The article surveys, summarises and assesses the critical reception and cultural reputation of Sylvia Townsend Warner. It recalls the very limited role women writers played in Montefiore’s own university experience as a student of English and discusses their growing prominence in the 1980s and beyond under the influence of the feminism of that time and in particular of feminist publishing houses
These two poems reflect on Sylvia Townsend Warner and her milieu.The first recalls an incident about...
Book review of a collection of essays about Sylvia Plath, looking at her work from biographical, cul...
Sylvia Townsend Warner’s wartime novel The Corner that Held Them (1948), about a nunnery during the ...
This article considers why Warner’s writing has been undervalued, in particular taking issue with th...
Susanna Pinney recalls her meetings with Sylvia Townsend Warner,first as a child in the 1950s, and t...
This article highlights Sylvia Lynd (1888-1952) as an important interwar ‘middlewoman’, arguing that...
Sylvia Townsend Warner’s 1958 poetry collection Boxwood is an unusual book with an unusual genesis. ...
A letter about Sylvia Townsend Warner’s friendship with Arnold Rattenbury and Rattenbury’s role as a...
The essay contextualises Lolly Willowes and The True Heart in relation to interwar ideas about land...
This essay discusses the subversive treatment of the First World War and patriotism in four of Sylvi...
This thesis works to question the peculiar relationship between form and subject in the intimate poe...
The presence of music and sound is crucially important in the writing of Sylvia Townsend Warner (187...
This article describes the friendship between Sylvia Townsend Warner, Peter Pears and Benjamin Britt...
Introduction : The corners that held her : the importance of place in Sylvia Townsend Warner's writi...
This article traces Virginia Woolf’s interest in the representation of women back to her first publi...
These two poems reflect on Sylvia Townsend Warner and her milieu.The first recalls an incident about...
Book review of a collection of essays about Sylvia Plath, looking at her work from biographical, cul...
Sylvia Townsend Warner’s wartime novel The Corner that Held Them (1948), about a nunnery during the ...
This article considers why Warner’s writing has been undervalued, in particular taking issue with th...
Susanna Pinney recalls her meetings with Sylvia Townsend Warner,first as a child in the 1950s, and t...
This article highlights Sylvia Lynd (1888-1952) as an important interwar ‘middlewoman’, arguing that...
Sylvia Townsend Warner’s 1958 poetry collection Boxwood is an unusual book with an unusual genesis. ...
A letter about Sylvia Townsend Warner’s friendship with Arnold Rattenbury and Rattenbury’s role as a...
The essay contextualises Lolly Willowes and The True Heart in relation to interwar ideas about land...
This essay discusses the subversive treatment of the First World War and patriotism in four of Sylvi...
This thesis works to question the peculiar relationship between form and subject in the intimate poe...
The presence of music and sound is crucially important in the writing of Sylvia Townsend Warner (187...
This article describes the friendship between Sylvia Townsend Warner, Peter Pears and Benjamin Britt...
Introduction : The corners that held her : the importance of place in Sylvia Townsend Warner's writi...
This article traces Virginia Woolf’s interest in the representation of women back to her first publi...
These two poems reflect on Sylvia Townsend Warner and her milieu.The first recalls an incident about...
Book review of a collection of essays about Sylvia Plath, looking at her work from biographical, cul...
Sylvia Townsend Warner’s wartime novel The Corner that Held Them (1948), about a nunnery during the ...