Vita Sackville-West

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Standard Name: Sackville-West, Vita
Birth Name: Victoria Mary Sackville-West
Nickname: Mar
Self-constructed Name: Vita Sackville-West
Self-constructed Name: V. Sackville-West
Married Name: Victoria Mary Nicolson
Self-constructed Name: Julian Sackville-West
Self-constructed Name: David Sackville-West
Styled: the Honourable Victoria Mary Sackville-West
VSW wrote prolifically and almost obsessively from her childhood in the early twentieth century. She began with poems, plays, and fiction about her family's romantic links to English history. As an adult she used these genres to describe or transform her own complicated love-life: lesbian relationships, triangular relationships, love between masculine women and feminine men. Her best-known poems, The Land and The Garden, create classically-descended georgic from the traditional labour of the Kentish countryside, and the related art of gardening. Many novels (some she called pot-boilers) use conventional style to delineate upper-class society, but she also made forays (first inspired by Virginia Woolf ) into the experimental. She wrote history, biography, travel books, diaries, and letters. She was a popular and productive journalist, both in print and on the radio, whose topics included literature, gardening, and the status of women (though she refused the label of feminist). Her gardening writings and her actual gardens remain her best-known works. Her masterpiece, the Sissinghurst gardens, are the most-visited in Britain.

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Friends, Associates Violet Trefusis
VT was gathering material for her upcoming roman à clef, Broderie Anglaise, about herself, Vita Sackville-West , and Woolf (with whom Vita had been intimately involved for several years). Woolf wrote about the meeting...
Friends, Associates Dorothy Wellesley
Among these readers, Ruth Pitter became a valued friend of DW ,
Wellesley, Dorothy. Far Have I Travelled. James Barrie, 1952.
175
as she did too of Vita Sackville-West . Another friend of Wellesley's later years was Sir Ifor Evans .
Friends, Associates Gertrude Bell
GB met Harold Nicolson and Vita Sackville-West in Paris.
Wallach, Janet. Desert Queen. Nan A. Talese/Doubleday, 1996, .
223, 229
Intertextuality and Influence Penelope Lively
Personal reflections on plants are one of her subjects here, along with gardening history, her varied experiences of being in gardens, and writers who have preceded her in touching on or immersing themselves in the...
Intertextuality and Influence Violet Trefusis
Broderie Anglaise may be read as the last of a variously-authored trilogy of novels featuring references to the affair between VT and Vita Sackville-West , following Vita's Challenge and Virginia Woolf 's Orlando (1928), both...
Intertextuality and Influence E. M. Delafield
The diary abounds with references to contemporary literature, including several internal allusions to Time and Tide. The Provincial Lady engages in friendly rivalry over its competitions for readers and describes social encounters with the...
Intertextuality and Influence Muriel Spark
Norman Page called attention to the parallel with William Golding 's Pincher Martin, another novel about psychic survival for some time after physical death, published seventeen years earlier.
Page, Norman. Muriel Spark. Macmillan, 1990.
86-7
An even more intriguing parallel...
Intertextuality and Influence Monica Furlong
This saint had already attracted a number of English women writers: Evelyn Underhill , Sheila Kaye-Smith , and Vita Sackville-West (the only one in Furlong's bibliography). A new edition of MF 's book appeared in 2001.
Intertextuality and Influence Lady Anne Clifford
LAC made a great impression on Sackville-West and Woolf : on the former for her family associations, on the latter for her symbolic possibilities. In Donne after three Centuries and again in her last, unfinished...
Intertextuality and Influence Monica Furlong
MF begins her introduction with Saint Thérèse as exemplar of that style of traditional female sanctity which involves drastic self-abnegation, with Sackville-West 's attribution to her of niaiserie or sugariness, and with her own consequent...
Leisure and Society Edith Craig
Radclyffe Hall and Una Troubridge , who lived nearby, were among those who attended the Barn Theatre performances.
Cockin, Katharine. Edith Craig (1869-1947): Dramatic Lives. Cassell, 1998.
161
Virginia Woolf 's letters to Vita Sackville-West reflect her interest in attending, though it is not...
Leisure and Society Enid Bagnold
Vita Sackville-West described EB 's method of getting round petrol rationing at the beginning of 1941: She has a phaeton built in 1880 in which she drives herself about . . . . The horse...
Leisure and Society Christopher St John
John Gielgud and Peggy Ashcroft performed in Twelfth Night in the Barn Theatre; it was on this night that CSJ first met her new neighbours Vita Sackville-West and Harold Nicolson .
Glendinning, Victoria. Vita. Penguin, 1984.
251
Leisure and Society Christopher St John
CSJ and Edith Craig hosted a reading of The Land performed by its author, Vita Sackville-West .
Glendinning, Victoria. Vita. Penguin, 1984.
251
Literary responses Ivy Compton-Burnett
This novel made the best-seller list the month after publication; but at the end of the year it received the Bookseller's Glass Slipper award for books whose sales had not reflected their quality. Reviewers...

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