No Modernism Without Lesbians Diana Souhami (best books to read in life .TXT) 📖
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184
I feel so very very
H.D. to Bryher, 10 March 1933, Analyzing Freud
184
These Jews, I think
H.D. to Bryher, 28 May 1933, Analyzing Freud
185
I cannot understand
Bryher, ‘What shall you do in the war?’ Close Up, 1933
186
Freud in himself
The Heart to Artemis
186
He says ‘many
H.D. to Bryher, 22 March 1933, Analyzing Freud
187
such a scene with Elizabeth
Bryher papers, Beinecke, quoted in Analyzing Freud
188
if you saw Hepburn
Quoted in Herself Defined
188
I had the great satisfaction
Ibid.
188
a Hilton on wheels
Macpherson, ‘One’
189
I believe that my father
The Heart to Artemis
190
I read the news
Freud to Bryher, 19 July 1933, Analyzing Freud
191
Please Fido if you love me
H.D. to Bryher, 24 November 1934
192
I don’t want to change you
Bryher to Macpherson, 25 August 1934
193
five buds and flowers
H.D. to Silvia Dobson, 1933, quoted in Herself Defined
195
I came to Vienna
Freud, 16 November 1938, letter to Time and Tide
195
I blame the English government
Heart to Artemis
196
Ask me to die
Ibid.
196
when people are fighting
Ibid.
196
I plundered the black
Ibid.
197
Here I was
Ibid.
197
that blue smoky
The Days of Mars
198
we were firm friends
Ibid.
199
I could visualise
H.D., The Gift
200
I had a sort of ‘shock treatment
H.D. to Bryher, 21 September 1946, Silverstein
201
When you were so very ill
Bryher to H.D., 29 September 1946
207
Most occupants
Bryher to Silvia Dobson, 1 May 1961, Silverstein
207
she minded the frustrations
Bryher to Silvia Dobson, 1 October 1961, Silverstein
209
I was nine when my parents
Bryher, foreword to The Coin of Carthage
Works by Bryher
Amy Lowell: A Critical Appreciation, 1918
The Days of Mars: A Memoir, 1972
Development, 1920
Film Problems in Soviet Russia, 1929
H.D. fragment, typescript (at Beinecke)
The Heart to Artemis: A Writer’s Memoirs, 1962
Two Selves, 1923
West, 1925
‘What Shall You Do in the War?’, Close Up, June 1933
Novels:
Beowulf, 1956
The Coin of Carthage, 1964
The Fourteenth of October, 1954
This January Tale, 1968
Roman Wall, 1955
Ruan, 1961
Works by H.D.
Asphodel, 1961
Collected Poems, 1912–44, 1983
The Gift, 1998
Helen in Egypt, 1961
HERmione, 1981
Hymen, 1921
Notes on Thought and Vision, 1982
Palimpsest, 1926
Tribute to Freud, 1956
Works referencing Bryher
Aldington, Richard, Death of a Hero, 1929
——Richard Aldington & H.D., The Early Years in Letters, ed. Caroline Zilboorg, 1992
Collecott, Diana, H.D. and Sapphic Modernism, 1999
Donald, James, A. Friedberg and L. Marcus, eds, Close Up 1927–1933: Cinema and Modernism, 1998
Dobson, Silvia,’Mirror for a Star’, letters and autobiographical notes. Unpublished typescript at Beinecke
Duberman, Martin Bauml, Paul Robeson, 1989
Ellis, Havelock, Fountain of Life, 1930
——Studies in the Psychology of Sex, vol. 1: Sexual Inversion, 1897
Flanner, Janet, Paris Was Yesterday: 1925–1939, ed. Irving Drutman, 1972
Freud, Sigmund, The Interpretation of Dreams, 1900
——Letters to H.D. and Bryher (at Beinecke)
——Totem and Taboo, 1913
——Why War?, 1933
Friedberg, Anne, ‘Writing About Cinema: Close Up 1927–1933’, 1983
Friedman, Susan Stanford, ed., Analyzing Freud: Letters of H.D., Bryher and their Circle, 2002
——Psyche Reborn: the emergence of H.D., 1981
