Chapman, Wayne K., and Janet M. Manson, editors. Women in the Milieu of Leonard and Virginia Woolf: Peace, Politics, and Education. Pace University Press, 1998.
257-8
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Anthologization | Eleanor Rathbone | ER
contributed an essay on Changes in Public Life to Our Freedom and Its Results, a feminist anthology edited by Ray Strachey
and published by Leonard
and Virginia Woolf
. Alberti, Johanna. Eleanor Rathbone. Sage Press, 1996. 179 Pedersen, Susan. Eleanor Rathbone and the Politics of Conscience. Yale University Press, 2004. 380 |
Cultural formation | Mary Stott | Mary's mother took her to Liberal meetings while she was still a girl. From her early twenties, when she read Ray Strachey
's The Cause, she developed her own feminist agenda. Stott, Mary. Forgetting’s No Excuse. Faber and Faber, 1973. 131 |
death | Millicent Garrett Fawcett | She commissioned Ray Strachey
, her life-long friend, to be her official biographer; but a feminist of a later generation, Ann Oakley
, has speculated that she probably required from Strachey discretion and even self-censorship... |
Education | Augusta Webster | Suffragist historian Ray Strachey
relates that AW
jeopardized the prospects of women students at the South Kensington Art School
when she was expelled for whistling. Strachey, Ray. The Cause: A Short History of the Women’s Movement in Great Britain. Virago, 1978. 96 Webster, Augusta. “Introduction”. Portraits and Other Poems, edited by Christine Sutphin, Broadview, 2000, pp. 9 - 37. 10 |
Family and Intimate relationships | Dorothy Bussy | DB
's youngest sister, Marjorie Colville (Gumbo) Strachey
(1882-1964), was a teacher, suffragist, writer, and member of the group Woolf called the Neo-Pagans group (which included Rupert Brooke
, Gwen Raverat
, Ka Cox
... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Dorothy Bussy | Oliver Strachey
, like a number of Strachey men, worked with the East India Company
. His second wife was Rachel (Ray) Costelloe
, Newnham College
graduate, women's rights activist, and author, best known for... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Amabel Williams-Ellis | Amabel Strachey had a long roster of talented, accomplished relations by birth and marriage. Within her own generation her cousins or cousins by marriage included the writers Lytton Strachey
, Ray Strachey
, and Dorothy Bussy |
Friends, Associates | Julia Strachey | |
Friends, Associates | Julia Strachey | JS
was at Brackenhurst in 1911 when her father, Oliver
, married his second wife, feminist author and activist Ray Costelloe Strachey
. Blain, Virginia, Patricia Clements, and Isobel Grundy, editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford, 1990. Hussey, Mark. Virginia Woolf A to Z. Facts on File, 1995. 278 Strachey, Julia, and Frances Partridge. Julia: A Portrait of Julia Strachey. Little, Brown, 1983. 45, 51 |
Friends, Associates | Julia Strachey | Shortly after the wedding, Julia became the charge of Alys Russell
, a suffrage and temperance activist who was also the aunt of Ray (Costelloe) Strachey
, sister of writer Logan Pearsall Smith
and Mary Berenson |
Friends, Associates | Mary Agnes Hamilton | MAH
's memoirs give detailed and affectionate pen-portraits of innumerable friends, made both at home and in many of the other countries she travelled or worked in. Many of her English friends are known names... |
Literary responses | Lydia Becker | Ray Strachey
, in her history of the feminist movement, summarizes LB
's enormous impact: She combined political sagacity with undeviating enthusiasm, and she was therefore widely trusted and respected, in spite of a certain... |
Literary responses | Millicent Garrett Fawcett | Ray Strachey
praises MGF
's biography of Molesworth as one of the most interesting of her books. Strachey, Ray. Millicent Garrett Fawcett. J. Murray, 1931. 187 |
Literary responses | Florence Nightingale | John Stuart Mill
, who called Cassandra a cri du coeur, Kahane, Claire. “The Aesthetic Politics of Rage”. LIT: Literature Interpretation Theory, No. 1, pp. 19 -31. 28 Webb, Val. Florence Nightingale: The Making of a Radical Theologian. Chalice, 2002. 102 |
Literary responses | Florence Nightingale | Ray Strachey
called this book very long, and further claimed that its arrangement is very confused . . . it is a highly wearisome book to read. It is full of repetitions, and of... |