Blain, Virginia et al., editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford.
Columbia University
Connections
Connections | Author name Sort ascending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Production | Ella Wheeler Wilcox | EWW
's papers are divided between several archives, including the State Historical Society of Wisconsin
, Columbia University
, and the New York Public Library
. |
Education | Eudora Welty | After this she attended the University of Wisconsin
, majoring in English Literature and studying under Ricardo Quintana
. Vande Kieft, Ruth M. Eudora Welty. Twayne Publishers. 4 Encyclopedia of World Biography. http://www.notablebiographies.com/index.html. |
Cultural formation | Eudora Welty | EW
's time in New York City was educational not only academically but also in broadening her cultural horizons. As a middle-class white in America's Deep South she had grown up among people whose outlook... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Eudora Welty | |
Textual Production | Sylvia Townsend Warner | STW
wrote an opera libretto about the last days of Percy Shelley
, The Sea Change, for musician Paul Nordoff
, who had been commissioned by Columbia University
to write an opera. Harman, Claire. Sylvia Townsend Warner: A Biography. Chatto and Windus. 222 |
Travel | Helen Waddell | HW
sailed on SS Berengaria to New York to accept in person the award of an honorary DLitt. from Columbia University
on 3 June. Blackett, Monica. The Mark of the Maker: A Portrait of Helen Waddell. Constable. frontispiece, 121-4 Waddell, Helen. “Acknowledgements; Note; Introduction”. Between Two Eternities, edited by Felicitas Corrigan, Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, pp. viii - ix, 1. 9 |
Reception | Helen Waddell | HW
's remarkable popularity—as an academic scholar whose name was well-known in non-academic, cultivated households—went hand in hand with some scholarly condemnation. She was said to have been barred from |
Family and Intimate relationships | Anna Jane Vardill | AJV
's father, John Vardill
, was born in the American colonies in 1749 and educated at King's College
, New York (the forerunner of Columbia University). In 1773 he became Professor of Natural Law... |
Textual Production | Annie S. Swan | Her papers are held at the University of Aberdeen
, Edinburgh University
, and Columbia University
, New York, which holds both catalogued and uncatalogued correspondence by her in its collection of the papers... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Jan Struther | JS
finally married Adolf Kurt Placzek
, by then a librarian at Columbia University
in New York, her lover of nearly a decade, whom she had met during his refugee days in England. Maxtone Graham, Ysenda. The Real Mrs Miniver. John Murray. 267 Reynolds, David. “Zest”. London Review of Books, pp. 34-5. 35 |
Textual Production | Hesba Stretton | Columbia University
, New York, holds correspondence by her in its collection of the papers of Hodder and Stoughton
. “Hodder and Stoughton Records 1875-1914”. Columbia University in the City of New York, Rare Book & Manuscript Library. |
Occupation | Gertrude Stein | On October 24 1934 she was greeted with effusive press coverage in New York. Hobhouse, Janet. Everybody Who was Anybody: A Biography of Gertrude Stein. Doubleday. 158-9 |
Performance of text | Gertrude Stein | The work was commissioned by the Alice M. Ditson
Fund of Columbia University
and performed there on 7 May 1947. Stein, Gertrude. “How Many Acts Are There In It?”. Last Operas and Plays, edited by Carl Van Vechten, Rinehart, p. vii - xix. xi |
Residence | Christina Stead | After this year in Europe , they found an apartment in uptown Manhattan, at 403 West 115th Street, Morningside Heights, close to Columbia University
. A year later they moved to another apartment, near... |
Occupation | Constance Smedley | Before coming to America they had sold or given away the Greenleaf Theatre costumes and props, intending to work at painting and writing until they had saved enough to engage in community drama. In America... |
Timeline
1836: Mount Holyoke Female Seminary (later Mount...
Building item
1836
Mount Holyoke Female Seminary
(later Mount Holyoke College) was founded at South Hadley, Maryland, by Mary Lyon
: the first post-secondary educational institution for women in the USA.
11 July 1919: University women from Britain, the USA, and...
Building item
11 July 1919
University women from Britain, the USA, and Canada met in London to plan the founding of the International Federation of University Women , which held an inaugural conference at Bedford College
, London, in 1920.
23 October 1920: In his novel Main Street, Sinclair Lewis...
Writing climate item
23 October 1920
In his novelMain Street, Sinclair Lewis
excoriated the small-town life often represented in American literature as the backbone of national life.
December 1990: Bibliographer G. Thomas Tanselle spoke out...
Writing climate item
December 1990
Bibliographer G. Thomas Tanselle
spoke out at Columbia University
about what he termed the microfilming epidemic, with attendant destruction of texts once microfilmed.
Texts
No bibliographical results available.