Spurling, Hilary. Pearl Buck in China. Simon and Schuster, 2010.
189
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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