Bliss and Other Stories by Katherine Mansfield
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International Journal of Science Vol.5 No.1 2018 ISSN: 1813-4890 Representation of Modernism in Mansfield’s Short Stories Jialing Ding Nantong University, Nantong 226001, China [email protected] Abstract The modernist thought itself has a very complex background. Strictly speaking, modernism is not a genre, but a literary trend that is revealed in many modernist creative fictions. Kathrine Mansfield’s works have this unique feature. She uses modernist techniques in her short stories very skillfully and tactfully. The aim of the thesis is to explore representative modernist techniques in Mansfield’s short stories. Through the research, I want to prove that she is an innovator of English short stories. The thesis mainly discusses stream of consciousness in Mansfield’s short stories which includes association, time and space montage and illusion. The thesis also analyses symbols in her representative short stories and different perspectives of narration in her works. I sincerely hope that readers can understand her works better through my efforts. Undoubtedly, Mansfield opens up a path to a higher literary standard. Keywords Mansfield; modernism; stream of consciousness; symbolism; perspectives of narration. 1. Introduction Katherine Mansfield(1888-1923) is a splendid English short story writer in the early 20th century. In order to get a better development, Mansfield gave up her pleasant and affluent life. Surprisingly, she chose to travel to London by herself. From the moment she set foot in London, she has become a wandering soul who didn’t have a complete home. Mansfield had complex personality, at the same time, she went through the same intricate life journey. -
Katherine Mansfield – Assessment Task
Katherine Mansfield – Assessment Task Engaged in the real world of the 20th century, modernist writer Katherine Mansfield depicts her short stories and her strong beliefs on feminism, social issues and relationships through the voice of characters contained in her ‘Collection of Short Stories.’ With narrative anthologies exploring a vast range of dysfunctional relationships, Mansfield argues they should be a matter of personal choice. Her experiences growing up in New Zealand heightened her awareness of the discontinuities, lacunae, and constrictions of 20th century life. Following with her journeys around the world, where she absorbed the condescending ethics of social class around a patriarchy society, which she demonstrates throughout her narratives. The concept that relationships should be a matter of choice is portrayed by the views of multiple characters in Mansfield’s ‘Prelude’. ‘Prelude’ is the first story in the collection and is an essential reading, like its sequel, ‘At the bay.’ Initially, the Burnell family are moving from the city to the country. The three children are neglected by their parents, Linda and Stanley and are predominantly raised by their grandmother, Mrs Fairfield. The Burnell’s being ‘upper class’ use language primarily to establish control over their environment, “we shall simply have to cast them off.” This contrasts with the linguistic style of the Samuel Josephs who are ‘lower class’ and the reader assumes to be less educated, “you come and blay in the dursery”. Mansfield writes with such strong descriptive language that the story is played out visually for the reader, “she had a comb in her fingers and in a gentle absorbed fashion she was combing the curls from her mother’s forehead.” Through this technique we know Linda is unhappy in her marriage and ironically her envious sister Beryl Fairfield contrarily wishes she was in one. -
Appendix: Major Periodical Publications (1910–22)
