Marek, Jayne E. Women Editing Modernism: "Little" Magazines & Literary History. University Press of Kentucky, 1995.
128
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Literary responses | Virginia Woolf | Quentin Bell reports that [a]s always, [Woolf] found publication an agitating business, and that when she received her own six copies, on 20 October, she immediately dispatched one to each of Vanessa
, Clive Bell |
Literary responses | Dorothy Richardson | The first reviewer, in the Sunday Observer, found DR
's narrative strategy extraordinary, but remarkably clear. He noted that her leaving the reader without explanations or apologies was not in the least troubling or... |
Occupation | Dorothy Brett | After graduating from the Slade School of Art, DB
became a professional artist. Her most famous early exhibition piece was War Widows, painted in 1916, in which a crowd of black-clad pregnant women take... |
Publishing | H. D. | Her contributions in 1925-7 to the Adelphi (edited by John Middleton Murry
) consisted of brief, anonymous reviews of books . . . about various aspects of classical cultures and art. Marek, Jayne E. Women Editing Modernism: "Little" Magazines & Literary History. University Press of Kentucky, 1995. 128 |
Publishing | Iris Murdoch | While working exceptionally hard in a Treasury
office during the war, when all food had to be queued for, she still found energy to write fiction and poems as well as letters. Conradi, Peter J. Iris Murdoch. A Life. HarperCollins, 2002. 141-2 |
Publishing | Elizabeth Taylor | ET
for the first time had a short story actually in print: Better Not, published by John Middleton Murry
in the Adelphi. Beauman, Nicola. The Other Elizabeth Taylor. Persephone Books, 2009. 124 |
Publishing | Dorothy Richardson | In September 1934, she met S. S. Koteliansky
, known as Kot to such friends and associates as Katherine Mansfield
and John Middleton Murry
, D. H. Lawrence
, and Virginia
and Leonard Woolf
... |
Reception | Marcel Proust | Anticipating protest from critics, MP
defended his work and its increasingly homosexual aspects on the grounds that he had to follow his characters where their serious defects or vices lead. qtd. in Carter, William C. Marcel Proust: A Life. Yale University Press, 2000. 734 |
Reception | Catherine Carswell | Although Murry
had overseen serialisation of parts of The Savage Pilgrimage in a magazine under his editorship, he wrote to Chatto and Windus
within two weeks of the book's appearance to demand withdrawal of the... |
Residence | Dorothy Brett | John Middleton Murry
was supposed to accompany them, but in the event did not, and the idea of the community quickly evaporated. They first stayed in Taos with Mabel Dodge Luhan
, who then conveyed... |
Residence | Katherine Mansfield | Back from a summer spent largely in Cornwall, Mansfield
and Murry
(after she had briefly left him once more to stay in Brett
's studio) moved into J. M. Keynes
's house in Bloomsbury. Alpers, Antony. The Life of Katherine Mansfield. Oxford University Press, 1982. 409-10 |
Residence | Katherine Mansfield | The recently married KM
and John Middleton Murry
moved into their own home at 2 Portland Villas, Hampstead (along with L. M.
, who had given up her job to housekeep for them). Alpers, Antony. The Life of Katherine Mansfield. Oxford University Press, 1982. 412 Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. |
Residence | Katherine Mansfield | KM
, returned from wanderings in Europe, settled with John Middleton Murry
at The Gables, Cholesbury, Buckinghamshire. Alpers, Antony. The Life of Katherine Mansfield. Oxford University Press, 1982. 407 |
Residence | Katherine Mansfield | Because of Murry
's bankruptcy, he and KM
came back from Paris to England to live in Chelsea. Alpers, Antony. The Life of Katherine Mansfield. Oxford University Press, 1982. 407 |
Residence | Katherine Mansfield |
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