Katharine Tynan

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Standard Name: Tynan, Katharine
Birth Name: Katharine Tynan
Nickname: Kate
Nickname: K. T.
Nickname: Katie
Married Name: Katharine Hinkson
Married Name: K. T. Hinkson
Married Name: Mrs H. A. Hinkson
The busy writing career of Irish nationalist poet, novelist, and journalist KT spanned the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, driven partly by the need to support her family. Her more than 160 volumes include about a hundred novels (written primarily for women, many of them romance and some gothic), twenty-seven volumes of poetry (some of it inspired by Irish heritage, nationalism, and Catholicism), twenty-three collections of short stories, six volumes of autobiography, three volumes of sketches, a religious play, a book of axioms, and three volumes of biography or memoirs of other people.
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
Napier, Taura S., and Louise S. Napier. Seeking a Country: Literary Autobiographies of Twentieth-Century Irishwomen. University Press of America.
53
She selected and edited three poetry collections and a massive volume of Irish literature, all of them important in the Irish Literary Revival, which she helped to produce. Her non-fiction covers Irish history, work for children (including a religious text and a book on behaviour), and a collaboratively written book on flowers. As a journalist she turned out articles and sketches on social, political, and gender issues. She kept an unpublished diary, and a journal of the Great War.

Connections

Connections Author name Sort descending Excerpt
Family and Intimate relationships Lady Cynthia Asquith
Cynthia's uncle George Wyndham was a Conservative politician (named Secretary of State for Ireland in 1900), an author, and a personal friend of the writer Katharine Tynan .
Family and Intimate relationships Mona Caird
His father, Sir James Caird (an agricultural economist and large landowner in south-west Scotland, knighted in 1882), had at some date (probably connected with inheritance) linked his own surname with that of his wife, born...
Literary responses Mona Caird
The Daily Telegraph responded with an article headed Is Marriage a Failure?, which brought in about 27,000 letters in response and a parallel surge of letters in the USA in Cosmopolitan (showing, says Heilmann...
politics Constance, Countess Markievicz
The journal, which was the first women's newspaper in Ireland, issued its first number this November, though CCM did not begin to publish articles in it until March 1909. Other contributors included Katharine Tynan ,...
Textual Production Maud Gonne
This was was the first women's paper published in Ireland. Among its contributors were Constance Markievicz , Katharine Tynan , MG , and Molony.Gonne contributed several articles, though she frequently did so anonymously. She was...
Author summary Eva Gore-Booth
In addition to her intense suffrage and labour activism, EGB wrote poetry, periodical essays, political pamphlets, religious criticism, plays, and an autobiograpical sketch. Her work was admired by her contemporaries Katharine Tynan , Æ (...
Literary responses Eva Gore-Booth
This poem drew several tributes from friends. Æ (George Russell ) wrote: I am delighted with your poem. You have slipped into it at last—the Celtic manner . . . . It ought to...
Friends, Associates Sarah Grand
While living in Tunbridge WellsSG met the poet, popular novelist, and Irish nationalist Katharine Tynan .
Tynan, Katharine. The Middle Years. Constable.
380
Literary responses Catherine Maria Grey
Age and Argus called The Gambler's Wife a tale of touching, pathetic interest, written with much grace and deep devotional feeling where so deep is the melancholy, and so trying are the incidents of her...
Publishing Violet Hunt
Here VH caught the attention of other journal editors, and she was soon writing a weekly column, Wares of Autolycus, for the Pall Mall Gazette (a column later taken on by Alice Meynell and...
Anthologization James Joyce
Yeats felt that Katharine Tynan 's inclusion of three poems by Joyce in her Irish anthology The Wild Harp in 1913 gave a material boost to his career.
Hinkson, Pamela. “The Friendship of Yeats and Katharine Tynan, II: Later Days of the Irish Literary Movement”. The Fortnightly, No. 1043 n.s., pp. 323-36.
332
Textual Production Judith Kazantzis
This remarkable anthology brings to a wider audience poems by many otherwise unknown writers, as well as by, for instance, Vera Brittain , Edith Sitwell , Nancy Cunard , Cicely Hamilton , Rose Macaulay ,...
Publishing Fanny Aikin Kortright
Towards the end of her memoirs FAK notes that she wrote from the age of seventeen but did not earn until I was twenty-six.
Kortright, Fanny Aikin. The Recollections of My Long Life. Printed for the author by Farmer and Sons.
Her earliest publications were poems for the Guernsey Star (when she...
Fictionalization Amy Levy
Quite apart from the biographical errors perpetrated by James Warwick Price , other myths about her were woven from her Jewishness and her suicide. Her friend Clementina Black (perhaps feeling that her reputation needed rescue)...
Cultural formation Hannah Lynch
HL grew up as an urban middle-class Irishwoman with some Scottish heritage and amid nationalist influence, in a cultivated literary and political household which was also a predominantly female environment. It is described in Twenty-Five...

