Patricia Clements

Standard Name: Clements, Patricia

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Literary responses Virginia Woolf
Her nephew Quentin Bell felt that the recording did not accurately capture the quality of her voice.
Woolf, Virginia. The Letters of Virginia Woolf. Editors Nicolson, Nigel and Joanne Trautmann, Hogarth Press, 1975–1980, 6 vols.
6: 108n2
But critic Patricia Clements wrote decades later that the voice, with wide musical range and changing...
Textual Features Edith Sitwell
French as well as English poetry is much in evidence here, predominantly Gérard de Nerval , Baudelaire , Stéphane Mallarmé , Verlaine , and Rimbaud , all of whom she much admired. ES groups her...

Timeline

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Texts

Clements, Patricia. “’As in the rough stream of a glacier’: Virginia Woolf’s Art of Narrative Fusion”. Virginia Woolf: New Critical Essays, edited by Patricia Clements and Isobel Grundy, Vision Press; Barnes and Noble, 1983, pp. 11-32.
Clements, Patricia. “’Transmuting’ Nancy Cunard”. Dalhousie Review, Vol.
66
, 1986, pp. 188-14.
Grundy, Isobel. “’Words Without Meaning: Wonderful Words’: Virginia Woolf’s Choice of Names”. Virginia Woolf: New Critical Essays, edited by Patricia Clements and Isobel Grundy, Vision Press; Barnes and Noble, 1983, pp. 200-20.
Rosenbaum, S. P. “An Educated Man’s Daughter: Leslie Stephen, Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Group”. Virginia Woolf: New Critical Essays, edited by Patricia Clements and Isobel Grundy, Vision; Barnes and Noble, 1983, pp. 32-56.
Clements, Patricia. Baudelaire and the English Tradition. Princeton University Press, 1985.
Butler, Terry et al. “Can a Team Tag Consistently? Experiences on the Orlando Project”. Markup Languages: Theory and Practice, Vol.
2
, No. 2, 2000, pp. 111-25.
Grundy, Isobel et al. “Dates and ChronStructs: Dynamic Chronology in the Orlando Project”. Literary and Linguistic Computing, Vol.
15
, No. 3, 2000, pp. 265-89.
Brown, Susan I. et al. “Intertextual Encoding in the Writing of Women’s Literary History”. Computers and the Humanities, Vol.
38
, 2004, pp. 191-06.
Binhammer, Katherine et al. “Introduction: Feminist Literary Historiography”. Women and Literary History: ’For There She Was’, edited by Katherine Binhammer and Jeanne Wood, University of Delaware Press, 2003, pp. 9-23.
Clements, Patricia. “Introduction: Ink and Air: Computing and the Research Culture of the Humanities”. Mind Technologies: Humanities Computing and the Canadian Academic Community, edited by Raymond G. Siemens and David Moorman, University of Calgary Press, 2006, p. xxxiii - xlii.
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, 1990.