Edwin Muir

Standard Name: Muir, Edwin

Connections

Connections Author name Sort descending Excerpt
Residence Willa Muir
Willa and Edwin Muir moved to the Orkney Islands, off the northeast coast of Scotland (Edwin's native place).
Muir, Willa. Belonging. Hogarth Press.
174-5
Textual Production Willa Muir
Six years after Edwin Muir 's death, WM (as well as editing his Collected Poems) issued Living with Ballads, a study of the oral poetic tradition in Scotland, which he had planned but had left unfinished.
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
Muir, Willa. Belonging. Hogarth Press.
312
Elphinstone, Margaret. “Willa Muir: Crossing the Genres”. A History of Scottish Women’s Writing, edited by Douglas Gifford and Dorothy McMillan, Edinburgh University Press, pp. 400-15.
400
Residence Willa Muir
Willa and Edwin Muir moved to from St Andrews to Edinburgh after Edwin obtained a job with the British Council , organizing activities and lectures for foreign allies housed in the city.
Muir, Willa. Belonging. Hogarth Press.
208-9
Muir, Edwin. An Autobiography. Hogarth Press.
249
Author summary Willa Muir
WM , a twentieth-century Scotswoman, wrote in fiction and non-fiction about gender inequality, patriarchy, and the repressiveness of Calvinism, but never defined herself as a feminist. She was alert to the devaluing of women's work...
Residence Willa Muir
After the war Willa and Edwin Muir moved back to Prague (where they had lived briefly in 1921-2) when Edwin was appointed Director of the city's British Institute (funded by the British Council ).
Muir, Willa. Belonging. Hogarth Press.
211, 214
Health Willa Muir
Both WM and her husband suffered from serious cases in 1919 of the famous influenza epidemic which had hit London the previous autumn. Recently arrived in Prague two years later, in a harsher winter than...
Residence Willa Muir
Willa and Edwin Muir left Prague after about three years, shortly before the Communist Party , which had overthrown the elected government, closed Czechoslovakia's borders to foreigners or foreign travel.
The Communist Party controlled Czechoslovakia...
politics Willa Muir
WM and her husband hosted a Writers' Circle in their flat in Prague. The members of the Circle were young Czech writers, and discussions were often as much about Czech politics as about work-in-progress...
Residence Willa Muir
After a year in Italy, Willa and Edwin Muir returned to Scotland, this time to Dalkeith, near Edinburgh where Edwin became warden of Newbattle Abbey College .
Muir, Edwin. An Autobiography. Hogarth Press.
279
Intertextuality and Influence Willa Muir
After attending the theatre regularly in Prague in 1921-2, WM began planning a play on a biblical theme, to dramatize in modern terms the situation in which Noah and his family found themselves once the...
Travel Willa Muir
WM spent an academic year in the USA, where Edwin Muir was Charles Eliot Norton Professor for the year at Harvard University , at the invitation of the poet Archibald MacLeish .
Muir, Willa. Belonging. Hogarth Press.
282, 284
Textual Production Willa Muir
The question of the extent to which the couple collaborated in general is central to scholarship on WM , whose writing and translating career has been overshadowed by her husband 's literary legacy. Translations she...
Residence Willa Muir
After their year in the United States, Willa and Edwin Muir returned to England and settled at Priory Cottage, Swaffham Prior, near Cambridge.
Muir, Willa. Belonging. Hogarth Press.
306
Textual Production Willa Muir
Standard reference sources list Edwin Muir as co-translator of this work.
“Dictionary of Literary Biography online”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Center-LRC.
81, under Franz Kafka
“Contemporary Authors”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Centre-LRC.
The volume was reprinted on its own by the Limited Editions Club in 1987 and with other Muir translations of...
Family and Intimate relationships Willa Muir
WM 's husband, the poet Edwin Muir , died. She wrote later: I could not believe it possible for me to be alive and for him to be dead. . . . We belonged together...

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