The Remarkable Kinship of Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings and Ellen Glasgow
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Published By University Press Of Florida

9780813056968, 9780813053769

Author(s):  
Ashley Andrews Lear

“Women Who Will—Do” catalogues the nonfiction writings by Ellen Glasgow and Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings that detail their shared interest in social activism. Many of these writings were included in the material collected by Rawlings for the Glasgow biography or shared in correspondences between the two women writers. This chapter focuses on Rawlings’s interest in conservationism and Glasgow’s work with the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA). Both women found ways to use their fame and wealth to influence others about the social issues they supported.


Author(s):  
Ashley Andrews Lear

This introduction describes the start of the correspondence and friendship between two remarkable women writers, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings and Ellen Glasgow, as well as some of the historical context and the importance and influence of their preserved letters. While these women were very different-- Glasgow was a former Southern debutante and Rawlings was a raucous pioneer of the Florida scrub-- they felt for one another a remarkable kinship. While theirs was not the only relationship of its kind, it was one of the great literary friendships of the South, and should be studied for the impact that such friendships may have on the lives and experiences of women writers.


Author(s):  
Ashley Andrews Lear
Keyword(s):  

“A Certain Measure of Achievement” looks at the many book reviews and clippings on Ellen Glasgow’s major works collected by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings when working on her biography and compares them with similar reviews of Rawlings’s major works. This chapter considers the ways in which their responses to one another’s literature helped to further Rawlings and Glasgow’s friendship, while underscoring their shared literary values. Glasgow and Rawlings clearly saw pieces of their own experiences and worldviews in their respective works. This chapter also establishes, through criticism, the literary identities of both authors.


Author(s):  
Ashley Andrews Lear

“A Letter and a Dream” examines the letters exchanged between Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings and Ellen Glasgow during their lives, as well as correspondences written by the two authors about one another to mutual acquaintances. The chapter focuses primarily on the dream Rawlings shared with Glasgow, signifying the depth of their friendship. “A Letter and a Dream” also explores the adulation of Rawlings for Glasgow in the letters written after Glasgow’s death, many of which focus on her biographical research.


Author(s):  
Ashley Andrews Lear

The afterword is an overview of the unique and supportive friendship between Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings and Ellen Glasgow. When Rawlings befriended Glasgow, she found inspiration in their paralleled experiences with the writing process and those “wells” of creativity they constantly needed to refill through introspection and periods of rest or distraction. Their relationship was not the only one of its kind, but it was one of the great literary friendships in the South, and it needs to be recognized and studied for its influential mark on both women and on their writing.


Author(s):  
Ashley Andrews Lear

“The Sheltered Life” looks at Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings and Ellen Glasgow’s attempts to sustain romantic attachments while maintaining their success as writers. Rawlings spent much of her time in Richmond interrogating friends and relations about Glasgow’s romantic relationships, especially her confirmed engagement to Henry Anderson. Rawlings herself was married to Norton Baskin after her initial marriage to Charles Rawlings fell apart over their volatile tempers and professional jealousies. Glasgow never married and found it difficult to sustain her romantic affairs for any length of time. Both women prioritized their professional lives as writers over romantic attachments and were regularly frustrated by their partners’ inability to understand their lives as writers.


Author(s):  
Ashley Andrews Lear

In her posthumously published, fictionalized memoir, Blood of My Blood, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings provides a scathing account of her relationship with her mother, along with the details of her childhood. Rawlings delved just as deeply into the familial relationships of Ellen Glasgow when researching her biography. Contrasting the two writers’ similar feelings of connection and estrangement with their parents and their complex relationships with siblings, it is clear that family experiences compelled them to write, even as those same experiences hindered their writing careers. Even though there is no indication that the two women discussed their parents, their lives indicate a remarkable similarity in overcoming family trials to succeed in writing careers that were considered by some to be unconventional.


Author(s):  
Ashley Andrews Lear

Chapter 7 builds upon the activism of Ellen Glasgow and Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings to critique their oftentimes conflicting views of race, class, and gender through their literature, nonfiction writing, and correspondences. This chapter reveals how Glasgow and Rawlings struggled to maintain traditional values and an attachment to an older, more naturalistic lifestyle while embracing the more modern views of social justice that such lifestyles often overlooked.


Author(s):  
Ashley Andrews Lear

“In Search of Truth, Not Sensation” examines the critical reception both Ellen Glasgow and Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings encountered and explores how they each dealt with critical reception, namely being classified as regional writers or writers of juvenilia. This chapter focuses on their discussions with one another and about one another’s works to defend and define “regionalism” to literary critics and book reviewers.


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