Kiddle, Margaret, and Sir Douglas Copland. Caroline Chisholm. Melbourne University Press.
3
Connections | Author name Sort descending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Cultural formation | Caroline Chisholm | Near the time of her marriage, CC
converted to Catholicism
, her husband's faith. From this point onwards she remained a devout Catholic. Kiddle, Margaret, and Sir Douglas Copland. Caroline Chisholm. Melbourne University Press. 3 |
Cultural formation | Caroline Chisholm | Protestant minister John Dunmore Lang
's bitter anti-Catholic
denunciation of CC
's immigration work prompted lively correspondence in the Sydney Morning Herald. Kiddle, Margaret, and Sir Douglas Copland. Caroline Chisholm. Melbourne University Press. 81-4 |
Cultural formation | Kate Chopin | KC
had a cultural heritage which was both French Creole (her mother's family had come to Louisiana centuries earlier from northern France) and Irish. She was a presumably white American, of a well-to-do... |
Cultural formation | Hélène Cixous | Early in life, HC
also saw both of her parents suffer racism. At three years old, she discovered what being Jewish meant in Oran. When her father, a military officer during the war, took... |
Cultural formation | Mary Cowden Clarke | MCC
was born into a professional, English family of European extraction (her father was half Italian and her mother half German) and Roman Catholic
religion. Mary writes of her early, Catholic church attendance in terms... |
Cultural formation | Olivia Clarke | |
Cultural formation | Agnes Mary Clerke | |
Cultural formation | Ellen Mary Clerke | EMC
was a devoted and exemplary Catholic
, Margaret Lindsay, Lady Huggins, and Aubrey St John Clerke. Agnes Mary Clerke and Ellen Mary Clerke. Printed for private circulation. 50 Stephen, Sir Leslie, and Sidney Lee, editors. The Dictionary of National Biography. Smith, Elder. |
Publishing | Ellen Mary Clerke | EMC
was a frequent, lifelong contributor to both English and Italian periodicals. She wrote for the journal of the Manchester Geographical Society
, National Review, Contemporary Review, Gentleman's Magazine, and (less frequently... |
Cultural formation | An Collins | AC
was a devout Christian believer. One group of her editors think she was possibly Roman Catholic
, certainly anti-Calvinist; another group thinks she was Calvinist in sympathy. Greer, Germaine et al., editors. Kissing the Rod. Virago. 148 Graham, Elspeth et al., editors. Her Own Life. Routledge. 55 |
Cultural formation | Joseph Conrad | He was born into the gentry class, or rather at a level of Polish society which had something of that and something of the British nobility. He was baptised into the Roman Catholic Church
and... |
Cultural formation | Constance, Countess Markievicz | Shortly after her first release from prison, Irish nationalist Constance, Countess Markievicz,
became a Roman Catholic
. Marreco, Anne. The Rebel Countess: The Life and Times of Constance Markievicz. Chilton Books. 234 |
Cultural formation | Catherine Cookson | She was baptised a Roman Catholic
, though her family did not practise: this was called being a wooden Catholic. The interdenominational hatred in the area was fierce and dangerous. After her first confession... |
Cultural formation | Catherine Cookson | After the war, CC
's search for religious belief involved her for a while in spiritualism. She believed that on one occasion when she and her husband lost themselves in a country lane they had... |
Wealth and Poverty | Catherine Cookson | That estimate covered what remained after giving large sums away, much of it to medical research. The Cookson mouse has been developed to bear the gene for haemorrhagic teleangiectasia: hopefully a step towards a cure... |
No bibliographical results available.