Jane Ellen Harrison
-
Standard Name: Harrison, Jane Ellen
Birth Name: Jane Ellen Harrison
Classics scholar JEH
devoted much of her career to radically unorthodox studies of the development of ritual and religion in early Greek culture. Her findings, issuing in both monographs and articles, were highly publicized and often controversial during her own time, but fell into neglect before receiving sharply increased attention from the late 1980s forward. As recent studies have demonstrated, it is difficult to overestimate the impact of Harrison's work on her specific scholarly field (Greek ritual, art, and myth), on women in academia, or on a range of creative writers. She also published a personal memoir.
Connections
Connections | Author name Sort descending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Production | Hope Mirrlees | The Nonesuch Press
published a collection of translations by Jane Harrison
and HM
, The Book of the Bear, Being Twenty-One Tales Newly Translated from the Russian. The text features illustrations by Ray Garnett
. Robinson, Annabel. The Life and Work of Jane Ellen Harrison. Oxford University Press, 2001. 297 |
Author summary | Hope Mirrlees | Much of the sparse information currently available on HM
focuses on her lasting personal relationship with eminent scholar Jane Harrison
rather than her own body of writing, which includes poetry, novels, and biographies (published and... |
Cultural formation | Hope Mirrlees | HM
was born into a wealthy business family which struck Virginia Woolf as typical[ly] English Woolf, Virginia. The Letters of Virginia Woolf. Editors Nicolson, Nigel and Joanne Trautmann, Hogarth Press, 1975–1980, 6 vols. 3: 200 |
Family and Intimate relationships | Hope Mirrlees | |
Family and Intimate relationships | Hope Mirrlees | |
Cultural formation | Hope Mirrlees | Jane Harrison
is the only intimate companion linked to HM
by current critics or historians. Mary Beard
notes that Mirrlees was talked about in ways that pointed to her homosexuality. Beard, Mary. The Invention of Jane Harrison. Harvard University Press, 2000. 153 |
Education | Hope Mirrlees | HM
returned to France in early 1915, when she and Jane Harrison
spent several months in Paris: they lived at the Hôtel de l'Élysée and studied Russian at the École des Langues Orientales
. (... |
Travel | Hope Mirrlees | HM
returned from Paris to England in 1926, via Provence and Burgundy with Harrison
, who was by now in very bad health. |
Literary responses | Hope Mirrlees | But it has generally been read with less attention to its abstract meaning, as a covert treatment of the possible lesbian relationship between the author and Jane Harrison
. Virginia Woolf
had read it by... |
Literary responses | Hope Mirrlees | Julia Briggs
reads the text as a roman à clef in which Scudéry
is an unflattering portrait of Natalie Barney
(whom HM
would have encountered when herself living in Paris) while Harrison
appears as the... |
Education | Willa Muir | She had also studied English and modern history during her degree. In her first year she discovered Jane Ellen Harrison
's Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion (1903). Harrison's work, which suggests that the... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Ann Quin | Taking place in an unidentified Mediterranean country with growing political repression, the novel concerns a couple, a man and a woman, the latter of whom is searching for her possibly dead brother. Passages was AQ |
Reception | Laura Riding | Miranda Seymour
(who has published a life of Graves and a novel based on an incident in his life and Riding's) does not believe this story of indebtedness, Seymour, Miranda. “The Hand from the Grave”. Lives for Sale: Biographers’ Tales, edited by Mark Bostridge, Continuum, 2004, pp. 191-5. 192 |
Textual Production | Nan Shepherd | After her retirement from teaching in 1956, while editing the Aberdeen University Review, NS
contributed to it articles on such literary figures as Hugh McDiarmid
and Agnes Mure Mackenzie
, and on the history... |
politics | May Sinclair | Unlike many suffragists, MS
was a decided supporter of the war. With three other women (Jane Ellen Harrison
, Flora Annie Steel
, and Mary Augusta Ward
) she signed the Authors' Declaration to... |
Timeline
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Texts
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