Women’s Writing in the British Isles from the Beginnings to the Present
Violet Hunt
-
Standard Name: Hunt, Violet
Birth Name: Isabel Violet Hunt
Pseudonym: Violet Herris
Known mainly as a popular novelist, VH
also published book and theatre reviews, translations, short stories, non-fiction, memoirs, and a biography. Her publishing career covers the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Though often initially praised, her works began to fall out of print and critical favour during her lifetime. Readers are returning to her writing, however: critics such as Marie Secor
, Kathryn Ledbetter
, and Donald Mason
have begun to focus particular attention on her exploration of women's personal and creative struggles in familial, artistic, and social contexts.
After her move to England, Ezra Pound
introduced HD to his circle of friends, many of whom were important figures in the modernist movement. They included W. B. Yeats
, T. S. Eliot
,...
In London JFLW
associated with writers such as Marie Corelli
, Ouida
, and Violet Hunt
. Oscar
, an emerging celebrity, introduced his mother to the city's artistic circle.
Friends, Associates
Ivy Compton-Burnett
Friendship did not blossom with Woolf, whom years later ICB
described to Nathalie Sarraute
as a terrible snob.
Spurling, Hilary. Secrets of a Woman’s Heart. Hodder and Stoughton.
40
This was the period when Compton-Burnett was lionised after the publication of Brothers and Sisters...
Friends, Associates
May Kendall
MK
began publishing in 1885. During this decade she became friends with classical scholar and poet Andrew Lang
, who advanced her career as a writer.
Birch, Catherine Elizabeth. Evolutionary Feminism in Late-Victorian Women’s Poetry: Mathilde Blind, Constance Naden and May Kendall. University of Birmingham.
Violet Hunt
played a major role in its inception, acting as contributor, sub-editor, and reader.
Occupation
Harriet Shaw Weaver
Writer and suffragist Iris Barry
, summarizing a general admiration for HSW
on the part of Soho writers (Pound, Eliot, Wyndham Lewis, Violet Hunt
, and others), coined the phrase, the lion-hearted Miss Weaver who...
Timeline
No timeline events available.
Texts
Hunt, Violet, and Ford Madox Ford. Zeppelin Nights. John Lane, 1916.