Timeline

July 1889: Women's Suffrage: A Reply appeared in the...

Building item

July 1889

Women's Suffrage: A Reply appeared in the Fortnightly Review to counter Mary Augusta Ward 's Appeal Against Female Suffrage in the previous month's Nineteenth Century.

1890: The year following Irish nationalist Ellen...

Women writers item

1890

The year following Irish nationalist Ellen O'Leary 's death from breast cancer on 15 October 1889, her Lays of Country, Home and Friends (many of them political) were collected and published.

1895: Thomas Bird Mosher of Portland, Maine, began...

Writing climate item

1895

Thomas Bird Mosher of Portland, Maine, began publishing The Bibelot. A Reprint of Poetry & Prose for Book Lovers, a monthly series later collected as an annual volume, of exquisitely produced editions in tiny press-runs.

November 1908: Bean na h-Eireann (whose title means Woman...

Writing climate item

November 1908

Bean na h-Eireann (whose title means Woman of Ireland) began publishing in Dublin as the organ of the nationalist group Inighnidhe na h-Eireann , Daughters of Ireland.

Texts

Tynan, Katharine. A Cluster of Nuts. Lawrence and Bullen, 1894.
Tynan, Katharine. A Lover’s Breast-Knot. Elkin Mathews, 1896.
Tynan, Katharine. A Nun, Her Friends, and Her Order. Kegan Paul, 1891.
Tynan, Katharine. “A Word for Shopgirls”. Times, No. 43698, p. 10.
Tynan, Katharine. An Isle in the Water. A. and C. Black, 1895.
Tynan, Katharine. Ballads and Lyrics. Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner, 1891.
Tynan, Katharine. Cuckoo Songs. Elkin Mathews and John Lane, 1894.
Tynan, Katharine, and Dora Sigerson. “Dora Sigerson: A Tribute and Some Memories”. The Sad Years, Constable, 1918, p. vii - xii.
Tynan, Katharine. Experiences. A. H. Bullen, 1908.
Tynan, Katharine. Flower of Youth. Sidgwick and Jackson, 1915.
Tynan, Katharine, and Eva Gore-Booth. In Memoriam: Dora Sigerson, 1918-1923. Privately printed by Clement Shorter, 1923.
Tynan, Katharine. Innocencies. A. H. Bullen; Maunsel, 1905.
Tynan, Katharine, editor. Irish Love-Songs. T. F. Unwin, 1892.
Tynan, Katharine. Irish Poems. Sidgwick and Jackson, 1913.
Tynan, Katharine. Julia. Smith, Elder, 1904.
Tynan, Katharine. Late Songs. Sidgwick and Jackson, 1917.
Tynan, Katharine. Lord Edward. John Murray, 1916.
Tynan, Katharine. Louise de la Vallière. Kegan Paul, Trench, 1885.
Tynan, Katharine. New Poems. Sidgwick and Jackson, 1911.
Tynan, Katharine. “Our Daughters’ Future: Independence or Idleness?”. Times, No. 43003, p. 10.
Tynan, Katharine. “Our Daughters’ Future: The Marriage Problem; Girls as Colonists; A Dowry System Suggested”. Times, No. 43019, p. 19.
Tynan, Katharine et al., editors. Poems and Ballads of Young Ireland. M. H. Gill and Son, 1888.
Tynan, Katharine. “Santa Christina”. The Bookman, Vol.
41
, pp. 185-90.
Tynan, Katharine. Shamrocks. Kegan Paul, Trench, 1887.
Tynan, Katharine. She Walks in Beauty. Smith, Elder, 1899.