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 She kept an unpublished diary, and a journal of the Great War.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
Friends, Associates Hannah Lynch
Through her involvement with the Ladies' Land League , HL became acquainted with the League's leading force: Irish nationalist and artist Anna Parnell , to whom she dedicated her novel The Prince of the Glades...
Literary responses Hannah Lynch
Katharine Tynan wrote that Lynch's novels appealed to the discriminating.
Binckes, Faith, and Kathryn Laing. “A Forgotten Franco-Irish Literary Network: Hannah Lynch, Arvède Barine and Salon Culture of Fin-de-Siècle Paris”. Études irlandaises, Vol.
36
, No. 2, pp. 157-71.
2
Family and Intimate relationships Alice Meynell
She bore eight children, of whom one died in infancy. As the family grew, financial worries forced her to work unceasingly. Katharine Tynan was godmother to Olivia , born in 1890, and Francis Thompson was...
Friends, Associates Alice Meynell
Following her early conquest of Tennyson , AM went on to develop a large circle of literary acquaintances. Callers on the Meynells at Palace Court included Irish writer Katharine Tynan , Aubrey Beardsley (while he...
Fictionalization Alice Meynell
To many of her contemporaries (especially male contemporaries), AM symbolised the perfection of Woman and Mother. Many descriptions of her suggest Woolf 's Mrs Ramsay in To the Lighthouse. Coventry Patmore and Francis Thompson
Friends, Associates Viola Meynell
During 1913 to 1914, VM became close friends with Gladys Parrish Huntington (who in 1915 was to publish Carfrae's Comedy) through a common friend, Ivy Low .
MacKenzie, Raymond N. A Critical Biography of English Novelist Viola Meynell, 1885-1956. Edwin Mellen.
110-11, 113
Soon afterwards, while doing war...
Travel Viola Meynell
They were joined later by poet and novelist Katharine Tynan and her daughter Pamela .
MacKenzie, Raymond N. A Critical Biography of English Novelist Viola Meynell, 1885-1956. Edwin Mellen.
235
Intertextuality and Influence Charlotte Grace O'Brien
Among the essays, The Feminine Animal starts from Darwin 's law of evolution, which O'Brien takes to be in some sense proved.
O’Brien, Charlotte Grace. Charlotte Grace O’Brien. Editor Gwynn, Stephen Lucius, Maunsel.
183
She scans the findings of science for their non-literal interpretation, and finds...
Reception Martin Ross
The Corinthian Dinner Committee of Dublin honoured Irish women writers including Edith Somerville , Martin Ross , Lady Gregory , Eva Gore-Booth , Emily Lawless , Susan Mitchell , and Katharine Tynan .
Collis, Maurice. Somerville and Ross: A Biography. Faber and Faber.
158-9
Friends, Associates Christina Rossetti
In the 1880s CR became acquainted with her admirer Katharine Tynan , whose verse she in turn liked for its piety. Lisa Wilson , an admirer of CR who herself wrote and painted, approached the...
Literary responses Christina Rossetti
As Rebecca W. Crump 's guide to publications on CR to 1973 reveals, her high reputation persisted after her death—she stood, according to Katharine Tynan ' article Santa Christina in 1912, head and shoulders above...
Friends, Associates Naomi Royde-Smith
Another close friend of NRS , J. D. Beresford , a highly-regarded novelist, was also an important friend to Dorothy Richardson , and a mentor and support to Macaulay as well as Royde-Smith, and such...
Textual Features Lady Margaret Sackville
Health Dora Sigerson
When DS fell seriously ill she did so extremely suddenly. Her close friend Katharine Tynan , remembering later how rapid was the onset of her illness, recorded that Sigerson had attributed it herself to her...
Textual Features Dora Sigerson
Probably influenced by her friend and contemporary Katharine Tynan , DS 's poems feature a shared traditional Irish symbolism and imagery. (Tynan was publishing two years before Sigerson.) Such techniques include the embodiment of Ireland...

Timeline

No timeline events available.

Texts

Tynan, Katharine, and Frances Maitland. The Book of Flowers. Smith, Elder, 1909.
Tynan, Katharine et al., editors. The Cabinet of Irish Literature. Gresham, 1903.
Tynan, Katharine. The Dear Irish Girl. Smith, Elder, 1899.
Tynan, Katharine. The Holy War. Sidgwick and Jackson, 1916.
Tynan, Katharine. The House on the Bogs. Ward, Lock, 1922.
Tynan, Katharine. The Middle Years. Constable, 1916.
Sigerson, Dora, and Katharine Tynan. The Sad Years. Constable, 1918.
Tynan, Katharine. “The Tyrannies of Ireland: Youth and the Revolver, Growing Peace Hunger”. Times, No. 43032, p. 17.
Tynan, Katharine. The Wandering Years. Constable, 1922.
Tynan, Katharine. The Way of a Maid. Lawrence and Bullen, 1895.
Watts, C. M. The Wild Harp. Editor Tynan, Katharine, Sidgwick and Jackson, 1913.
Tynan, Katharine. The Wind in the Trees. Grant Richards, 1898.
Tynan, Katharine. The Years of the Shadow. Constable, 1919.
Tynan, Katharine. “To the Editor of the Times”. Times, No. 38166, p. 2.
Tynan, Katharine. Twenty One Poems. Editor Yeats, W. B., Dun Emer Press, 1907.
Tynan, Katharine. Twenty-Five Years: Reminiscences. Smith, Elder, 1913.
Tynan, Katharine. Twilight Songs. Blackwell, 1927.
Tynan, Katharine. Wives. Hurst and Blackett, 1924.