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Margery Fry
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 288

Margery Fry

Founder of the Howard league for penal reform.

Mrs Humphry Ward
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 208

Mrs Humphry Ward

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1973
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  • Publisher: Unknown

This is a biography of the British novelist Mary Augusta Ward who wrote under her married name: Mrs Humphrey Ward. Her novels contained religious themes, reflecting her Victorian values, the best-known of which was "Robert Elsmere." Three of her books were written about WWI at the behest of Theodore Roosevelt. In addition to her writing, she was involved in the anti-suffrage league, fighting against women getting the vote. She also worked to improve the education of the poor.

The Elements of Ethics
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 250

The Elements of Ethics

This volume contains a series of ten unpublished lectures that were presented by Moore, one of the most prominent 20th century philosophers.

The Essential Amateur
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 256

The Essential Amateur

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1966
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

A Victorian Wanderer
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 304

A Victorian Wanderer

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2003
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  • Publisher: Unknown

A biography of Matthew Arnold's Catholic younger brother Tom, a scholar, teacher, and self-styled 'wanderer'. Arnold's path in life took him, after a brilliant start at Oxford, to colonial New Zealand, to Tasmania, to Dublin, back to Oxford, and once more to Dublin, where he died in 1900. Hisspiritual wanderings led him into the Catholic Church, then out of it for some years, and finally back to it. He was close both to Matthew and to John Henry Newman, and his relations with them show unfamiliar aspects of these eminent Victorians. As a young man, Tom Arnold knew the elderlyWordsworth, and Arthur Hugh Clough was his closest friend. He was acquainted with such celebrated Oxford personalities as Benjamin Jowett, Mark Pattison, and Lewis Carroll; as a Professor of English in Dublin he was a colleague of Gerard Manley Hopkins; and in the last year of his life he read andapproved of an undergraduate essay by James Joyce.The book makes an original contribution to Victorian studies at the same time as telling an absorbing human story. An appendix contains a previously unpublished letter from Matthew Arnold to his brother.

Margaret Fry
  • Language: en

Margaret Fry

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1966
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Desire and Excess
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 381

Desire and Excess

  • Categories: Art

In this fascinating look at the creative power of institutions, Jonah Siegel explores the rise of the modern idea of the artist in the nineteenth century, a period that also witnessed the emergence of the museum and the professional critic. Treating these developments as interrelated, he analyzes both visual material and literary texts to portray a culture in which art came to be thought of in powerful new ways. Ultimately, Siegel shows that artistic controversies commonly associated with the self-consciously radical movements of modernism and postmodernism have their roots in a dynamic era unfairly characterized as staid, self-satisfied, and stable. The nineteenth century has been called th...

East Wind
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 277

East Wind

East Wind offers the first complete, archive-based account of the relationship between China and the British Left, from the rise of modern Chinese nationalism to the death of Mao Tse tung. Beginning with the "Hands Off China" movement of the mid-1920s, Tom Buchanan charts the mobilisation of British opinion in defence of China against Japanese aggression, 1931-1945, and the role of the British left in relations with the People's Republic of China after 1949. He shows how this relationship was placed under stress by the growing unpredictability of Communist China, above all by the Sino-Soviet dispute and the Cultural Revolution, which meant that by the 1960s China was actively supported only ...

Mrs Humphry Ward and Greenian Philosophy
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 282

Mrs Humphry Ward and Greenian Philosophy

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2019-03-26
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  • Publisher: Springer

This book examines Mary Ward’s distinctive insight into late-Victorian and Edwardian society as a famous writer and reformer, who was inspired by the philosopher and British idealist, Thomas Hill Green. As a talented woman who had studied among Oxford University intellectuals in the 1870s, and the granddaughter of Dr Arnold of Rugby, Mrs Humphry Ward (as she was best known) was in a unique position to participate in the debates, issues and events that shaped her generation; religious doubt and Christianity, educational reforms, socialism, women’s suffrage and the First World War. Helen Loader examines a range of biographical sources, alongside Mary Ward’s writings and social reform activities, to demonstrate how she expressed and engaged with Greenian idealism, both in theory and practice, and made a significant contribution to British Society.

The Life and Turbulent Times of Clara Dorothea Rackham
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 217

The Life and Turbulent Times of Clara Dorothea Rackham

This is the first critical study of Clara Dorothea Rackham née Tabor (1875–1966), a towering figure in the suffrage, labour, co-operative, peace, and adult education movements but virtually forgotten today. This clearly written and engaging study is based on unpublished primary sources including Rackham’s unpublished speeches, letters, diaries, and contemporary media coverage of her work in local and national archives. It reassesses this remarkable woman not only as a politician who changed the face of Cambridge, the university city in which she lived and worked, but also as a public intellectual whose feminist advocacy of a fair, just, and equal society helped pave the way to Britainâ€...