Gerri Kimber,Todd Martin

Katherine Mansfield and Virginia Woolf

Notify me when the book’s added
To read this book, upload an EPUB or FB2 file to Bookmate. How do I upload a book?
  • b6012005981has quoted3 years ago
    Disgust disgusts, and its obscenities rub off on the investigator. Think of the hellfire sermon in Joyce’s A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, a diatribe that glories in disgust as well as in the jouissance of terrorising schoolboys.
  • b6012005981has quoted3 years ago
    both writers show a queasy, even anorexic attitude to eating, their nausea exacerbated by the sight and sound of other masticating jaws.1
  • b6012005981has quoted3 years ago
    Mansfield’s In a German Pension (1911), which contains some of her most disgusted and disgusting stories, is generally dismissed as juvenilia.
  • b6012005981has quoted3 years ago
    While Mansfield and Woolf have often been applauded or disparaged for their lyricism, depending on literary fashion, their fascination with the loathsome has received less critical attention
  • b6012005981has quoted3 years ago
    the one hand Mansfield is too distant – ‘someone apart, entirely self-centred’, feline, alien, ‘inscrutable’ (VWD2, p. 44; 1, p. 257) – but on the other hand too close for comfort, with a stink that gets up her rival’s nose.
  • b6012005981has quoted3 years ago
    Woolf admitted: ‘I was jealous of [Mansfield’s] writing – the only writing I have ever been jealous of’ (VWD2, p. 227).
  • b6012005981has quoted3 years ago
    ‘We could both wish that ones first impression of K.M. was not that she stinks like a – well civet cat that had taken to street walking’ (VWD1, p. 58).
  • b6012005981has quoted3 years ago
    Mansfield and Woolf depict characters who look up from the book to misread their surrounding worlds, misapply allusions or draw wrong, sometimes damaging parallels.
  • b6012005981has quoted3 years ago
    I close with Mansfield’s posthumous influence on The Waves through her Journal and her afterimage in Woolf’s – and perhaps Bell’s – dreams and creative imagination.
  • b6012005981has quoted3 years ago
    My essay, ‘Katherine’s Secrets’, explores things Mansfield knew that Woolf evidently didn’t, notwithstanding Mansfield’s offer of ‘the keys to the city’ and Woolf’s joy in their conversation: Mansfield’s November 1919 letters attacking Bloomsbury and expounding the ‘secret’ of her art;
fb2epub
Drag & drop your files (not more than 5 at once)