Amy Levy
-
Standard Name: Levy, Amy
Birth Name: Amy Levy
Pseudonym: Melissa
Pseudonym: A Maiden Aunt
AL
was a precocious writer who died (in 1889) so young that all her work might in other circumstances be classed as juvenilia. She is a remarkable poet, melancholy but forceful and individual. Some of her short stories and essays, and one of her three novels, fall into her own categorization of pot-boilers; in others her artistic purpose is paramount. She was also a translator of German poetry. She is a writer of the urban and the modern, whose work is given extra interest by its sometimes painful engagement with her Jewish identity and with the position of Jews in the world of the English intelligentsia.
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Cultural formation | Vernon Lee | As early as 24 August 1887 VL
was calling Kit her new love, or new life (adapting the title of a poem which had been written for Lee by Amy Levy
). Beckman, Linda Hunt. Amy Levy: Her Life and Letters. Ohio University Press, 2000. 148 |
Education | Emma Frances Brooke | Newnham College
opened in September 1871 with Anne Jemima Clough
as its principal, and with five pioneering students: Mary Paley (later Marshall
, who encouraged Jane Ellen Harrison
to follow her to Newnham), Edith Creak |
Education | Elaine Feinstein | She later felt she was lucky to be a postwar student; before then, she would have been as out of place at Newnham as Amy Levy
. Christianity was everywhere Feinstein, Elaine. It Goes with the Territory. Alma, 2013. 37 |
Education | Constance Garnett | Following her mother's death, Constance was sent to Brighton High School
, a boarding school where she was forced to sleep by herself since she refused to say prayers at night. There she continued studying... |
Friends, Associates | Katharine Tynan | Other women writers present at the meeting were Amy Levy
, Mathilde Blind
, Clementina Black
, and Graham Tomson (later Rosamund Marriott Watson)
. Tynan, Katharine. Twenty-Five Years: Reminiscences. Smith, Elder, 1913. 331 |
Friends, Associates | Rosamund Marriott Watson | She forged friendships with other women writers, including Mona Caird
, E. Nesbit
, Mathilde Blind
, Amy Levy
, and Alice Meynell
. She was also a friend of William Sharp
, Austin Dobson |
Friends, Associates | Clementina Black | Besides her friendship with Eleanor MarxCB
became close friends with Amy Levy
, whom she met in London in the late 1870s. She introduced Levy's work Xantippe to publishers. Cameron, Mary. “Clementina Black: A Character Sketch”. The Young Woman, pp. 315 - 16. 315 |
Friends, Associates | Mathilde Blind | One of her travelling companions (and a close friend) was the New Woman novelist Mona Caird
(famous for her declaration calling the institution of marriage a vexatious failure in the Westminster Review in 1888). Thesing, William B., editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 199. Gale Research, 1999. 38 |
Friends, Associates | Beatrice Webb | Beatrice Potter (the future Beatrice Webb) became a friend of Amy Levy
during the 1880s through their shared use of the ladies' lunch room at the British Museum
, where a group developed of young... |
Friends, Associates | Vernon Lee | The young poet Amy Levy
was a guest at the Florence home of VL
; Levy was at once emotionally drawn to Lee. Beckman, Linda Hunt. Amy Levy: Her Life and Letters. Ohio University Press, 2000. 119 Colby, Vineta. Vernon Lee: A Literary Biography. University of Virginia Press, 2003. 119 Matthew, Henry Colin Gray, Brian Harrison, and Lawrence Goldman, editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. under Levy |
Intertextuality and Influence | Louisa May Alcott | Following her death, G. K. Chesterton
in a laudatory (if sexist) review classed LMA
with Austen
as an early realist, and praised her apt depictions of human truths. Chesterton, G. K. “Louisa Alcott”. Critical Essays on Louisa May Alcott, edited by Madeleine B. Stern, G. K. Hall, 1984, pp. 212 - 14. 213-14 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Percy Bysshe Shelley | For generations PBS
appeared the quintessential image of the Romantic poet, whose work influenced such poets as Mathilde Blind
, Amy Levy
, Alice Meynell
, Sarojini Naidu
—though for some of them he was... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Germaine de Staël | After completing this novel GS
wrote, I'd like a really big [writing] table, it seems to me I've got the right to it now. Kobak, Annette. “Mme de Staël and Fanny Burney”. The Burney Journal, pp. 12 -35. 19 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Beatrice Harraden | The epigraph, she said, came from an (unidentified) old English author. Galbraith,. “Things Literary in London Gossip”. New York Times. |
Intertextuality and Influence | Charlotte Montefiore | In an article in the Jewish Chronicle two years afterCM
died, Abraham Benisch
wrote in praise of nineteenth-century Jewish women writers. He asserted that it is a remarkable phenomenon on the horizon of Anglo-Jewish... |
Timeline
2 May 1857
A grand dome designed by Panizzi
was opened in what had been the central courtyard of the British Museum
.