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Doris Lessing

Doris May Lessing CH OMG (née Tayler; 22 October 1919 – 17 November 2013) was a British-Zimbabwean novelist. She was born to British parents in Iran, where she lived until 1925. Her family then moved to Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), where she remained until moving in 1949 to London, England. Her novels include The Grass Is Singing (1950), the sequence of five novels collectively called Children of Violence (1952–1969), The Golden Notebook (1962), The Good Terrorist (1985), and five novels collectively known as Canopus in Argos: Archives (1979–1983).

Doris Lessing

Lessing in 2006
BornDoris May Tayler
(1919-10-22)22 October 1919
Kermanshah, Iran
Died17 November 2013(2013-11-17) (aged 94)
London, England
Pen nameJane Somers
OccupationWriter
NationalityBritish
Period1950–2013
Genre
  • Novel
  • short story
  • biography
  • drama
  • libretto
  • poetry
Literary movement
Notable works
Notable awards
Spouse
Frank Charles Wisdom
(m. 1939; div. 1943)
(m. 1943; div. 1949)
Children
  • John (1940–1992)
  • Jean (b. 1941)
  • Peter (1946–2013)[1]
Website
dorislessing.org

Lessing was awarded the 2007 Nobel Prize in Literature. In awarding the prize, the Swedish Academy described her as "that epicist of the female experience, who with scepticism, fire and visionary power has subjected a divided civilisation to scrutiny".[2] Lessing was the oldest person ever to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature.[3][4][5]

In 2001 Lessing was awarded the David Cohen Prize for a lifetime's achievement in British literature. In 2008 The Times ranked her fifth on a list of "The 50 greatest British writers since 1945".[6]

Life

Early life

Lessing was born Doris May Tayler in Kermanshah, Iran, on 22 October 1919, to Captain Alfred Tayler and Emily Maude Tayler (née McVeagh), both British subjects.[7] Her father, who had lost a leg during his service in World War I, met his future wife, a nurse, at the Royal Free Hospital in London where he was recovering from his amputation.[8][9] The couple moved to Iran, for Alfred to take a job as a clerk for the Imperial Bank of Persia.[10][11]

In 1925 the family moved to the British colony of Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) to farm maize and other crops on about 1,000 acres (400 ha) of bush that Alfred bought. In the rough environment, his wife Emily aspired to lead an Edwardian lifestyle. It might have been possible had the family been wealthy; in reality, they were short of money and the farm delivered very little income.[12]

As a girl Doris was educated first at the Dominican Convent High School, a Roman Catholic convent all-girls school in the Southern Rhodesian capital of Salisbury (now Harare).[citation needed] Then followed a year at Girls High School in Salisbury.[13] She left school at age 13 and was self-educated from then on. She left home at 15 and worked as a nursemaid. She started reading material that her employer gave her on politics and sociology[9] and began writing around this time.

In 1937 Doris moved to Salisbury to work as a telephone operator, and she soon married her first husband, civil servant Frank Wisdom, with whom she had two children (John, 1940–1992, and Jean, born in 1941), before the marriage ended in 1943.[9] Lessing left the family home in 1943, leaving the two children with their father.[1]

Move to London; political views

After the divorce, Doris's interest was drawn to the community around the Left Book Club, an organisation she had joined the year before.[12][14] It was here that she met her future second husband, Gottfried Lessing. They married shortly after she joined the group, and had a child together (Peter, 1946–2013), before they divorced in 1949. She did not marry again.[9] Lessing also had a love affair with RAF serviceman John Whitehorn (brother of journalist Katharine Whitehorn), who was stationed in Southern Rhodesia, and wrote him ninety letters between 1943 and 1949.[15]

Lessing moved to London in 1949 with her younger son, Peter, to pursue her writing career and socialist beliefs, but left the two older children with their father Frank Wisdom in South Africa. She later said that at the time she saw no choice: "For a long time I felt I had done a very brave thing. There is nothing more boring for an intelligent woman than to spend endless amounts of time with small children. I felt I wasn't the best person to bring them up. I would have ended up an alcoholic or a frustrated intellectual like my mother."[16]

As well as campaigning against nuclear arms, she was an active opponent of apartheid, which led her to being banned from South Africa and Rhodesia in 1956 for many years.[17] In the same year, following the Soviet invasion of Hungary, she left the British Communist Party.[18] In the 1980s, when Lessing was vocal in her opposition to Soviet actions in Afghanistan,[19] she gave her views on feminism, communism and science fiction in an interview with The New York Times.[10]

On 21 August 2015, a five-volume secret file on Lessing built up by the British intelligence agencies, MI5 and MI6, was made public[20] and placed in The National Archives. The file, which contains documents that are redacted in parts, shows Lessing was under surveillance by British spies for around twenty years, from the early-1940s onwards. Her associations with Communism and her anti-racist activism are reported[21] to be the reasons for the secret service interest in Lessing.

