Women’s Writing in the British Isles from the Beginnings to the Present
Mary Kingsley
-
Standard Name: Kingsley, Mary
Birth Name: Mary Henrietta Kingsley
MK
's two lengthy travel books about West Africa feature personal experience (including sharply amusing anecdotes) and comment on African culture, politics, and biology. As well as books, she penned essays for periodicals and letters to newspapers on the same themes, and a memoir of her father. Though viewed by some as a New Woman figure because of her independence as a late Victorian traveller and a thinker, she was opposed to the contemporary women's movement, and her critique of the crown colony system was aimed at improving rather than dismantling it.
Reading still offered EW
considerable solace and she praised the travel writing of Mary Kingsley
and Simon Fraser
. However, her daily routine came to consist of exercises in physical therapy to continue to rehabilitate...
Friends, Associates
Amabel Williams-Ellis
During Amabel's childhood, visitors to the St Loe Strachey household included the powerful and famous, mostly diplomats, millionaires, politicians.
Williams-Ellis, Amabel. All Stracheys Are Cousins. Weidenfeld and Nicolson.
She followed this with many more instructional works for children, which address such topics as human biology (in How You Began, 1928, and How You Are Made1932) and the relation of food to...
In 1888 LTS
visited Paris in the company of her friend the explorer Mary Kingsley
.
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
under Mary Henrietta Kingsley
Friends, Associates
Lucy Toulmin Smith
Smith was Kingsley
's mentor in scholarly matters.
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
Textual Production
Lucy Toulmin Smith
In 1886, soon after the publication of the York Plays, LTS
edited at the request of Lady Caroline KerrisonA Common-place Book of the Fifteenth Century, a short, anonymous collection of poetry, prose...
Health
Flora Shaw
The biographer
of FS
's rival Mary Kingsley
, however, alleges that Shaw's unstable health at this time was caused by a rejection she received from her long-time object of affection, Sir George Goldie.
Literary responses
Flora Shaw
FS
's contemporary and fellow African traveller Mary Kingsley
maintained a fear of her and a strong distaste for her political views. In comments that she based on Shaw's publications and on the talk of...
Friends, Associates
Evelyn Sharp
ES
wrote later that at no time in her life did she make intimate friends easily. Most people she had to do with she liked up to a certain point only, but she could count...
Literary responses
Mary Seacole
Scholars of colonial discourse such as Simon Gikandi have found in her newly available narrative an avenue for exploring the complexity of the colonial subject's construction of identity, against whom to read better-known Victorian women...
Intertextuality and Influence
Dervla Murphy
This time the background books taken on the journey included Mungo Park
's Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa, 1799, and Mary Kingsley
's Travels in West Africa, 1897. DM
renders eloquently...
Occupation
Louisa Anne Meredith
In 1891 LAM
took her fish paintings to Albert Charles Günther
, the British Museum
ichthyologist. He admired them, but to her annoyance proclaimed them unsound scientific records because, although beautiful and correct, for scientific...
Family and Intimate relationships
Lucas Malet
The travel writer Mary Kingsley
was a first cousin of her namesake LM
, being the daughter of another uncle, George Henry Kingsley.
Friends, Associates
Vernon Lee
Not long afterwards came the meeting with another important friend, the future traveller Mary Kingsley
.
Frank, Katherine. A Voyager Out: The Life of Mary Kingsley. Houghton Mifflin.
42-3
Timeline
No timeline events available.
Texts
Kingsley, Mary. A Hippo Banquet. Penguin, 2015.
Gunther, Albert Karl Lewis Gotthilf et al. “Appendix III: Report on a Collection of Reptiles and Fishes made by Miss M. H. Kingsley during her travels on the Ogowé River and in Old Calabar”. Travels in West Africa, 3rdrd ed, Frank Cass, 1965, pp. 692-17.
Kingsley, Mary, and George Henry Kingsley. “Memoir”. Notes on Sport and Travel, Macmillan, 1900, pp. 1-206.
Kingsley, Mary. “The Development of Dodos”. National Review, Vol.
27
, pp. 66-79.
Kingsley, Mary. Travels in West Africa. Macmillan, 1897.
Kingsley, Mary, and John E. Flint. Travels in West Africa. Frank Cass, 1965.
Kingsley, Mary. “Travels in West Africa, 1897”. University of Adelaide Library: Electronic Texts Collection.
Kingsley, Mary. West African Studies. Macmillan, 1899.
Kingsley, Mary. West African Studies. Macmillan, 1901.
Kingsley, Mary. West African Studies. Cambridge University Press, 2010, http://www.cambridge.org/series/sSeries.asp?code=CLOR.