Appendix: Major Periodical Publications (1910–22) Short stories (signed Katherine Mansfield unless otherwise stated) ‘Bavarian Babies: The Child-Who-Was-Tired’, New Age, 6.17 (24 February 1910), 396–8 [Katharine Mansfield] ‘Germans at Meat’, New Age, 6.18 (3 March 1910), 419–20 [Katharine Mansfield] ‘The Baron’, New Age, 6.19 (10 March 1910), 444 [Katharine Mansfield] ‘The Luft Bad’, New Age, 6.21 (24 March 1910), 493 [Katharine Mansfield] ‘Mary’, Idler, 36.90 (March 1910), 661–5 [K. Mansfield] ‘At “Lehmann’s” ’, New Age, 7.10 (7 July 1910), 225–7 [Katharine Mansfield] ‘Frau Brechenmacher Attends a Wedding’, New Age, 7.12 (21 July 1910), 273–5 ‘The Sister of the Baroness’, New Age, 7.14 (4 August 1910), 323–4 ‘Frau Fischer’, New Age, 7.16 (18 August 1910), 366–8 ‘A Fairy Story’, Open Window, 1.3 (December 1910), 162–76 [Katharina Mansfield] ‘A Birthday’, New Age, 9.3 (18 May 1911), 61–3 ‘The Modern Soul’, New Age, 9.8 (22 June 1911), 183–6 ‘The Journey to Bruges’, New Age, 9.17 (24 August 1911), 401–2 ‘Being a Truthful Adventure’, New Age, 9.19 (7 September 1911), 450–2 ‘A Marriage of Passion’, New Age, 10.19 (7 March 1912), 447–8 ‘Pastiche: At the Club’, New Age, 10.19 (7 March 1912), 449–50 ‘The Woman at the Store’, Rhythm, no. 4 (Spring 1912), 7–24 ‘Pastiche: Puzzle: Find the Book’, New Age, 11.7 (13 June 1912), 165 ‘Pastiche: Green Goggles’, New Age, 11.10 (4 July 1912), 237 ‘Tales of a Courtyard’, Rhythm, no. -
Thesis Hum 2009 Johnstone V.Pdf
The copyright of this thesis vests in the author. No quotation from it or information derived from it is to be published without full acknowledgement of the source. The thesis is to be used for private study or non- commercial research purposes only. Published by the University of Cape Town (UCT) in terms of the non-exclusive license granted to UCT by the author. University of Cape Town "Divine warnings": Katherine Mansfield Vanessa Johnstone (JHNVANOOl) A minor dissertation submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the award of the degree of Master of Arts in English Language and Literature. Faculty of the Humanities Universityty ofof Cape Cape Town Town May 2009 DIGITISED Universi - 2 APR Z013 This work has not previously been submitted in whole, or in part, for the award of any degree. It is my own work. Each significant contribution to, and quotation in, this dissertation from the work, or works, of other people has been attributed, and has been cited and referenced. Signature: Date: IS-· S- .0'1 ~--......:7 /~ } Contents Abstract 3 Introduction 4 Part One: Katherine Mansfield 6 Part Two: Modernist London 16 Part Three: Six Mansfield themes Town23 Part Four: Short stories 36 "Germans at meat" Cape 36 of The Aloe and "Prelude" 40 "Psychology" 57 "Bliss" 62 University "M iss Brill" 70 "A Married Man's Story" 75 Conclusion 83 References 85 2 "My secret belief - the innennost credo by which I live - is that although Life is loathsomely ugly and people are terribly often vile and cruel and base, nevertheless there is something at the back of it all, which if only I were great enough to understand would make everything, everything, indescribably beautiful. -
Katherine Mansfield: the Question of Perspectives in Commonwealth Literature
Kunapipi Volume 6 Issue 2 Article 11 1984 Katherine Mansfield: The Question of Perspectives in Commonwealth Literature Andrew Gurr Follow this and additional works at: https://ro.uow.edu.au/kunapipi Part of the Arts and Humanities Commons Recommended Citation Gurr, Andrew, Katherine Mansfield: The Question of Perspectives in Commonwealth Literature, Kunapipi, 6(2), 1984. Available at:https://ro.uow.edu.au/kunapipi/vol6/iss2/11 Research Online is the open access institutional repository for the University of Wollongong. For further information contact the UOW Library: [email protected] Katherine Mansfield: The Question of erspectivP es in Commonwealth Literature Abstract Writing literary criticism as a collaborative act is a complex operation. It requires similar interests, similar styles of writing and above all a similarity of critical perspective which must be neither so narrow as to inhibit original thinking nor so broad as to allow real differences to show. Even parallel lines of thought can follow tracks different enough to be embarrassing when the aim is to present a coherent and unified view of the subject. When the writer is a regional figure with a metropolitan publishing history the strain of diversity can be acute. This journal article is available in Kunapipi: https://ro.uow.edu.au/kunapipi/vol6/iss2/11 ANDREW GURR Katherine Mansfield: The Question of Perspectives in Commonwealth Literature Writing literary criticism as a collaborative act is a complex operation. It requires similar interests, similar styles of writing and above all a similar- ity of critical perspective which must be neither so narrow as to inhibit original thinking nor so broad as to allow real differences to show. -
