Anna Livia,. “Anna Livia Julian Brawn: Curriculum Vitae”. University of California, Berkeley: Department of French.
Mona Caird
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Standard Name: Caird, Mona
Birth Name: Alice Mona Alison
Married Name: Alice Mona Caird
Pseudonym: G. Noel Hatton
Pseudonym: The Author of Whom Nature Leadeth
, until recently very little remembered, caused a sensation in 1888 with her articles calling for reform in marriage practices. She was already at that date a published novelist, and went on issuing novels until 1931, the year before her death, as well as essays, short stories, travel writing, and journalism. She was an important member of the group of New Woman writers of the 1890s, and campaigned in fiction and non-fiction for a group of related causes: improved status for women (in education, marriage, divorce, child-rearing, job opportunities, and voting rights), anti-vivisection, pacificism, and international co-operation. She was a writer of high intellectual ability, and her characteristic tone is trenchant, satirical, and often bleakly comic.
Timeline
Texts
Caird, Mona. A Romance of the Moors. J. W. Arrowsmith, 1891.
Caird, Mona. “Marriage”. Westminster Review, Vol.
130
, pp. 186-01. Caird, Mona. One That Wins. T. Fisher Unwin, 1887.
Caird, Mona. The Daughters of Danaus. Bliss, Sands and Foster, 1894.
Caird, Mona. The Great Wave. Wishart, 1931.
Caird, Mona. The Morality of Marriage. George Redway, 1897.
Caird, Mona. The Morality of Marriage. Cambridge University Press, 2010, http://www.cambridge.org/series/sSeries.asp?code=CLOR.
Caird, Mona. The Pathway of the Gods. Skeffington and Son, 1898.
Caird, Mona. The Stones of Sacrifice. Simpkin, Marshall, 1915.
Caird, Mona. The Wing of Azrael. Trübner, 1889.
Caird, Mona. Whom Nature Leadeth. Longmans, Green, 1883.