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Sylvia Townsend Warner and the Question of Feminism

Montefiore, Janet E. (2024) Sylvia Townsend Warner and the Question of Feminism. The Journal of the Sylvia Townsend Warner Society, 24 (1). pp. 64-92. ISSN 2398-0605. (doi:10.14324/stw.24.1.07) (KAR id:108687)

Abstract

Sylvia Townsend Warner was a self-supporting writer who attacked the subordination of women, celebrated energy and freedom in women, and lived openly in a lesbian marriage. Yet she has not become a feminist heroine: perhaps because her activism was left-wing rather than feminist, perhaps because of her hostility to bossy, entitled women. She loved her father who educated her informally, and her links with his former male pupils at Harrow were important during the 1920s in establishing her as a literary presence. She attacked patriarchal oppression in her fiction, from her first novel, Lolly Willowes, to her last, The Flint Anchor. Of her few essays directly addressing gender politics, the most important is ‘Women as Writers’ (1959), written in unspoken dialogue with Virginia Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own, in which Warner praises women for outwitting the conventions meant to silence them and for the ‘immediacy’ of their writing.

Item Type: Article
DOI/Identification number: 10.14324/stw.24.1.07
Uncontrolled keywords: Sylvia Townsend Warner, feminism, emancipation, activism, domesticity, Woolf, gender, immediacy
Subjects: P Language and Literature
Divisions: Divisions > Division of Arts and Humanities > School of English
Funders: University of Kent (https://ror.org/00xkeyj56)
SWORD Depositor: JISC Publications Router
Depositing User: JISC Publications Router
Date Deposited: 21 Feb 2025 14:41 UTC
Last Modified: 26 Feb 2025 03:54 UTC
Resource URI: https://kar.kent.ac.uk/id/eprint/108687 (The current URI for this page, for reference purposes)

University of Kent Author Information

Montefiore, Janet E..

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