Keep Calm and Read Short Stories
МІНІСТЕРСТВО ОСВІТИ І НАУКИ УКРАЇНИ КАМ’ЯНЕЦЬ-ПОДІЛЬСЬКИЙ НАЦІОНАЛЬНИЙ УНІВЕРСИТЕТ ІМЕНІ ІВАНА ОГІЄНКА І.С. КАЗИМІР KEEP CALM AND READ SHORT STORIES Навчально-методичний посібник Кам’янець-Подільський – 2020 1 УДК 811.111’373(075.8) К42 Друкується за рішенням науково-методичної ради факультету іноземної філології Кам’янець-Подільського національного університету імені Івана Огієнка (протокол № 4 від 14 травня 2020 року) SHORT STORIES Рецензенти: Уманець А.В., кандидат філологічних наук, доцент, за- A short story is one of the most popu- відувач кафедри іноземних мов Кам’янець-Подільського lar forms of literature. Even though it is a національного університету імені Івана Огієнка. fiction, a product of the author’s imagina- Галайбіда О.В., кандидат філологічних наук, доцент, tion, you may become interested in reading завідувач кафедри англійської мови Кам’янець-Подільсь- it because it deals with people, places, ac- кого національного університету імені Івана Огієнка. tions, and events that seem to familiar. At other times it may stir Казимір І.С. your imagination because it deals with the fantastic – or unusual. К42 KEEP CALM AND READ SHORT STORIES: Whatever your reason for enjoying a particular short, you will навч.-метод. посібник / Уклад. Казимір І.С. – Кам’янець- find that because it is short, you can usually read it in one sitting. Подільський: ТОВ “Друкарня Рута”, 2020. – 104 с. A short story is made up of elements: plot, character, setting, ISBN 000-000-0000-000-0 point of view, and theme. The plot is the sequence of events in the story. The characters are the people, and sometimes the ani- Навчально-методичний посібник призначений для mals, that play a role in the story. -
Katherine Mansfield
'UNCOMMON GROUND. DISLOCATION, DISPLA-NT, AND DIX1UNCTION IN THE WRlTING OF KAT'EEmMANSmELD Georgia Dawn Milligan B.A., Simon Fraser University, 1992 A THESIS SUBMTIED IN PARTIAL FULFUAENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS in the Department of English O Georgia Dawn Milligan 1996 SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY April 1996 All rights reserve& This work may not be r,"produced in whole or in part, by photocopy or other means, without permission of the author. National Library Bibliothwue nationale 1*1 of Canada du Canada Acquisitions and Direction des acquisitions et Bibliographic %rvices Branch des services bibliographiques 395 Wellmgtm Street 395. rue Wellington Ottawa, Ontarii Ottawa (Ontario) KIA OF44 KIA ON4 Your hle Votre r6ference Our file Nofre rWrence The author has granted an L'auteur a accorde une licence irrevocable non-exclusive licence irrevocable et non exclusive allowing the National Library of permettant a la Bibliotheque Canada to reproduce, loan, nationale du Canada de distribute or sell copies of reproduire, prQer, distribuer ou - hisjher thesis by any means and vendre des copies de sa these in any form or format, making de quelque maniere et sous this thesis available to interested quelque forme que ce soit pour persons. mettre des exemplaires de cette these a la disposition des personnes interessees. The author retains ownership of L'auteur conserve la propri26 du the copyright in hislher thesis. droit d'autew qui protege sa Neither the thesis nor substantial thhse. Ni la these ni des extraits extracts from it may be printed or substantiels de celle-ci ne otherwise reprcduced without doivent 8re imprimes ou his/her permission. -
A Comment on Katherine Mansfield's a Dill Pickle
