January 30, 2014

KATHERINE MANSFIELD (1947)

Master of the short story who evolved a distinctive prose style with many overtones of poetry.

Her delicate stories focused upon internal, psychological conflicts, have an obliqueness of narration and a subtlety of observation that reveal the influence of Anton Chekhov.

She had much influence on the development of the short story as a form of literature.

After her education (in Wellington and London) she left New Zealand at the age of 19 to establish herself in England as a writer.

Her initial disillusion appears in the ill-humoured stories collected in In a German Pension (1911).

Until 1914 she published stories in Rhythm and The Blue Review edited by the critic and essayist John Middleton Murry whom she married in 1918 after her divorce from George Bowden.

The death of her soldier brother in 1915 shocked her into a recognition that she owed what she termed a sacred debt to him and to the remembered places of her native country. The Aloe (1916) later revised as Prelude (1918) was the beginning of a series of short stories beautiful evocative of her family memories of New Zealand. These with others were collected in Bliss (1920) which secured her reputation and is typical of her art.

In the next two years Miss Mansfield did her best work achieving the height of her powers in The Garden Party (1922) which includes At the Bay, The Voyage, The Stranger (with New Zealand settings) and the classic Daughters of the Late Colonel a subtle account of genteel frustration.

Her final work (apart from unfinished material) was published posthumously in The Dove´s Nest (1923) and Something Childish (1924).

From her papers Murry edited the Journal (1927) and he also published with annotations her letters to him (1928).

The last five years of her life were shadowed by tuberculosis.

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