Sengupta, Padmini. Sarojini Naidu: A Biography. Asia Publishing House, 1966.
9
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Family and Intimate relationships | Sarojini Naidu | Her father, Aghorenath Chattopadhyaya
, was a professor at Nizam College
. According to SN
, he was a great dreamer, a great man whose life has been a magnificent failure. Sengupta, Padmini. Sarojini Naidu: A Biography. Asia Publishing House, 1966. 9 |
Friends, Associates | Evelyn Underhill | EU
and her husband led active social lives, often entertaining friends and colleagues at their home. Blanche Alethea Crackanthorpe
introduced her to Marie Belloc Lowndes
, who became a friend of Underhill and called her... |
Friends, Associates | Michael Field | They made a friend of George Meredith
some time before 1890 and visited him often. Field, Michael, and William Rothenstein. Works and Days. Moore, Thomas Sturge and D. C. Sturge MooreEditors , J. Murray, 1933. 66 |
Friends, Associates | Ling Shuhua | The group's founders emphasised exchanges between Asian and British literary cultures; they named it after Rabindrath Tagore
's prose-poem collection The Crescent Moon (1903), after they brought Tagore
to Beijing via the Society for Lectures on the New Learning |
Friends, Associates | Natalie Clifford Barney | By the 1920s the salon attracted an impressive array of prominent writers, artists, and intellectuals, including Paul Valéry
, Colette
, Jean Cocteau
, Gabriele D'Annunzio
, Rabindranath Tagore
, Ernest Hemingway
, F. Scott |
Friends, Associates | Frances Cornford | Among friends entertained regularly or occasionally at Conduit Head were William Rothenstein
, Eric Gill
, Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson
, Bertrand Russell
, and Rabindranath Tagore
. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray, Brian Harrison, and Lawrence Goldman, editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. |
Friends, Associates | Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence | During her stay in India, EPL
met the poet Rabindranath Tagore
. Pethick-Lawrence, Emmeline. My Part in a Changing World. Hyperion, 1976. 338 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Constance Holme | |
Intertextuality and Influence | Sarojini Naidu | Clusters of poems in this volume bear epigraphs pointing to both Eastern and Western influences: The Flowering Year quotes Shelley
, while The Peacock Lute and The Temple: A Pilgrimage of Love quote Omar Khayyàm |
Material Conditions of Writing | Evelyn Underhill | After she met Rabindranath Tagore
, then at the height of fame, in 1912, EU
went on to write three reviews of his books for the Nation. The two
maintained a friendship and correspondence... |
names | Ketaki Kushari Dyson | KKD
's given name, the name of a flower, was taken from the poetry of Bengali poet Rabindranath Tagore
, who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1913. Dyson, Ketaki Kushari. “Forging a Bilingual Identity: A Writer’s Testimony”. Bilingual Women: Anthropological Approaches to Second Language Use, edited by Pauline Burton, Ketaki Kushari Dyson, and Shirley Ardener, Berg, 1994, pp. 170 - 85. 172 |
Publishing | Ketaki Kushari Dyson | |
Publishing | May Sinclair | MS
praised Rabindranath Tagore
's Gitanjali in a piece for the North American Review which hails him as a modern, a very modern poet. Raitt, Suzanne. May Sinclair: A Modern Victorian. Clarendon Press, 2000. 194 Raitt, Suzanne. May Sinclair: A Modern Victorian. Clarendon Press, 2000. 194 and n43 |
Reception | Ketaki Kushari Dyson | KKD
feels strongly that the difficulty she has faced in attracting an English-speaking audience and commanding the attention of English-speaking critics is related to her ethnicity and bilingualism. Most of the slender English criticism of... |
Textual Features | Natalie Clifford Barney | Less intimate than Souvenirs indiscrets, this volume includes sketches of Gertrude Stein
, Jean Cocteau
, Gide
, D'Annunzio
, and Rabindranath Tagore
. One piece, written in response to Ramon Gomez de la Serna |