Journal of Literature and Art Studies, August 2015, Vol. 5, No. 8, 583-587 doi: 10.17265/2159-5836/2015.08.002 D DAVID PUBLISHING A Comment on Katherine Mansfield’s A Dill Pickle WANG Xiao-yan, LI Ze-ming Changchun University, Changchun, China Katherine Mansfield is a world famous woman master of short stories in English literature. Her stories are sensitive revelations of human behaiour in quite ordinary situations, through which we can glimpse a powerful, and sometimes cruelly pessimistic view of life. A Dill Pickle is one of her short stories published in 1917, describing the encounter between a young woman and a young man who have been lovers six years ago and their lost love and changes over the years. Short as it is, it is really worth our carful analysis and appreciation. This paper will comment on this short story from the following two aspects: a commont on the theme of the story; a comment on the writing technique of the story. The paper conludes that romantic love is dependent upon circumstances and the convergence of certain character traits at a particular time. Keywords: A Dill Pickle, Katherine Mansfield, theme, technique Introduction Katherine Mansfield, an outstanding woman master of short stories of 20th century English literature, was born in a middle-class family in New Zealand. Throughout her life , she led a wandering life in search of health and wrote under difficulties. And most of her works are from the recreation of her experineces with the theme of women’s disillusion and loneliness. A Dill Pickle, completed in 1917, is one of her most significant masterpieces and it is based on her own experience. -
Virginia Woolf, Hd, Germaine Dulac, and Walter Benjamin
LYRIC NARRATIVE IN LATE MODERNISM: VIRGINIA WOOLF, H.D., GERMAINE DULAC, AND WALTER BENJAMIN DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Cheryl Lynn Hindrichs, M.A. * * * * * The Ohio State University 2006 Dissertation Committee: Professor Sebastian Knowles, Adviser Approved by Professor Brian McHale ______________________________ Professor James Phelan Adviser Graduate Program in English ABSTRACT This dissertation redefines lyric narrative—forms of narration that fuse the associative resonance of lyric with the linear progression of narrative—as both an aesthetic mode and a strategy for responding ethically to the political challenges of the period of late modernism. Underscoring the vital role of lyric narrative as a late- modernist technique, I focus on its use during the period 1925-1945 by British writer Virginia Woolf, American expatriate poet H.D., French filmmaker Germaine Dulac, and German critic Walter Benjamin. Locating themselves as outsiders free to move across generic and national boundaries, each insisted on the importance of a dialectical vision: that is, holding in a productive tension the timeless vision of the lyric mode and the dynamic energy of narrative progression. Further, I argue that a transdisciplinary, feminist impulse informed this experimentation, leading these authors to incorporate innovations in fiction, music, cinema, and psychoanalysis. Consequently, I combine a narratological and historicist approach to reveal parallel evolutions of lyric narrative across disciplines—fiction, criticism, and film. Through an interpretive lens that uses rhetorical theory to attend to the ethical dimensions of their aesthetics, I show how Woolf’s, H.D.’s, Dulac’s, and Benjamin’s lyric narratives create unique relationships with their audiences. -
Katherine Mansfield and Conceptualisations of the Self
Katherine Mansfield and Conceptualisations of the Self Submitted for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy of English Literature At the University of Northampton 2018 Louise Jane Edensor © Louise Jane Edensor 2018 PhD This thesis is copyright material and no quotation from it may be published without proper acknowledgement. Abstract The thesis aims to show how Katherine Mansfield’s desire to discover aspects of the self shaped her strengths and distinctiveness as a writer, particularly in the development of her own modernist aesthetic. Mansfield’s letters and notebooks often betray a preoccupation with issues of the self. In one notebook entry she exclaims, ‘if one was true to oneself . True to oneself! Which self? Which of my many – well, really, that’s what it looks like coming to – hundreds of selves’ (CW4, 349). By examining this and many other scattered references to the self throughout Mansfield’s letters and notebooks, this thesis aims to uncover the relationship between Mansfield’s personal comments and questions