Arvède Barine

Standard Name: Barine, Arvède
Used Form: Louise-Cécile Vincens

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Friends, Associates Hannah Lynch
Through her involvement with the Ladies' Land League , HL became acquainted with the League's leading force: Irish nationalist and artist Anna Parnell , to whom she dedicated her novel The Prince of the Glades...
Literary responses Hannah Lynch
Arvède Barine , who had offered to review the original when it came out, contributed a supportive and enthusiastic
Binckes, Faith, and Kathryn Laing. “A Forgotten Franco-Irish Literary Network: Hannah Lynch, Arvède Barine and Salon Culture of Fin-de-Siècle Paris”. Études irlandaises, Vol.
36
, No. 2, 2011, pp. 157-71.
3
review to the Journal des débats of the French translation (which she had also looked...
Literary responses Hannah Lynch
Arvède Barine reviewed this book at the author's request.
Binckes, Faith, and Kathryn Laing. “A Forgotten Franco-Irish Literary Network: Hannah Lynch, Arvède Barine and Salon Culture of Fin-de-Siècle Paris”. Études irlandaises, Vol.
36
, No. 2, 2011, pp. 157-71.
3
The reviewer for the Catholic World mistakenly deduced from Lynch's praise of the unorthodox Catholic churchman Victor Charbonnel that she was a Protestant Englishwoman (instead...
politics Hannah Lynch
HL formulated her political creed in a letter in French to Arvède Barine in 1901: she was, she said, solidly (carrément) anti-Catholic, anti-militarist, anti-nationalist, very much a republican. The only people she could...
Textual Production Hannah Lynch
HL 's unpublished correspondence with Arvède Barine (real name Louise-Cécile Vincens) is in the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris.
Binckes, Faith, and Kathryn Laing. “A Forgotten Franco-Irish Literary Network: Hannah Lynch, Arvède Barine and Salon Culture of Fin-de-Siècle Paris”. Études irlandaises, Vol.
36
, No. 2, 2011, pp. 157-71.
2, n1

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