Violet Hunt

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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.

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Education Constance Countess Markievicz
Julian's was then one of the largest and most rigorous private art schools in Paris. He allowed his female and male students to compete together for monthly prizes, but kept studios segregated by gender and...
Family and Intimate relationships Rebecca West
From the beginning, the liaison was fraught with difficulties. When they met, Wells was over forty and still married to his second wife, with whom he had come to an agreement that he would be...
Family and Intimate relationships Lucas Malet
He later became rector of Clovelly in Devon. The relationship turned out unhappily, and after some years the couple began living separately. Their marriage was childless (LM apparently let it be known that...
Family and Intimate relationships Christina Rossetti
Around 1857 CR came to know the painter John Brett , who may have proposed to her and been rejected, as Violet Hunt claimed to have been told, though it is also possible that he...
Family and Intimate relationships H. G. Wells
Wells wrote about characters who defied conventional morality. In his own life, he married twice, and had a busy extramarital sexual career. He writes about this himself in the second volume of his autobiography (published...
Family and Intimate relationships Fay Weldon
During her marriage she and Edgar entertained the literary and avant-garde world: she later regaled her grand-daughter with irreverent stories of Joseph Conrad , Jean Rhys (Such a louche young woman),
qtd. in
Weldon, Fay. Auto da Fay. Flamingo, 2002.
102
Ford Madox Ford
Family and Intimate relationships Radclyffe Hall
RH met Violet Hunt , a novelist notorious for her New Woman life-style.
Cline, Sally. Radclyffe Hall: A Woman Called John. John Murray, 1997.
53
Family and Intimate relationships Ford Madox Ford
Ford Madox Hueffer (later Ford) first met writer Violet Hunt in March 1907. They became lovers a couple of years later, after Ford threatened to commit suicide. They lived together off and on from 1909...
Family and Intimate relationships Nina Hamnett
NH 's mother was born Mary Elizabeth De Blois Archdeacon in 1863; she attended Notting Hill High School (an early London public school for girls) with the future writer Violet Hunt . Mary Elizabeth Archdeacon...
Friends, Associates Catharine Amy Dawson Scott
Dawson counted Violet Hunt among her closest friends in London; she also socialized with Annie Besant , Flora Annie Steel , James McNeill Whistler , and Netta Syrett .
Watts, Marjorie, and Frances King. Mrs. Sappho. Duckworth, 1987.
16
Friends, Associates Ada Leverson
AL 's circle of friends comprised writers and artists who were to lend the . . . decade its peculiarly distinctive air:
Speedie, Julie. Wonderful Sphinx: The Biography of Ada Leverson. Virago, 1993.
27
Max Beerbohm , Aubrey Beardsley , Henry Harland (editor of the...
Friends, Associates Rebecca West
RW met Violet Hunt and Ford Madox Hueffer (later Ford Madox Ford ), who wished to make her their protegée.
Rollyson, Carl. Rebecca West: A Saga of the Century. Hodder and Stoughton, 1995.
33
Friends, Associates Lucas Malet
LM was a friend for much of her life of the novelist Emma Marshall , who was also a friend of her mother. On Marshall's death in 1899 she wrote: The thought of her has...
Friends, Associates John Ruskin
JR 's social and intellectual network was extensive: amongst his acquaintances were Elizabeth Barrett and Robert Browning , Elizabeth Gaskell , Violet Hunt , Jean Ingelow , Flora Shaw , Jane Welsh Carlyle and Thomas Carlyle
Friends, Associates Dorothy Richardson
Throughout the late 1910s and 1920s, DR 's other friends and acquaintances included Violet Hunt , May Sinclair , Marianne Moore , C. A. Dawson-Scott , Catherine Carswell , and Sinclair Lewis .
Richardson, Dorothy. Windows on Modernism: Selected Letters of Dorothy Richardson. Editor Fromm, Gloria G., University of Georgia Press, 1995.
39, 107, 138, 141, 170, 284

Timeline

June 1908: The Women Writers' Suffrage League was established...

