Sylvia Townsend Warner’s wartime novel The Corner that Held Them (1948), about a nunnery during the Black Death, reflects on female community and bonding in a period of male fascist violence. The novel explores the shift from pacifism to acceptance of the need for anti-fascist war which characterised Warner’s intellectual beliefs from the 1930s into wartime, probing the arts of peace in compositional practice. Such a dialectic of war and peace is considered in relation to what Maud Ellmann has described as the outward turn to collective choral consciousness in mid-century modernism. This article explores both the staging of fascism as plague and the feminist daring and limits that Warner saw as operative in female witnessing and withstandin...
This dissertation explores Irish and English fiction before, during, and shortly after the Second Wo...
This dissertation analyzes the idiosyncratic and ambivalent ways Black writers in the United States ...
Sylvia Townsend Warner’s 1958 poetry collection Boxwood is an unusual book with an unusual genesis. ...
In A Life of One’s Own (1934) Marion Milner asked the apparently simple question: “What do I like?” ...
Permission to deposit 2 articles provided by Editor, Journal of the Sylvia Townsend Warner Society. ...
At the end of Sigrid Undset’s medieval trilogy Kristin Lavransdatter (1920–1922), the heroine encoun...
This dissertation examines the texts of Anglophone women writers from the First World War. Women’s r...
A draft manuscript essay in which Warner recalls the genesis of The Corner That Held Them and the st...
The ‘golden age’ of clue-puzzle detective fiction is usually considered to end in 1939 with the outb...
[Abstract] In the atmosphere of growing oppression in the 1930s Britain, where the rapid raise of Fa...
When addressing marginal experiences during the Second World War, the German occupation of the Chann...
"The Seductive Fallacy" provides a literary focus for feminist critiques of fascist gender and sexua...
(First paragraph) War InspIred Horror In Virginia Woolf. Her antipathy toward those who cause wars i...
A Woman in Berlin (1954) has undoubtedly shaped global understanding of wartime rape. The present ar...
This essay discusses the subversive treatment of the First World War and patriotism in four of Sylvi...
This dissertation explores Irish and English fiction before, during, and shortly after the Second Wo...
This dissertation analyzes the idiosyncratic and ambivalent ways Black writers in the United States ...
Sylvia Townsend Warner’s 1958 poetry collection Boxwood is an unusual book with an unusual genesis. ...
In A Life of One’s Own (1934) Marion Milner asked the apparently simple question: “What do I like?” ...
Permission to deposit 2 articles provided by Editor, Journal of the Sylvia Townsend Warner Society. ...
At the end of Sigrid Undset’s medieval trilogy Kristin Lavransdatter (1920–1922), the heroine encoun...
This dissertation examines the texts of Anglophone women writers from the First World War. Women’s r...
A draft manuscript essay in which Warner recalls the genesis of The Corner That Held Them and the st...
The ‘golden age’ of clue-puzzle detective fiction is usually considered to end in 1939 with the outb...
[Abstract] In the atmosphere of growing oppression in the 1930s Britain, where the rapid raise of Fa...
When addressing marginal experiences during the Second World War, the German occupation of the Chann...
"The Seductive Fallacy" provides a literary focus for feminist critiques of fascist gender and sexua...
(First paragraph) War InspIred Horror In Virginia Woolf. Her antipathy toward those who cause wars i...
A Woman in Berlin (1954) has undoubtedly shaped global understanding of wartime rape. The present ar...
This essay discusses the subversive treatment of the First World War and patriotism in four of Sylvi...
This dissertation explores Irish and English fiction before, during, and shortly after the Second Wo...
This dissertation analyzes the idiosyncratic and ambivalent ways Black writers in the United States ...
Sylvia Townsend Warner’s 1958 poetry collection Boxwood is an unusual book with an unusual genesis. ...