Rudyard Kipling
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Standard Name: Kipling, Rudyard
Birth Name: Joseph Rudyard Kipling
An Indian-born English journalist, novelist, and travel writer, best-known for short stories, poetry, and children's books, RK
won the Nobel Prize for Literature. He never felt like a native in England although he spent most of his life there, lived in other countries as well, and never saw India after his mid-twenties. He was convinced of the moral mission of the British empire, seeing devoted heroism in its workers but pettiness and bureaucracy in its administration. He writes of India as an insider and his Indian writings were his best loved in England. His increasingly conservative politics seeped into his writing later in his career and lost him some of the immense, immediate public interest that his early work had garnered.
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
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Intertextuality and Influence | Amabel Williams-Ellis | The varied influences on AWE
's passion for folk and fairy tales include her uncle Henry Strachey
, Rudyard Kipling
, and Maxim Gorky
. Williams-Ellis, Amabel. All Stracheys Are Cousins. Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1983. 6 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Stella Gibbons | The story is told in first-person by an austere seventy-year-old woman who has withdrawn from life since she suffered bereavement during the First World War. A young, illegitimate relative startles her into a new life... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Louisa Baldwin | |
Intertextuality and Influence | Hélène Barcynska | The Pleasure Garden is set partly in the London theatre world (or underworld) and partly in India (or rather in Burma, which was politically part of British India at this date). Kipling
's poetry... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Freya Stark | FS
's title flatly contradicts Kipling
's assertion in The Ballad of East and West: Oh, East is East, and West is West, and never the twain shall meet. The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations. 2nd, with revisions, Oxford University Press, 1956. 294 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Mary Frances Billington | Each chapter reflects on a single yet complex aspect of female life in India, from a woman's birth to her death. Each includes an epigraph to introduce its themes and issues, some from Indian cultural... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Sara Jeannette Duncan | According to critic Rosemary Sullivan
, SJDwas an elitist and a monarchist. She had no difficulty with the lot of the Indians and the ethics of imperialism. Sullivan, Rosemary, and Sara Jeannette Duncan. “Introduction”. The Pool in the Desert, edited by Gillian Siddall and Gillian Siddall, Broadview, 2001, pp. 11-22. 13 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Patricia Highsmith | In these tales, animals affected by human callousness and cruelty carry out some startling acts of reprisal. As PH
herself puts it, animals get the better of their masters or owners, because the latter merit... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Juliana Horatia Ewing | Mary's Meadow was used by Rudyard Kipling
in a story called Fairy-kist (included in Limits and Renewals, 1932). The protagonist of Kipling's story, suffering from shell-shock after the First World War, is obsessed with... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Mildred Cable | The first three chapters are devoted to each individual woman, while the fourth describes their coming together into a three-fold cord, which could not easily be broken. Cable, Mildred, and Francesca French. Something Happened. Hodder and Stoughton, 1933. 110 This image refers to a passage in... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Lady Margaret Sackville | In some poems she writes as one of the mothers who have lost their sons; in another as an anonymous watching eye in a silent village where dead bodies lie in the street after it... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Joanna Cannan | Alison Dunbar, lonely among her fashion-conscious and shopping-mad schoolmates, begins writing her pony story in exercise books (as was Cannan's own habit) and attains the apotheosis of acceptance by a publisher. She also sheds the... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Wendy Cope | The title, and the verse-form that goes with it, derive from Kipling
's The Law of the Jungle—a deliberately ironic circumstance, since Kipling writes of the rules meticulously observed by wolves and other wild... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Rose Allatini | A study in temperament, this novel opens with its young hero, Ruan Scorrier, watching the outgoing tide turn on a beach on the rugged north Cornish coast, and imagining feelings for the sand and for... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Una Marson | Some of these early poems engage with familiar British texts. Her playful To Wed or Not to Wed is based on the most famous speech by Shakespeare
's Hamlet, and is not without a trace... |
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