on the self and the development of her literary techniques. The beginning of the twentieth century, when Mansfield was writing, saw many advancements in science and technology as well as new psychological theories popularised by William James and Sigmund Freud. These theories added to a discourse on the psychological make-up of the individual as modernity caused a crisis in understanding the construction of the self, calling identity into question. By examining these theories, this thesis provides a framework for the analysis of Mansfield’s writing, integrating current critical commentary on her fiction, Mansfield’s private thoughts and her experimental fiction. -
The Collected Fiction of Katherine Mansfield
The Collected Fiction of Katherine Mansfield, Edited by Gerri and Vincent O'Sullivan Mansfield, Katherine digitalisiert durch: The Edinburgh edition of the collected works of Katherine ... IDS Luzern 2012- Contents Acknowledgements ix Abbreviations and Textual Note xi Chronology xiii Introduction xix Fiction Enna Blake 3 A Happy Christmas Eve 5 The Great Examination 7 The Pine Tree, The Sparrows, and You and I Misunderstood She A True Tale was a big bare house' 'I am afraid I be very Two with One Moral Die Einsame (The Lonely One) 20 Your Birthday 22 One Day 24 About Pat 29 CONTENTS My Potplants Les Deux Etrangeres 3 5 Juliet 37 '"I was never happy", Huia said' Memories 63 The Tale of the Three 64 66 Vignette: Summer in Winter 66 Summer Idyll 67 Night Swiftly She and the Boy; or the Story of the 73 'She unpacked her box' Vignettes Vignette: Through the Afternoon Silhouettes 83 In the Botanical Gardens 84 In a Cafe Leves 89 The Story of Pearl Button Vignette: Sunset Tuesday 'On waking next morning' 94 An 97 Vignette: Westminster Cathedral 'She on the broad 99 The Man, the Monkey and the Mask The Education of Audrey Juliette Delacour The Unexpected Must Happen Vignette: By the Sea In Summer The Yellow Chrysanthemum The Thoughtful Her Literary Aspirations Vignette: They are a ridiculous Company The Thoughtful Child Rewa The Tiredness of Rosabel Study: The Death of a Rose 'Youth and Age' CONTENTS Vignette: 'I out through the window' Almost a Tragedy: The Cars on Lambton Quay A God, One Day on Mount Olympus 'He her again on the Pier at Prose -
The Pursuit of Inner Peace—The Modernistic Narration in Katherine
Journal of Arts & Humanities Studies, Volume 1, ISSN: 2664-0295 The Pursuit of Inner Peace—The Modernistic Narration in Katherine Mansfield’s Short Stories Zhang Lina1,a,*, Wang Shanshan2,b 1 Dalian Neusoft University of Information, Dalian, Liaoning, China 2 Dalian Neusoft University of Information, Dalian, Liaoning, China [email protected], [email protected] *Corresponding author: Zhang Lina Keywords: Modernistic narration, Inner peace, Katherine Mansfield, Short stories. Abstract. Katherine Mansfield innovatively applies the modernistic narrative techniques to her creation of short stories to fill her works with poetic artistic charm. The paper aims at exploring her emphasis on the characters’ pursuit of their inner peace in the short stories through modernistic narration techniques like plotless writing, stream of consciousness and interior monologue. 1. Introduction In an era characterized by industrialization, rapid social change, advances in science and the social sciences, Modernists felt a growing alienation incompatible with Victorian morality, optimism, and convention. Undoubtedly, the crisis of the society and the spiritual trauma of people led to a great change in literary world. “It is one of the great and flourishing periods of writing, a time when the novel changed wonderfully in spirit and purpose” (Bradbury ⅴ). Writers turned their focus onto the inner world and individuality of ordinary human beings. Therefore, either in form or in content, the literary works of this period broke the bondage of time and space and described the changing consciousness of people. Katherine Mansfield, a famous modernistic female writer, is no exception who established her literary fame on the short story writing. It’s universally acknowledged that her life “was a small and sad legend of loss, romantic illness, and talent unfulfilled” (Robinson 1).