Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Intertextuality and Influence | Anne Thackeray Ritchie | The novel opens with a lie by the heroine's selfish mother, who thereby diverts a marriage proposal from her daughter's suitor Sir John Dampier, for whom the mother herself has a mad fancy Ritchie, Anne Thackeray. The Story of Elizabeth. B. Tauchnitz, 1863. 16 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Maggie Gee | Her central figure, Alfred White, a park-keeper in a London borough based on that of Brent, is an old-fashioned ex-soldier who combines integrity, compassion, and intense pride in his job, with a violent temper... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Anne Thackeray Ritchie | Her friend Tennyson
became a literary mentor after the death of her father, and helped her with the ending of The Village on the Cliff. Shankman, Lillian F., and Anne Thackeray Ritchie. “Biographical Commentary and Notes”. Anne Thackeray Ritchie: Journals and Letters, edited by Abigail Burnham Bloom et al., Ohio State University Press, 1994, p. various pages. 155 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Julia Frankau | Stephen Lock
suggests in his introduction to the 1989 reprint that this novel is à clef: that JF
's Phillips (whose name, before the publisher suggested a change, was Dr Abrams) was modelled on Ernest Abraham Hart |
Intertextuality and Influence | Anita Desai | Influenced by Eliot
's Four Quartets, Clear Light of Day deals with time as destroyer and preserver, and with what the bondage of time does to people. qtd. in Gopal, N. Raj. A Critical Study of the Novels of Anita Desai. Atlantic Publishers and Distributors, 1995. 90 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Anne Thackeray Ritchie | The chapters are headed with epigraphs from writers including Tennyson
, the BrowningsRobert Browning
, and her father
.The book pays tribute to the vanished Kensington of ATR
's childhood, still in the 1850s a venerable... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Elinor Glyn | Whereas on love EG
sounds overwhelmingly passionate, on marriage she sounds noticeably cynical. In a section of the book devoted to the question, Why Marriage is Often a Failure, she suggests that because marriage... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Katharine Tynan | Mary Beaudesert, V. S. (1923) is about a young woman who, despite all odds and obstacles, succeeds in becoming a veterinarian and winning the heart of her beloved. “Review of Mary Beaudesert, V. S. by Katharine Tynan”. Times Literary Supplement, No. 1134, 11 Oct. 1923, p. 672. 672 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Catharine Amy Dawson Scott | The historical Sappho
had emerged by this date as a potentially lesbian or bisexual figure, for instance in the work of Swinburne
; Michael Field
's Long Ago was published this same year. Dawson's Sappho... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Edna St Vincent Millay | |
Intertextuality and Influence | Georgiana Fullerton | The novel's title foregrounds GF
's perhaps fantastic extrapolation from history, justified in the Introduction with the assertion that Truth and fiction are closely blended in this tale. . . . Those who are sometimes... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Catharine Amy Dawson Scott | The poems take up various late-Victorian feminist issues, and their topicality and title seem to make them an implicit rebuttal of Tennyson
's nostalgic Idylls of the King. In A Woman's Ethics (perhaps an... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Isabella Beeton | Notwithstanding the putative focus on management, the bulk of the 44-chapter book is taken up with discussion of food, from the chapters on Arrangement and Economy of the Kitchen and Introduction to Cookery to the... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Anna Brownell Jameson | This second lecture takes as its epigraph the invocation in Tennyson
's The Princess of men and women working side by side in council, hearth, and the tangled business of the world. Jameson, Anna Brownell. Sisters of Charity, Catholic and Protestant; and, The Communion of Labor. Hyperion Press, 1976. 143 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Lady Margaret Sackville | LMS
's earliest works, which emerged from a romantic sense of beauty, defined her for decades of readers. In the first phase of her writing career, from 1900 to about 1915, she sought the delicate... |
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