Literary career

At the age of fifteen, Lessing began to sell her stories to magazines.[22] Her first novel, The Grass Is Singing, was published in 1950.[12] The work that gained her international attention, The Golden Notebook, was published in 1962.[11] By the time of her death, she had published more than 50 novels, some under a pseudonym.[23]

 
Lessing in 1984

In 1982 Lessing wrote two novels under the literary pseudonym Jane Somers to show the difficulty new authors face in trying to get their work printed. The novels were rejected by Lessing's UK publisher but later accepted by another English publisher, Michael Joseph, and in the US by Alfred A. Knopf. The Diary of a Good Neighbour[24] was published in Britain and the US in 1983 and If the Old Could in both countries in 1984,[25] both as written by Jane Somers. In 1984 both novels were republished in both countries (Viking Books publishing in the US), this time under one cover, with the title The Diaries of Jane Somers: The Diary of a Good Neighbour and If the Old Could, listing Doris Lessing as author.[26]

Lessing declined a damehood (DBE) in 1992 as an honour linked to a non-existent Empire; she had previously declined an OBE in 1977.[27] Later she accepted appointment as a Companion of Honour at the end of 1999 for "conspicuous national service".[28] She was also made a Companion of Literature by the Royal Society of Literature.[29]

In 2007 Lessing was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.[30] She received the prize at the age of 88 years 52 days, making her the oldest winner of the literature prize at the time of the award and the third-oldest Nobel laureate in any category (after Leonid Hurwicz and Raymond Davis Jr.).[31][32] She was also only the eleventh woman to be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature by the Swedish Academy in its 106-year history.[33] In 2017, just 10 years later, her Nobel medal was put up for auction.[34][35] Previously only one Nobel medal for literature had been sold at auction, for André Gide in 2016.[35]

Illness and death

During the late-1990s Lessing suffered a stroke,[36] which stopped her from travelling during her later years.[37] She was still able to attend the theatre and opera.[36] She began to focus her mind on death, for example asking herself if she would have time to finish a new book.[17][36] She died on 17 November 2013, aged 94, at her home in London, predeceased by her two sons, but was survived by her daughter, Jean, who lives in South Africa.[38]

She was remembered with a humanist funeral service.[39]

Fiction

 
Idries Shah, who introduced Lessing to Sufism[40]

Lessing's fiction is commonly divided into three distinct phases.

During her Communist phase (1944–56) she wrote radically about social issues, a theme to which she returned in The Good Terrorist (1985). Doris Lessing's first novel, The Grass Is Singing, as well as the short stories later collected in African Stories, are set in Southern Rhodesia (today Zimbabwe) where she was then living.[citation needed]

This was followed by a psychological phase from 1956 to 1969, including the Golden Notebook and the "Children of Violence" quartet.[citation needed]

Third came the Sufi phase, explored in her 70s work, and in the Canopus in Argos sequence of science fiction (or as she preferred to put it "space fiction") novels and novellas.[citation needed]

Lessing's Canopus sequence received a mixed reception from mainstream literary critics. John Leonard praised her 1980 novel The Marriages Between Zones Three, Four and Five in The New York Times,[41] but in 1982 John Leonard wrote in reference to The Making of the Representative for Planet 8 that "[o]ne of the many sins for which the 20th century will be held accountable is that it has discouraged Mrs. Lessing... She now propagandises on behalf of our insignificance in the cosmic razzmatazz,"[42] to which Lessing replied: "What they didn't realise was that in science fiction is some of the best social fiction of our time. I also admire the classic sort of science fiction, like Blood Music, by Greg Bear. He's a great writer."[43] She attended the 1987 World Science Fiction Convention as its Writer Guest of Honor. Here she made a speech in which she described her dystopian novel Memoirs of a Survivor as "an attempt at an autobiography."[44]

The Canopus in Argos novels present an advanced interstellar society's efforts to accelerate the evolution of other worlds, including Earth. Using Sufi concepts, to which Lessing had been introduced in the mid-1960s by her "good friend and teacher" Idries Shah,[40] the series of novels also uses an approach similar to that employed by the early 20th century mystic G. I. Gurdjieff in his work All and Everything. Earlier works of "inner space" fiction like Briefing for a Descent into Hell (1971) and Memoirs of a Survivor (1974) also connect to this theme. Lessing's interest had turned to Sufism after coming to the realisation that Marxism ignored spiritual matters, leaving her disillusioned.[45]

Lessing's novel The Golden Notebook is considered a feminist classic by some scholars,[46] but notably not by the author herself, who later wrote that its theme of mental breakdowns as a means of healing and freeing one's self from illusions had been overlooked by critics. She also regretted that critics failed to appreciate the exceptional structure of the novel. She explained in Walking in the Shade that she modelled Molly partly on her good friend Joan Rodker, the daughter of the modernist poet and publisher John Rodker.[47]

Lessing did not like being pigeon-holed as a feminist author. When asked why, she explained:

What the feminists want of me is something they haven't examined because it comes from religion. They want me to bear witness. What they would really like me to say is, 'Ha, sisters, I stand with you side by side in your struggle toward the golden dawn where all those beastly men are no more.' Do they really want people to make oversimplified statements about men and women? In fact, they do. I've come with great regret to this conclusion.

