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Mrs Humphry Ward

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Mrs Humphry Ward Synopsis

Mary Ward (1851-1920) had a furiously active public career, her literary and philanthropic activities transforming her from an eminent Victorian into a pre-eminent Edwardian. The granddaughter of Thomas Arnold, she found herself at the centre of an intellectual and cultural coterie comprising the Arnold, Huxley, and Trevelyan families. Her novel, Robert Elsmere (1888), the first of a series of bestsellers, earned her both unprecedented sums of money and the critical respect of writers such as Henry James. She helped found Somerville College, Oxford, the University's first institution for the higher education of women, and inaugurated a number of play centres for the children of London's working women, despite being a fierce opponent of women's suffrage. As the first female reporter to visit the trenches in 1916, she was instrumental in bringing America into the war. Yet for all her achievements, her private life was overshadowed - often tragically so - by misfortune. Her parents's marriage was seriously affected by her father's religious doubts; she eclipsed her husband, a Times journalist and art critic, while her indolent son frittered away her financial and emotional resources. John Sutherland's fascinating study of the private suffering of this predominantly public person also provides useful insights into the restrictions placed upon women in the late-Victorian-Edwardian era. This title also appears in the Oxford General Books catalogue for Autumn 1990.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780198185871
Publication date: 30th August 1990
Author: John (Professor of Literature, Professor of Literature, California Institute of Technology) Sutherland
Publisher: Clarendon Press an imprint of Oxford University Press
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 442 pages
Genres: Biography: general
Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers
Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000