Barker, Mary Anne. A Year’s Housekeeping in South Africa. Macmillan, 1877.
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Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
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Cultural formation | Mary Anne Barker | Though she was and remained, she said, a staunch Churchwoman myself, and yield to no one in pure love and reverence for my own form of worship, Barker, Mary Anne. A Year’s Housekeeping in South Africa. Macmillan, 1877. 196 |
Cultural formation | Rudyard Kipling | As an English boy and then man in India, Rudyard must have been constantly aware of his status as one of the white race and administrative ruling class. His earliest memories of India were impressions... |
Cultural formation | Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence | |
Cultural formation | Ethel Wilson | |
Cultural formation | Hesba Stretton | She grew up in a nonconformist environment that encouraged reading and learning. Bratton, Jacqueline S. The Impact of Victorian Children’s Fiction. Croom Helm, 1981. 81 Khorana, Meena, and Judith Gero John, editors. Dictionary of Literary Biography 163. Gale Research, 1996. 163: 288 |
Cultural formation | Lucy Boston | |
Cultural formation | Anne Hart Gilbert | The mother and grandmother of Anne and her sister Elizabeth were Methodists, and the girls themselves were baptised Methodists
in 1786, the year after their mother's death, during a missionary visit to Antigua. After their... |
Cultural formation | Judith Cowper Madan | Born into the English professional class, to a family with strong connections with the law, JCM
became deeply religious. When the Methodist
movement got going (still within the Church of England
) it attracted her strongly. |
Cultural formation | Hesba Stretton | |
Cultural formation | Charlotte Brooke | Sources also differ as to whether her family were Church of IrelandAnglicans
(following long tradition) and Charlotte later inclined to Methodism
or Evangelicism, like her mother, or whether while many of her relations were... |
Cultural formation | Judith Cowper Madan | From about this time she associated herself with John Wesley
's fairly new religious group called the Methodists
(then part of the Church of England). Another influence on her religious thinking was Selina Hastings, Countess of Huntingdon |
Cultural formation | Joanna Southcott | She created her own, millenarian religious sect after the Methodists
and the Church of England
(both of whose services she attended) had rebuffed her unconventional advances. She is, however, often associated with the Methodists. Hopkins, James K. A Woman To Deliver her People: Joanna Southcott and English Millenarianism in an Era of Revolution. University of Texas Press, 1982. 47, 58, 35 |
Cultural formation | Josephine Butler | |
Cultural formation | Anne Hart Gilbert | McDonald chose the Gilbert household as the base from which to pursue his mission, until he died of a violent fever on 4 December 1798. His death was a solemn yet, as their religion decreed... |
Cultural formation | Mary Bosanquet Fletcher | The child of wealthy English Anglican
family of Huguenot extraction, Mary Bosanquet received at about the age of four what she felt to be a proof that God answers prayer. At five she developed an... |
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