Later in life she involved herself with the Quakers or Society of Friends
. Diana Maltz
notes that although she was not a Quaker herself, she was closely allied with their institutional activities and contributed...
Textual Production
May Kendall
MK
's relationship with Rowntree is described by Diana Maltz
as what Beatrice Potter Webb
had been to Charles Booth
twenty-five years earlier.
Maltz, Diana. “Sympathy, Humor, and the Abject Poor in the Work of May Kendall”. English Literature in Transition, 1880-1920, Vol.
50
, No. 3, ELT Press, 2007, pp. 313-32.
313
Her work suggests that although she was an advocate for social...
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Texts
Maltz, Diana. “Sympathy, Humor, and the Abject Poor in the Work of May Kendall”. English Literature in Transition, 1880-1920, Vol.