Jane Ellen Harrison

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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 Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Textual Production Hope Mirrlees
Virginia and Leonard Woolf 's Hogarth Press published a translation from seventeenth-century Russian by Jane Harrison and HM , The Life of the Archpriest Avvakum by Himself.
Woolmer, J. Howard, and Mary E. Gaither. A Checklist of the Hogarth Press, 1917-1946. Woolmer/Brotherson.
25
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.
297
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.
Travel Dorothy Bussy
Another who attended these conferences, though in different years, was the classical scholar Jane Ellen Harrison .

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Texts

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