British Books in Print. J. Whitaker and Sons.
1976
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Production | Ann Jebb | The reform that would introduce annual exams at Cambridge University
was already AJ
's subject as well as her husband's: she had addressed it in the Whitehall Evening Post. The pamphlet generally ascribed to... |
Textual Production | Q. D. Leavis | |
Textual Production | Ann Jellicoe | AJ
published Some Unconscious Influences in the Theatre, a booklet of criticism based on the annual Judith Wilson Lecture she gave at Cambridge University the same year. British Books in Print. J. Whitaker and Sons. 1976 OCLC WorldCat. http://www.oclc.org/firstsearch/content/worldcat/. Accessed 1999. Dix, Carol. “Ann Jellicoe (interview)”. The Guardian, p. 10. 10 |
Textual Production | Q. D. Leavis | |
Textual Production | Anita Brookner | This originated as a series of lectures for the Courtauld Institute
, developed into six of AB
's Slade Lectures at Cambridge
, and thence into a monograph. The title came from McNay, Michael. “Anita Brookner obituary”. theguardian.com. |
Textual Features | Q. D. Leavis | QDL
's review constitutes a personal and professional attack on Woolf, based primarily on three fronts: education, domesticity, and class. A footnote asserts that Woolf commenting on women's institutional education is voicing an opinion on... |
Textual Features | Virginia Woolf | Whatever the truth of that, she wrote in full consciousness of outsider status, both delight[ing] in the patriarchal anonymity of the TLS and simultaneously tilt[ing] at it. Wood, James. “Phut-Phut”. London Review of Books, pp. 11-12. 11 |
Textual Features | Beatrice Harraden | They wanted, they said, to build up and develop in the very heart of the British Empire the opportunities offered to all women students of all nations. “The Times Digital Archive 1785-2007”. Thompson Gale: The Times Digital Archive. (29 March 1906): 8 |
Textual Features | Judith Kazantzis | Again contemporary documents in facsimile accompany explanatory broadsheets (on the suffrage campaign itself and contextual subjects beginning with The Prison House of Home) and an illustrated timeline, Women in Revolt, running from 1743... |
Textual Features | Ethel Sidgwick | Though she calls her work a memoir, ES
spends only twenty-six pages writing about Eleanor Sidgwick's childhood, and gives much of the text to the history of Newnham, before as well as during her aunt's... |
Textual Features | Margaret Atwood | Negotiating with the Dead, A Writer on Writing, 2002, presents essays on the motives that make people into writers, on the trajectories of their lives, on her own experience, responses to her work, rewards... |
Textual Features | Amy Levy | Her eponymous Leonard Leuniger is a male Jewish undergraduate at Cambridge
, a budding writer. He makes upper-class friends at university whose antisemitism only gradually reveals itself, cruelly frustrating his efforts to win their approval... |
Textual Features | Helen Oyeyemi | This is HO
's haunted house novel; she reports having been inspired by Shirley Jackson
's The Haunting of Hill House. Harrison, Niall. “Throwing Voices And Observing Transformations: An Interview With Helen Oyeyemi”. Strange Horizons. |
Textual Features | Eva Mary Bell | The title of this novel comes from the biblical Book of Proverbs: a servant when he reigneth is one of three things for which, it says, the earth is disquieted. Examples of such disquiet... |
Textual Features | Marguerite Gardiner, Countess of Blessington | This novel is set in the political climate which followed the recent Reform Bill, and in the fashionable area of the Faubourg St Germain in Paris, which its author knew at first hand, as well... |
No bibliographical results available.