Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Mansfield wrote short stories and poetry under a variation of her own name, Katherine Mansfield, which explored anxiety, sexuality and existentialism alongside a developing New Zealand identity. When she was 19, she left New Zealand and settled in England, where she became a friend of D. H. Lawrence , Virginia Woolf , Lady Ottoline Morrell and ...
"A Dill Pickle" is a 1917 short story by Katherine Mansfield. It was first published in the New Age on 4 October 1917. [1] A revised version later appeared in Bliss and Other Stories. [2] The characters and their relationship possibly were inspired by Mansfield's older sister Vera Margaret Beauchamp and her husband James Mackintosh Bell. [3]
The Germans first used Chlorine gas on 22 April 1915 at Ypres, and as Mansfield was at Carco's flat in Paris on 8/9 May she may have seen a gassed French soldier in a café then. The narrator Raoul Duquette of her story Je ne parle pas français (who has a cynical attitude to love and sex) is partly based on Carco. [2]
Pornographic actress, pornographic film director, sex educator, author, and feminist [45] Patrick Harvie: born 1973 British Scottish Green Party co-leader 2008– [46] [47] Beatrice Hastings: 1879–1943 British Writer, poet and literary critic. Lover of Katherine Mansfield and Wyndham Lewis [48] Annette Haven: born 1954 American
"Prelude" is a short story by Katherine Mansfield. It was first published by the Hogarth Press in July 1918, after Virginia Woolf encouraged her to finish the story. Mansfield had begun writing "Prelude" in the midst of a love affair she had in Paris in 1915. [1] It was reprinted in Bliss and Other Stories (1920). [2]
Beyond quelling nerves, sharing with your partner can actually improve intimacy and trust within your relationship, says Jesse Kahn, LCSW-R, CST, director and sex therapist at the Gender ...
Despite her busy schedule, De Laurentiis makes spending time with her kiddo, Jade, a top priority. But the single mom reveals being divorced makes it especially difficult.
Rosabel's fantasies instantiate escapism, particularly in relation to her social class.During her commute, Rosabel is disgusted by a young woman reading about 'a hot, voluptuous night, a band playing, and a girl with lovely, white shoulders' in a middle-brow novel (p. 1); however, Rosabel's own fantasy of the ball with Harry also involves 'a voluptuous night, a band playing, and her lovely ...