The Neglected Authors - English Women: Celebrated in their time, forgotten in ours

The Neglected Authors - English Women: Celebrated in their time, forgotten in ours

Title: The Neglected Authors - English Women: Celebrated in their time, forgotten in ours
Author: Aphra Behn, Marjorie Bowen, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, D. K. Broster, Mary Butts, Mary Cholmondeley, Mrs Craik, Ella D'Arcy, E. M. Delafield, Lettice Galbraith, Winifred Holtby, Violet Hunt, Letitia Elizabeth Landon, Mary E. Mann, Amy Levy, Charlotte Mew, Hannah More, Ada Radford, May Sinclair, Netta Syrett, Mary Webb, Catherine Wells & Leonara Wodehouse
Release: 2025-01-01
Kind: audiobook
Genre: Fiction
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The Neglected Authors - English Women: C Aphra Behn, Marjorie Bowen, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, D. K. Broster, Mary Butts, Mary Cholmondeley, Mrs Craik, Ella D'Arcy, E. M. Delafield, Lettice Galbraith, Winifred Holtby, Violet Hunt, Letitia Elizabeth Landon, Mary E. Mann, Amy Levy, Charlotte Mew, Hannah More, Ada Radford, May Sinclair, Netta Syrett, Mary Webb, Catherine Wells & Leonara Wodehouse
Throughout the long centuries of human history is the want, and the need, to share information, to exchange ideas and for that knowledge and experience, for curiosity and learning, to be the basis of a civil society.
In literature the ambition is much narrower. In order to be known, to be popular, you had to be published. And for that people had to know you existed and your ideas worth reading. Obviously for most of humanity’s time people couldn’t read and texts couldn’t be published in any great number.

In the 15th Century Gutenberg’s printing press began the revolution to address the second and by the 19th century had gathered pace with startling speed and mass distribution. Education for the many was brought in to help people understand more of their world and, with new skills, how to have a better place within it. Now, if the powers that owned the presses and means of distribution agreed an audience would now be able to avail themselves of your ideas, your printed words.

All too often the talents of women have been scorned, mocked and laughed at. In reality that was more usually by those who’s own talents were hardly fit to even grace their shadows.

But society in general still connived and set women to one side in almost everything that men considered their rightful territory. And literature was one such territory. Remarkably resilient as well as talented these women strove to be published, to show themselves as equals. The results more often than not proved that they were.

Sadly, in the thirst for the new, the recent and the past fell from sight, relegated to dark corners and dusty shelves.

But the printed word is rarely without someone, somewhere busying themselves through piles of papers and books rediscovering what a good story is, whatever its age.

In this volume we offer up a small selection of talents from the literary landscape of English women authors whose time has now come again.

More from Aphra Behn, Marjorie Bowen, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, D. K. Broster, Mary Butts, Mary Cholmondeley, Mrs Craik, Ella D'Arcy, E. M. Delafield, Lettice Galbraith, Winifred Holtby, Violet Hunt, Letitia Elizabeth Landon, Mary E. Mann, Amy Levy, Charlotte Mew, Hannah More, Ada Radford, May Sinclair, Netta Syrett, Mary Webb, Catherine Wells & Leonara Wodehouse

Aphra Behn
Aphra Behn
Edgar Allan Poe, Emily Dickinson, Aphra Behn, A. E. Housman, T. S. Eliot, Ella Wheeler Wilcox, Michael Drayton, Edith Nesbit, Alice Meynell, Robert Seymour Bridges, William Shakespeare, Rupert Brooke, Charlotte Smith & Kabir
William Wycherley, Aphra Behn, John Dryden, George Etherege, Thomas Otway & Edward Ravenscroft
Robert Burns, Jane Barker, Andrew Marvell, Aphra Behn, Daniel Sheehan, Edward Thomas, Jonathan Swift, Katherine Philips, Rumi, Rupert Brooke & William Blake
Aphra Behn, Susanna Centivre, William Congreve, Delarivier Manley, John Vanburgh & George Farquhar
Aphra Behn
Patrick Branwell Brontë, Charles Sorley, Khalil Gibran, William Morris, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Ivor Gurney, John Jay Thompson, Edith Wharton, William Shakespeare, Aphra Behn, Edgar Allan Poe & John Keats
Aphra Behn, Mary Cholmondeley, Charlotte Mew, Dorothy Edwards, E. M. Delafield, Elizabeth Gaskell, Ella D'Arcy, George Eliot, Mary Shelley & Virginia Woolf
Aphra Behn, John Donne & John Dryden
F. Scott Fitzgerald, Aphra Behn, Anatole France, D. H. Lawrence, Dorothy Parker, Ellen Glasgow, Frances Watkins Harper, Kenneth Grahame & Khalil Gibran
Aphra Behn, Marjorie Bowen, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, D. K. Broster, Mary Butts, Mary Cholmondeley, Mrs Craik, Ella D'Arcy, E. M. Delafield, Lettice Galbraith, Winifred Holtby, Violet Hunt, Letitia Elizabeth Landon, Mary E. Mann, Amy Levy, Charlotte Mew, Hannah More, Ada Radford, May Sinclair, Netta Syrett, Mary Webb, Catherine Wells & Leonara Wodehouse
Sherwood Anderson, Israel Zangwill, Amelia Edwards, Aphra Behn, Edith Nesbit, Elizabeth Gaskell, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Friedrich Schiller, Hugh Walpole, Majorie Bowen & Rabindranath Tagore
Eliza Acton, Charlotte Brontë & Aphra Behn
Ryūnosuke Akutagawa, Grant Allen, Leonid Andreyev, Mikhail Petrovich Artzybashev, Gertrude Atherton, Lady Augusta Gregory, Stacy Aumonier, William Austin, Richard Harris Barham, Robert Barr, Charles Baudelaire, Aphra Behn, John Davys Beresford, Helena Blavatsky, Marjorie Bowen, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Ernest Bramah, D. K. Broster, Rhoda Broughton, Valery Bryusov & Thomas Burke
F. Scott Fitzgerald, Kate Chopin, D. H. Lawrence, Aphra Behn, Khalil Gibran, Alice Dunbar Nelson, Elizabeth Gaskell, Ellen Glasgow, Bithia Mary Croker, Anton Chekhov, O. Henry, Amy Levy, William James Lampton, Tod Robbins, Mary E. Wilkins Freeman & Frances Watkins Harper