Mary Augusta Ward

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Standard Name: Ward, Mary Augusta
Birth Name: Mary Augusta Arnold
Married Name: Mary Augusta Ward
Pseudonym: Mrs Humphry Ward
Best known for her influential loss-of-faith novel Robert Elsmere, MAW was among the more prolific and popular novelists of the later Victorian and Edwardian periods. Her fifty-year career spanned an era of enormous transformation. During it she produced twenty-five novels, an autobiography, journalism (including reviews and literary criticism), a children's book, a translation, and several works of war propaganda. Her more serious earlier works were weighty novels of ideas in the tradition of George Eliot , which seek to chart the complex relationships among character, intellect, religion, and morality. Her work insistently takes up what she sees as the pressing social issues of her day, shifting in the early twentieth century to briefer works on a much wider geographical canvas and then taking up the war effort in both fiction and prose. It displays an abiding interest in the social, intellectual, and sexual relations between men and women. The education and occupations of women are recurrent themes, and Oxford with its intellectual ferment a common setting. Although MAW 's nationalism, imperialism, and anti-suffrage stance cast her as conservative to recent readers, she was a reformer, in her earlier years a democrat, and an acute analyst of gender who believed strongly in the currents of progress and the transformative power of texts.

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Occupation Charlotte Yonge
They produced a hand-written journal called The Barnacle. They included Mary Coleridge (a poet, who was in at the group's founding), Christabel Coleridge (who became CY 's biographer), Frances Mary Peard , and Mary Augusta Arnold, later Mrs Humphry Ward
Occupation Henri-Frédéric Amiel
He became a philosopher and a professor of aesthetics, and published a number of books including a study of Germaine de Staël . His best known work, however, was his diary. It exerted an influence...
Occupation Ethel M. Arnold
In the late 1890s, EA took up photography, for which she enroled in a course at the Regent Street Polytechnic  in 1898.
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
 One family friend reported that she had gone into partnership with the Australian portrait photographer ...
Occupation Susan Tweedsmuir
ST began her career (her own term) in welfare work under the ægis of Mrs. Humphry Ward .
Tweedsmuir, Susan. The Lilac and the Rose. G. Duckworth, 1952.
87
She began by serving food to crippled children at the Passmore Edwards Settlement (later the Mary...
Occupation Emma Marshall
While living first in Exeter and then in Gloucester, EM organized evening lectures for women, a cause into which she threw herself heart and soul.
Marshall, Beatrice. Emma Marshall. Seeley, 1900.
102
(In Exeter she also visited the women's penitentiary...
Occupation Constance Smedley
Since the Langham Place Group had provided a social space for women in 1860, several organizations had already challenged the flourishing institution of men's clubs. The Lyceum Club came on the scene at a time...
politics May Sinclair
Unlike many suffragists, MS was a decided supporter of the war. With three other women (Jane Ellen Harrison , Flora Annie Steel , and Mary Augusta Ward ) she signed the Authors' Declaration to...
politics Maude Royden
In 1912, MR wrote two letters to the editor of the Times to defend the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies and its publications against the critical judgements of the well-known anti-suffragist writer Mary Augusta Ward
politics Gertrude Bell
GB was often scornful of women as a group, and believed that the suffrage movement's militancy would jeopardize the achievements of professional women. Notably, anti-suffragists included many prominent supporters of women's higher education, such as...
politics Christina Rossetti
Notwithstanding these affiliations, however, she declined to support women's suffrage when requested by Augusta Webster around 1878. In a letter to Webster she stated: I do not think the present social movements tend on the...
politics F. Mabel Robinson
FMR became deeply interested in political debates and struggles around the issue of home rule for Ireland, and went so far as to carry secret messages back and forth between England and Ireland. This...
politics Beatrice Webb
Beatrice Potter (later BW ) signed the Ladies' Appeal against Women's Suffrage (Mrs Humphry Ward 's anti-suffrage manifesto), feeling at this date that economic issues outweighed any question of the vote.
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
politics Ethel M. Arnold
She did not support the militant and violent tactics of suffragettes like the Pankhursts. She did believe that votes were particularly important for working-class women, whose industrial organizations would otherwise be neglected. Part of the...
politics Jane Hume Clapperton
Her signature was among six hundred appended (chosen from those of more than two thousand women supporting the document) to the anonymously-published Women's Suffrage: A Reply. This argument in support of female suffrage appeared...
politics Eliza Lynn Linton
In June 1889 ELL publicly signed An Appeal Against Female Suffrage, written by Mary Augusta Ward and published in Nineteenth Century.
Ward, Mary Augusta. “An Appeal Against Female Suffrage”. Nineteenth Century, Vol.
25
, June 1889, pp. 781-8.
786

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