Cover image for Lost Girls : Demeter-Persephone and the Literary Imagination, 1850-1930.
Lost Girls : Demeter-Persephone and the Literary Imagination, 1850-1930.
Title:
Lost Girls : Demeter-Persephone and the Literary Imagination, 1850-1930.
Author:
Radford, Andrew.
ISBN:
9789401204668
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (357 pages)
Series:
Textxet. Studies in Comparative Literature, 53 ; v.53

Textxet. Studies in Comparative Literature, 53
Contents:
The Lost Girls Demeter-Persephone and the Literary Imagination, 1850-1930 -- Contents -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 Excavating the Dark Half of Hellas -- Chapter 2 Divine Mother and Maid in Victorian Poetry -- Chapter 3 Hardy's Tess: The Making and Breaking of a Goddess -- Chapter 4 'Gone to Earth': Mary Webb's Doomed Persephone -- Chapter 5 E. M. Forster and Demeter's English Garden -- Chapter 6 Lawrence's Underworld -- Chapter 7 Salvaging the Goddess of Wessex -- Afterword -- Select Bibliography -- Index.
Abstract:
The Lost Girls analyses a number of British writers between 1850 and 1930 for whom the myth of Demeter's loss and eventual recovery of her cherished daughter Kore-Persephone, swept off in violent and catastrophic captivity by Dis, God of the Dead, had both huge personal and aesthetic significance. This book, in addition to scrutinising canonical and less well-known texts by male authors such as Thomas Hardy, E. M. Forster, and D. H. Lawrence, also focuses on unjustly neglected women writers - Mary Webb and Mary Butts - who utilised occult tropes to relocate themselves culturally, and especially in Butts's case to recover and restore a forgotten legacy, the myth of matriarchal origins. These novelists are placed in relation not only to one another but also to Victorian archaeologists and especially to Jane Ellen Harrison (1850-1928), one of the first women to distinguish herself in the history of British Classical scholarship and whose anthropological approach to the study of early Greek art and religion both influenced - and became transformed by - the literature. Rather than offering a teleological argument that moves lock-step through the decades, The Lost Girls proposes chapters that detail specific engagements with Demeter-Persephone through which to register distinct literary-cultural shifts in uses of the myth and new insights into the work of particular writers.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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