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  • Format: ePub

Virginia Woolf said a woman writer had first to kill the Angel in the House. This book is about British women writers who comprehensively killed the Angel in their own house, who transgressed the expectations placed upon the women of their time by learning to read, learning languages, learning to think for themselves, enjoying the company of other, equally transgressive women, studying and translating contemporary European literature and the male classics of the patriarchive, often for money, transgressing the unspoken prohibition against women being professional writers and, most…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
Virginia Woolf said a woman writer had first to kill the Angel in the House. This book is about British women writers who comprehensively killed the Angel in their own house, who transgressed the expectations placed upon the women of their time by learning to read, learning languages, learning to think for themselves, enjoying the company of other, equally transgressive women, studying and translating contemporary European literature and the male classics of the patriarchive, often for money, transgressing the unspoken prohibition against women being professional writers and, most transgressive of all, daring to publish their own original writings under their own names.

Virginia Woolf said 'nothing is known about women before the eighteenth century,' and in her time nothing much was. But we know a lot more these days about those early transgressive women, the foremothers of contemporary women writers, the creators of the still-emerging matriarchive. As Woolf said, 'Without those forerunners, Jane Austen and the Brontës and George Eliot could no more have written than Shakespeare could have written without Marlowe, or Marlowe without Chaucer, or Chaucer without those forgotten poets who paved the ways and tamed the natural savagery of the tongue.'

Killing the Angel weaves an Ariadne's thread, connecting together some of these British women writers, from the earliest days of the English language to the end of the eighteenth century.


Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.

Autorenporträt
As well as Killing The Angel Francis Booth is the author of several books on twentieth century culture:

  • Amongst Those Left: The British Experimental Novel 1940-1960 (published by Dalkey Archive);
  • No Direction Home: The Uncanny In Literature
  • Girls in Bloom: Coming of Age in Mid-20th Century Women's Fiction
  • Text Acts: Twentieth Century Literary Eroticism
  • Everybody I Can Think of Ever: Meetings That Made the Avant Garde
  • A Girl Named Vera Can Never Tell A Lie: The Fiction of Vera Caspary
  • Comrades in Art: Revolutionary Art in America 1926-1938


Francis is also the author of two novel series:

  • The Code 17 series, set in the Swinging London of the 1960s and featuring aristocratic spy Lady Laura Summers
  • Young adult fantasy series The Watchers