Max Müller

Standard Name: Müller, Max
Used Form: Max Muller

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Health Pandita Ramabai
By her twenties PR was deaf. It is unclear whether her deafness was partial or complete, and whether it lasted her whole life. F. Max Müller suggests that her hearing deteriorated suddenly after she arrived...
Intertextuality and Influence Fanny Kingsley
FK composed this biography at Byfleet in Surrey during her temporary residence there in the year following her husband's death and her enforced removal from the rectory at Eversley. She consulted extensively with several...
Literary responses Anna Swanwick
Again she received her fan letters. Max Müller (a friend) and Oliver Wendell Holmes both read this book with delight, and a son of Tennyson reported that the Poet Laureate had left it open where...
Textual Features Mary Frances Billington
Her chapter on the remarriage of widows and divorce applies the ideas of the Sanskrit philologist Max Müller to unequal relations in marriage, particularly as they affect child brides.
Textual Production Mary Frere
MF calls herself the collector, not the author. She first persuaded Anna Liberata to begin telling stories one day when, as the only woman in the elaborate camp attending her father, she was at a...
Travel Constance Naden
Instead of travelling out entirely by sea, as was usual, the two women went overland through Europe, visiting Vienna and proceeding down the Danube through Budapest on their way to Constantinople. After a pause...

Timeline

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Texts

Müller, Max. Auld Lang Syne. Second Series: My Indian Friends. Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1899.