Dorling, William. Memoirs of Dora Greenwell. James Clarke.
152
Connections | Author name Sort ascending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Education | Olive Schreiner | She considered transferring to study medicine, but poor health and lack of money prevented her. Moreover, it was not until the next year that the Royal Commission on Medical Education
decided to allow women to... |
Occupation | Anna Kingsford | Since the British Medical Association
had banned women doctors from membership in 1874, AK
was not allowed to register. But registration was required only for government positions and the armed services, so there was nothing... |
Textual Features | Sophia Jex-Blake | In this essay SJB
focuses particularly on the January 1878 decision by the University of London
to admit women to the study of medicine on equal terms with men. This decision, she writes, made on... |
Literary responses | Dora Greenwell | The president of the British Medical Association
declared the article to have been written by some very able physician. Dorling, William. Memoirs of Dora Greenwell. James Clarke. 152 |
Publishing | Julia Frankau | Henry Vizetelly
, a publisher associated with progressive thinking of various kinds—he went to prison for publishing translations of Zola
—promoted this novel by emphasis on its being a picture of Jewish life. Lock, Stephen, and Julia Frankau. “Introduction”. Dr. Phillips, The Keynes Press, p. v - xii. vii |
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