Gregg, Frances, The Mystic Leeway, 1995
Grosskurth, Phyllis, Havelock Ellis, 1980
Guest, Barbara, Herself Defined; the poet H., 1984
Hanscombe, Gillian and Smyers, Virginia, Writing for Their Lives, 1987
Knoll, Robert E., ed., McAlmon and the Lost Generation, 1962
Lawrence, D.H., The Letters of D.H. Lawrence, ed., Aldous Huxley, 1932
——Selected Letters, ed. James T. Boulton, 1996
Lawrence, Frieda, Not I But the Wind, 1934
Luhan, Mabel Dodge, Lorenzo in Taos, 1933
Macpherson, Kenneth, fragment of a novel on H.D., at Beinecke
——‘One’, notes for a memoir, at Beinecke
McAlmon, Robert, Being Geniuses Together, 1938
——Some Have Their Moments, typescript at Beinecke
——Letters to H.D. at Beinecke
Monnier, Adrienne, The Very Rich Hours of Adrienne Monnier, ed. and trs. Richard McDougall, 1976
Patmore, Brigit, My Friends When Young, 1968
Pearson, Norman Holmes, notes for a biography of H.D., at Beinecke
Pound, Ezra, Selected Poems 1908–1959, 1975
——The Cantos, 1956
——Literary Essays, ed. T.S. Eliot, 1956
——Letters to H.D. and Bryher, at Beinecke
Rosenberg, John, Dorothy Richardson, 1973
Sachs, Hanns, Freud: Master and Friend, 1944
Smyth, Ethel, Impressions That Remain – Memoirs of Ethel Smyth
Souhami, Diana, Gluck: Her Biography, 1988
Natalie Barney
Natalie Barney’s and Romaine Brooks’ papers are in the Archives of American Art and the National Museum of American Art at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC; the McFarlin Library at the University of Tulsa; and the Bibliothèque Littéraire Jacques Doucet in Paris. Six hundred letters between Natalie and Romaine Brooks, dating from 1924 to 1969, are in the McFarlin Library. The publication by Francesco Rapazzini of the marriage agreement between Natalie and Elisabeth de Gramont, shows Natalie’s relationships in a new light.
The papers of Djuna Barnes are in the McKeldin Library, University of Maryland. The recent biography of Eva Palmer by Artemis Leontis is scholarly and impressive.
The Janet Flanner and Solita Solano papers are in the Library of Congress Manuscript Division, Washington, D.C.
213
I am a lesbian
Éparpillements
215
Love has always
Selected Writings
215
Living is the first
Ibid.
215
My queerness
Lettres à une inconnue, unpublished 1899
215
I have loved
The Woman Who Lives With Me, privately printed, no date; see A Perilous Advantage
215
the water I made
Souvenirs indiscrets
215
I neither like nor
Pensées d’une amazone
216
The finest life
Ibid.
216
What makes marriage
Souvenirs indiscrets
216
Why should I bother
A Perilous Advantage
217
I often reflect
Ibid.
217
When she bent over
‘Tribute to my Mother’, Archives of American Art
218
Live and let live
Ibid.
219
I loathe the enthusiasm
Pensées d’une amazone
219
mind pickers
Ibid.
221
Love has always been
Dorothy Strachey, Olivia
222
Your letter folds me
Eva Palmer to Natalie, 1901, Bibliothèque Jacques Doucet
226
God will punish you
Pensées d’une amazone
226
I still need
My Blue Notebooks
227
Ever since I remember
Undated, c.1900, Pike Barney letters, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian
228
The butler announced
Souvenirs indiscrets
229
‘The moon sulked
My Blue Notebooks
229
a disquieting beginning
Souvenirs indiscrets
231
she had brown eyes
Ibid.
232
Impossible to find
Colette, The
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