Braddon, Mary Elizabeth. Beyond These Voices. Hutchinson.
68
Connections | Author name Sort descending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Intertextuality and Influence | Mary Elizabeth Braddon | This story of infidelity features an Italian financier who as a furiously jealous foreigner is compared to Shakespeare's Othello. (At least Provana is not black Braddon, Mary Elizabeth. Beyond These Voices. Hutchinson. 68 |
Literary responses | Kathleen Caffyn | The TLS notice dismissed this novel as a feeble and commonplace story told with bright facility. Its sneering extended to pointing out a mis-spelling of Nietzsche
. TLS Centenary Archive Centenary Archive [1902-2012]. http://www.gale.com/c/the-times-literary-supplement-historical-archive. 766 (21 September 1916): 454 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Mona Caird | Critic Patricia Murphy
argues that this novel reads like a fictionalized version of Nietzsche
's treatise on the past in Unzeitgemässe betrachtungen (published in 1873, translated into English in 1983), in which he cautions against... |
Education | Dora Carrington | Carrington began to alter herself in other ways also. During her first term at the Slade she began to go by her surname only. Hill, Jane, and Michael Holroyd. The Art of Dora Carrington. Herbert Press. 13 |
Cultural formation | Isak Dinesen | As an adult she rejected Christianity [and] assumed instead a pagan stance derived primarily from Nietzsche
, Stambaugh, Sara. The Witch and the Goddess in the Stories of Isak Dinesen. UMI Research Press. 3 Stambaugh, Sara. The Witch and the Goddess in the Stories of Isak Dinesen. UMI Research Press. 59 |
Education | Isak Dinesen | |
Intertextuality and Influence | George Egerton | In these stories GE
examines female sexuality and passion, as well as women's reaction against gender constraints on their freedom, intellect, occupation, and sexuality. Stetz, Margaret. “Keynotes: A New Woman, Her Publisher, and Her Material”. Studies in the Literary Imagination, Vol. 30 , No. 1, pp. 89-107. 94-5 |
Textual Features | George Egerton | The tone of the last story, The Regeneration of Two, is that of a lecture. This follows the discovery by a rich, bored, unoccupied woman of a life of purpose in social work. A... |
Reception | George Egerton | GE
described these works as little extraordinary word-pictures expressing in parables Nietzsche
's exposition of the Ego theory. Egerton, George. A Leaf from the Yellow Book. Editor White, Terence de Vere, Richards Press. 126 Egerton, George. A Leaf from the Yellow Book. Editor White, Terence de Vere, Richards Press. 126 |
Education | George Egerton | By adulthood, Chavelita Dunne (later GE
) had already gained proficiency in five or six languages, including Swedish. Mix, Katherine Lyon. A Study in Yellow: <span data-tei-ns-tag="tei_title" data-tei-title-lvl="j">The Yellow Book</span> and Its Contributors. Greenwood Press. 172 |
Occupation | Florence Farr | The lecture proved quite popular, and Clifford's Inn had to turn people away. Over the following years, FF
put on many such readings, performing works by Homer
, Shelley
, Yeats
, Lady Gregory
... |
Textual Production | Jane Ellen Harrison | JEH
had been considering Themis since about 1907, when she felt that recent archaeological, sociological, and other developments rendered her Prolegomena somewhat outdated. Robinson, Annabel. The Life and Work of Jane Ellen Harrison. Oxford University Press. 220 |
Publishing | Luce Irigaray | LI
published at Paris her philosophical challenge, Amante Marine: de Friedrich Nietzsche. (Gillian C. Gill
's English version followed as Marine Lover of Friedrich Nietzsche, 1991.) Contemporary Authors and The Johns Hopkins... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Luce Irigaray | Marine Lover of Friedrich Nietzsche looks at its subject through his relation to the element of water. Its lover (who in the French title is unmistakably female) addresses her subject as you, but switches... |
Textual Production | Luce Irigaray | Along with her earlier Amante marine (addressed to Friedrich Nietzsche
), a book on Martin Heidegger
which appeared in 1983, and a projected fourth book (which was to have linked Marx
with the element of... |