Pacernick, Gary. Meaning and Memory: Interviews with Fourteen Jewish Poets. Ohio State University Press.
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Connections | Author name Sort descending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Textual Production | Elaine Feinstein | In Lawrence's Women, The Intimate Life of D. H. Lawrence, EF
said she attempted to explore the way his attitudes towards women shifted over time: in the USA this was entitled Lawrence and the... |
Textual Production | Elaine Feinstein | EF
's radio plays are more numerous still: Echoes, 1980, A Late Spring, 1982, A Day Off, 1983 (from the novella of that name from Storm Jameson
's Women against Men... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Elaine Feinstein | EF
says her fiction and poetry come from different parts of herself: the voice, the cadences, the rhythms are very different. She sees fiction as involving impersonation of other people. Pacernick, Gary. Meaning and Memory: Interviews with Fourteen Jewish Poets. Ohio State University Press. 180 |
politics | E. M. Forster | After 1924, EMF
turned from writing novels to social and political causes, in particular the issue of freedom of expression. In 1928 he campaigned against the suppression of Radclyffe Hall
's The Well of Loneliness... |
Textual Production | Julia Frankau | JF
loved to read the current books but had no interest in the lives of the authors. Among literature of the past she much admired that of the eighteenth century, and particularly Richardson
's Clarissa... |
Textual Production | Sir James George Frazer | The Golden Bough, a comparative study of human beliefs from the earliest times, had a major influence on modernist writings. SJGF
's text outlines an evolving belief system, which moves from magic, to religion... |
Friends, Associates | Constance Garnett | Their friends included several notable writers: D. H. Lawrence
, Joseph Conrad
, and John Galsworthy
. Humanities Research Center, University of Texas. The Garnetts: A Literary Family. University of Texas. 3 |
Literary responses | Constance Garnett | Yet her translations created an amazing legacy. D. H. Lawrence
, a friend of her husband
's, compared the couple's writing styles in these terms: Edward would rack his brain and suffer while his wife,... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Stella Gibbons | Such earthy regionalists—who include Thomas Hardy
and D. H. Lawrence
, as well as Webb
and Kaye-Smith
—become the butt of SG
's satire in Cold Comfort Farm. Oliver, Reggie. Out of the Woodshed: A Portrait of Stella Gibbons. Bloomsbury. 66, 112 |
Reception | Rumer Godden | RG
herself had misgivings about Gypsy, Gypsy, but her publisher Peter Llewelyn Davies
wrote of being enchanted by the story. Godden, Rumer. A Time to Dance, No Time to Weep. Macmillan. 143 |
Friends, Associates | H. D. | H. D.
and her husband, Richard Aldington
, were introduced to D. H.
and Frieda Lawrence
at a dinner party and poetry reading hosted by Amy Lowell
. Robinson, Janice S. H.D.: The Life and Work of an American Poet. Houghton Mifflin. 92 |
Health | H. D. | HD was referred to Freud by her previous therapist, Hanns Sachs
. Before agreeing to take her on as a patient and student, Freud read her writings, as well as those of D. H. Lawrence |
Textual Features | H. D. | This issue opened with an editorial by Dora Marsden
. It contained poetry by Aldington, HD, F. S. Flint
, D. H. Lawrence
, Marianne Moore
, and May Sinclair
and prose articles giving the... |
Textual Production | H. D. | During her London years HD also did important work (with Amy Lowell
and Richard Aldington
) on the three Imagist anthologies of 1915-17, and with the latter she edited the Poets' Translation Series for the... |
Textual Features | H. D. | Like the later End to Torment, this relates its author's attachments to and disaffection from Lawrence
and Pound
, her (tor)mentors. Blain, Virginia et al., editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford. |
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