Communist Party

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
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...
Residence Sylvia Pankhurst
Released from prison under the Cat and Mouse Act to regain her health after a hunger strike in 1913, SP went to live with Jessie Payne and her husband (both shoemakers) in Old Ford Road...
Textual Features Mary McCarthy
The group of urban radical and liberal intellectuals who set up their community in the mountains of New England is led by a general who is discontented with the world and has a desire for...
Textual Features Pearl S. Buck
Hilary Spurling calls this text, a favourite of Mao Zedong and the Communist Party , a hugely popular saga of resistance against a corrupt and unjust government by a band of thirteenth-century outlaws.
Spurling, Hilary. Pearl Buck in China. Simon and Schuster, 2010.
189
Textual Features Pearl S. Buck
The three daughters of present-day China might well remind readers of the three sons of Wang in The Good Earth trilogy, and Buck had begun with Letter from Peking, 1957, on a project of...
Textual Features Kate Clanchy
Antigona comes from the province of Kosovo in the former Yugoslavia (from the hamlet of Drenica near Mitrovica), but calls herself a Malësi from the impenetrable mountains that span four countries: Albania, Serbia,...
Textual Production Sylvia Pankhurst
It was renamed the Workers' Dreadnought in July 1917 to reflect SP 's new commitment to socialism. It was published by the Athenæum Press and sold for a halfpenny, with a circulation of 8,000, hawked...
Textual Production Sylvia Pankhurst
SP edited the weekly paper of the East London Federation of Suffragettes , the Women's Dreadnought, named with some panache after a state-of-the-art British battleship.
Winslow, Barbara, and Sheila Rowbotham. Sylvia Pankhurst: Sexual Politics and Political Activism. UCL Press, 1996.
68-9, 104, 185
Strachey, Lytton. Queen Victoria. Harcourt Brace, 1921.
73-4
Mitchell, David J. The Fighting Pankhursts: A Study in Tenacity. MacMillan, 1967.
44, 109
Harrison, Royden et al. The Warwick Guide to British Labour Periodicals, 1790-1970: A Check List. Harvester Press, 1977.
603
Dancyger, Irene. A World of Women: An Illustrated History of Women’s Magazines. Gill and Macmillan, 1978.
112
Doughan, David, and Denise Sanchez. Feminist Periodicals, 1855-1984. Harvester Press, 1987.
37
Textual Production Sylvia Pankhurst
Publishing through the Workers' Socialist Federation , SP released Housing and the Workers' Revolution: Housing in Capitalist Britain and Bolshevik Russia.
OCLC WorldCat. 1992–1998, http://www.oclc.org/firstsearch/content/worldcat/. Accessed 1999.
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Fleur Adcock
The first poem in this volume, like Meeting the Comet, treats a birth-defect—but an unmatching pair of ears, seen from the point of view of the mother, not the baby, is more lightly handled...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Evelyn Waugh
The protagonist of these books, Guy Crouchback, is a middle-aged Roman Catholic, divorced from his wife, Virginia (though not in the eyes of the Church , which therefore does not regard a sexual fling with...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Lesley Storm
Before the play's action begins, Fay Edwards's husband of five years, Bryan, has left her and their baby and disappeared as a Communist Party member to the Soviet Union. Now, fourteen months later, a...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Rosita Forbes
This is partly a book about change and modernization. RF welcomed particularly the stamping out of tribal conflict and corruption in Iran, and the tolerance newly extended to Jews , Christians , and Zoroastrians
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Fay Weldon
Whereas Big Women looked backwards to 1971, the new novel is set just into the future, in 2013. Frances Prideaux, its protagonist, is the now eighty-year-old alter ego and imaginary sister of the author FW
Travel Pearl S. Buck
Several of PSB 's journeys between China and the USA were undertaken for unwelcome medical purposes. Having been in America for undergraduate study, she returned there in 1920 to have a benign tumour removed after...

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