Life in the writings of Storm Jameson : a biography
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Life in the writings of Storm Jameson : a biography
(Cultural expressions of World War II / Phyllis Lassner, series editor)
Northwestern University Press, 2014
- : cloth
Available at 1 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 515-541) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Margaret Storm Jameson (1891-1986) is primarily known as a compelling essayist; her stature as a novelist and champion of the dispossessed is largely forgotten. In Life in the Writings of Storm Jameson, Elizabeth Maslen reveals a figure who held her own beside fellow British women writers, including Virginia Woolf; anticipated the Angry Young Women, such as Doris Lessing; and was an early champion of such European writers as Arthur Koestler and Czeslaw Milosz.
Jameson was a complex character whose politics were grounded in social justice; she was passionately antifascist - her novel In the Second Year (1936) raised the alarm about Nazism - but always wary of communism. An eloquent polemicist, Jameson was, as president of the British P.E.N. during the 1930s and 1940s, of invaluable assistance to refugee writers.
Elizabeth Maslen's biography introduces a true twentieth century hedgehog, whose essays and subtly experimental fiction were admired in Europe and the States.
by "Nielsen BookData"