
on the part of Soho writers (Pound, Eliot, Wyndham Lewis, Violet Hunt
, and others), coined the phrase, the lion-hearted Miss Weaver who... |
Occupation | Sylvia Beach | Joyce
wanted a simple, cheap-looking booklet, so Herbert Clarke
produced something that looked, even Clarke himself thought, regrettably pharmaceutical. qtd. in Beach, Sylvia. Shakespeare and Company. Harcourt, Brace, 1959. 174 |
Occupation | Harriet Shaw Weaver | In August 1921, while she waited for Ulysses' appearance, HSW
obtained the rights to all of Joyce
's publications: Chamber Music from Elkin Mathews
, and Dubliners and Exiles from Grant Richards
. Joyce... |
Occupation | Sylvia Beach | Joyce
was launching a lawsuit against Samuel Roth
at this time for illegally pirating Ulysses in the United States. He stated in a deposition against Roth that the book was not his property but... |
Occupation | Harriet Shaw Weaver | Ulysses grossed £2,608 and netted £1,637. Joyce
received royalties of £1,636. Lidderdale, Jane, and Mary Nicholson. Dear Miss Weaver. Viking, 1970. 234, 462 |
Occupation | Ezra Pound | Around this time, EP
began corresponding with James Joyce
and helped obtain A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man for serialization in 1914. “Dictionary of Literary Biography online”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Center-LRC. 4 |
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