National or international item

June 1908

The Women Writers' Suffrage League was established by Cicely Hamilton and Bessie Hatton .
Norquay, Glenda. Voices and Votes: A Literary Anthology of the Women’s Suffrage Campaign. Manchester University Press, 1995.
xv
Stowell, Sheila. A Stage of Their Own. University of Michigan Press, 1992.
2, 40, 102, 126n1
Cockin, Katharine. Edith Craig (1869-1947): Dramatic Lives. Cassell, 1998.
89
Whitelaw, Lis. The Life and Rebellious Times of Cicely Hamilton. Women’s Press, 1990.
68-74
Liggins, Emma. “The ’Sordid Story’ of an Unwanted Child: Militancy, Motherhood, and Abortion in Elizabeth Robins’s Votes for Women and Way Stations”. Women’s Writing, Vol.
25
, No. 3, Aug. 2018, pp. 347-61.
349

Early December 1908: A meeting of suffragists at the Albert Hall...

Building item

Early December 1908

A meeting of suffragists at the Albert Hall was marred by violence from both sides: a woman struck a steward in the face with a whip, and women were roughly handled.
Raitt, Suzanne. May Sinclair: A Modern Victorian. Clarendon Press, 2000.
112 and n14

5 October 1921: The P.E.N. Club (later PEN International),...

Writing climate item

5 October 1921

The P.E.N. Club (later PEN International ), a world association of authors, was founded in London by writers C. A. Dawson Scott and Violet Hunt .
Bozman, Ernest Franklin, editor. Everyman’s Encyclopaedia. 4th Edition, J. M. Dent, 1958, 12 vols.
9: 694

Texts

Hunt, Violet. A Hard Woman. Chapman and Hall, 1895.
Hunt, Violet. Affairs of the Heart. S. T. Freemantle, 1900.
Hunt, Violet. I Have This to Say. Boni and Liveright, 1926.
Hunt, Violet. More Tales of the Uneasy. W. Heinemann, 1925.
Hunt, Violet. Sooner or Later. Chapman and Hall, 1904.
Hunt, Violet. Tales of the Uneasy. W. Heinemann, 1911.
Hunt, Violet. The Cat. A. and C. Black, 1905.
Hunt, Violet. The Celebrity at Home. Chapman and Hall, 1904.
Hunt, Violet. The Celebrity’s Daughter. Stanley Paul and Company Limited, 1913.
Hunt, Violet, and Ford Madox Ford. The Desirable Alien. Chatto and Windus, 1913.
Hunt, Violet. The Doll. Stanley Paul and Company Limited, 1911.
Hunt, Violet. The Flurried Years. Hurst and Blackett, 1926.
Hunt, Margaret, 1831 - 1912 et al. The Governess. Chatto and Windus, 1912.
Hunt, Violet. The House of Many Mirrors. Stanley Paul and Company Limited, 1914.
Hunt, Violet. The Human Interest. Methuen, 1899.
Hunt, Violet. The Last Ditch. Stanley Paul and Company Limited, 1918.
Hunt, Violet. The Maiden’s Progress. Osgood, McIlvaine, 1894.
Hunt, Violet. The Way of Marriage. Chapman and Hall, 1896.
Hunt, Violet. The Wife of Altamont. W. Heinemann, 1910.
Hunt, Violet. The Wife of Rossetti. John Lane, Bodley Head, 1932.
Hunt, Violet. The Workaday Woman. T. Werner Laurie, 1906.
Hunt, Violet. Their Hearts. Stanley Paul and Company Limited, 1921.
Hunt, Violet, and Ford Madox Ford. Their Lives. Stanley Paul and Company Limited, 1916.
Hunt, Violet. Unkist, Unkind!. Chapman and Hall, 1897.
Hunt, Violet. White Rose of Weary Leaf. W. Heinemann, 1908.