Storm Jameson

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Standard Name: Jameson, Storm
Birth Name: Margaret Ethel Jameson
Nickname: Daisy
Self-constructed Name: Storm Jameson
Pseudonym: James Hill
Pseudonym: William Lamb
SJ was a prolific novelist with an intense commitment to political causes, especially pacifism, anti-fascism, artistic freedom, and various women's issues. Her fiction is generally thought of as realist or materialist in its techniques, and often draws liberally on fact (from her own life, historical events, and characteristics of actual people), though she experimented with its shape and matter more often than has been recognised. She also wrote political and polemical non-fiction, journalism, essays, literary criticism, and autobiography.

Connections

Connections Sort ascending Author name Excerpt
Publishing Elaine Feinstein
EF has carried out a great deal of scholarly commentary of a kind best calculated to be useful to readers (though she did not finish her MA thesis on nineteenth-century sexual fantasists like Ouida and...
politics Dora Russell
Other speakers included Vera Brittain , Clemence Dane , Megan Lloyd George , and Storm Jameson (all Six Point Vice-Presidents). The conference also involved the Married Women's Association and the National Union of Women Teachers
politics Gladys Henrietta Schütze
During Storm Jameson 's presidency of the English branch of PEN International (which began early in 1938) the Schützes lent Glebe House for a two-day sale raising funds for refugees from the Nazis . GHS
politics Sylvia Townsend Warner
Warner and Ackland were members of publisher Victor Gollancz 's Left Book Club , and wrote assiduously for left-wing papers and magazines. (After the second world war, however, Ackland developed divergent and comparatively right-wing views.)...
politics Phyllis Bottome
After the war, PB continued to be politically active, often writing letters to the editor of the Times on subjects like liberalism and human rights in South Africa. In the issue dated 14 December 1951...
politics Marghanita Laski
On 30 October 1958 ML was one of the signatories to a letter to the editor of theTimes urging the government to cease testing nuclear weapons; others who signed included Peggy Ashcroft , Storm Jameson
Occupation Dorothy Whipple
She sometimes did voluntary work, visiting schools and directing patients at an ante-natal clinic which made her feel embarrassed to be clean, warmly dressed and not pregnant. I felt the lot of the working-class woman...
Occupation Honoré de Balzac
Mary Russell Mitford translated some of Balzac's works. His oeuvre influenced many writers, including Mary Elizabeth Braddon , Storm Jameson , and Natalie Clifford Barney , and has attracted criticism from Anita Brookner .
Literary responses Hope Mirrlees
In The Georgian Novel and Mr. Robinson (1929), Storm Jameson , writing against notions of modern literature as a barren terrain, cites as evidence of its richness and diversity the masculine, sensitive, and solitary genius...
Literary responses Lettice Cooper
Like Cooper's previous book, this too netted a flattering comparison to a nineteenth-century woman writer. Richard Church in John O'London's likened it to Charlotte Brontë 's Villette.
Cooper, Lettice. Fenny. Gollancz.
inside dust-jacket
The British Book News review...
Literary responses Olivia Manning
Storm Jameson called this novel a really accomplished piece of work and its author a real writer. The publishers used her words in advertising.
Braybrooke, Neville, and Isobel English. Olivia Manning: A Life. Chatto and Windus.
60
The Times Literary Supplement treated the novel as the...
Literary responses Muriel Spark
British Book News began to cool wirh this novel: this time her central character is scarcely a sufficiently plausible figure to dominate the story as the plot requires.
British Book News. British Council.
(1960): 289
But Storm Jameson found the...
Literary responses Dora Marsden
DM sent her book to trusted readers before and after its publication. Her former instructor Samuel Alexander (who had published Space, Time and the Deity in 1920) advised against publication, telling her that the text...
Literary responses Susan Miles
Storm Jameson thought the book so honestly written that it cannot be read carelessly.
Jameson, Storm, and Susan Miles. “Foreword”. Portrait of a Parson, George Allen and Unwin, pp. 5-7.
6
A recent commentator, Peter Campbell , values the way that this book handles its material but finds its tone somewhat cloying.
Campbell, Peter. “Restoring St George’s”. London Review of Books, pp. 18-20.
20
Literary responses Susan Miles
This book appeared with very distinguished endorsement on its jacket. T. S. Eliot wrote that he found it a very poignant story.Storm Jameson wrote, Its simplicities are at a profound level. The theme is...

Timeline

No timeline events available.

Texts

Jameson, Storm et al. “Preface”. The Diary of a Young Girl, translated by. Barbara Mary Mooyaart-Doubleday, Constellation, 1952.
Jameson, Storm. Speaking of Stendhal. Gollancz, 1979.
Linke, Lilo, and Storm Jameson. Tale Without End. Knopf, 1934.
Jameson, Storm. The Black Laurel. Macmillan, 1947.
Jameson, Storm. The Decline of Merry England. Cassell, 1930.
Jameson, Storm. The End of This War. Allen and Unwin, 1941.
Jameson, Storm. The Georgian Novel and Mr. Robinson. Heinemann, 1929.
Jameson, Storm. The Green Man. Macmillan, 1952.
Jameson, Storm. The Happy Highways. Heinemann, 1920.
Jameson, Storm. The Intruder. Macmillan, 1956.
Jameson, Storm. The Journal of Mary Hervey Russell. Macmillan, 1945.
Jameson, Storm. The Lovely Ship. Heinemann, 1927.
Jameson, Storm. The Pot Boils. Constable, 1919.
Jameson, Storm. The Triumph of Time. Heinemann, 1932.
Jameson, Storm. The Voyage Home. Heinemann, 1930.
Jameson, Storm, and John Farleigh. The World Ends. Dent, 1937.
Jameson, Storm. The Wrtier’s Situation and Other Essays. Macmillan, 1950.
Jameson, Storm. Then We Shall Hear Singing. Cassell, 1942.
Jameson, Storm. Three Kingdoms. Constable, 1926.
Jameson, Storm. Women Against Men. Knopf, 1933.
Maupassant, Guy de. Yvette and Other Stories. Translator Jameson, Storm, Knopf, 1924.