— Doris Lessing, The New York Times, 25 July 1982[10]

Doris Lessing Society

The Doris Lessing Society is dedicated to supporting the scholarly study of Lessing's work. The formal structure of the Society dates from January 1977, when the first issue of the Doris Lessing Newsletter was published. In 2002 the Newsletter became the academic journal Doris Lessing Studies. The Society also organises panels at the Modern Languages Association (MLA) annual Conventions and has held two international conferences in New Orleans in 2004 and Leeds in 2007.[48]

Archives

Lessing's literary archive is held by the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, at the University of Texas at Austin. The 45 archival boxes of Lessing's materials at the Ransom Center contain nearly all of her extant manuscripts and typescripts up to 1999. Original material for Lessing's early books is assumed not to exist because she kept none of her early manuscripts.[49] The McFarlin Library at the University of Tulsa holds a smaller collection.[50]

The University of East Anglia's British Archive for Contemporary Writing holds Doris Lessing's personal archive: a vast collection of professional and personal correspondence, including the Whitehorn letters, a collection of love letters from the 1940s, written when Lessing was still living in Zimbabwe (then Southern Rhodesia). The collection also includes forty years of personal diaries. Some of the archive remains embargoed during the writing of Lessing's official biography.[51]

Awards

Publications

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Stanford, Peter (22 November 2013). "Doris Lessing: A mother much misunderstood". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 8 October 2019.
  2. ^ "NobelPrize.org". Retrieved 11 October 2007.
  3. ^ Crown, Sarah (11 October 2007). "Doris Lessing wins Nobel prize". The Guardian. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  4. ^ Editors at BBC. "Author Lessing wins Nobel honour", BBC News, 23 October 2007. Retrieved 12 October 2007.
  5. ^ Marchand, Philip. "Doris Lessing oldest to win literature award". Toronto Star, 12 October 2007. Retrieved 13 October 2007.
  6. ^ (5 January 2008). . Archived from the original on 25 April 2011. Retrieved 17 April 2008.. The Times. Retrieved 25 April 2011.
  7. ^ Hazelton, Lesley (11 October 2007). . Bloomberg. Archived from the original on 24 October 2013. Retrieved 11 October 2007.
  8. ^ Carole Klein. "Doris Lessing". The New York Times. Retrieved 11 October 2007.
  9. ^ a b c d Liukkonen, Petri. . Books and Writers (kirjasto.sci.fi). Finland: Kuusankoski Public Library. Archived from the original on 8 June 2008.
  10. ^ a b c Hazelton, Lesley (25 July 1982). "Doris Lessing on Feminism, Communism and 'Space Fiction'". The New York Times. Retrieved 11 October 2007.
  11. ^ a b "Author Lessing wins Nobel honour". BBC News. 11 October 2007. Retrieved 11 October 2007.
  12. ^ a b c "Biography". A Reader's Guide to The Golden Notebook and Under My Skin. HarperCollins. 1995. Retrieved 11 October 2007.
  13. ^ Lessing, Doris (1994). Under My Skin: Volume One of My Autobiography, to 1949. London: Harper Collins. p. 147. ISBN 000255545X.
  14. ^ Brief Chronology. A Home for the Highland Cattle & The Antheap. Broadview Press. 2003. ISBN 9781551113630. Retrieved 29 December 2010.
  15. ^ Flood, Alison (22 October 2008). "Doris Lessing donates revelatory letters to university". The Guardian.
  16. ^ "Lowering the Bar. When bad mothers give us hope" 30 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine, Newsweek, 6 May 2010. Retrieved 9 May 2010.
  17. ^ a b Peter Guttridge (17 November 2013). "Doris Lessing: Nobel Prize-winning author whose work ranged from social and political realism to science fiction". The Independent. Retrieved 17 November 2013.
  18. ^ Miller, Stephen (17 November 2013). "Nobel Author Doris Lessing Dies at 94". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 23 November 2013.
  19. ^ "Doris Lessing blows the veil of romanticism off Afghanistan", The Christian Science Monitor, 14 January 1988.
  20. ^ Shirbon, Estelle, "British spies reveal file on Nobel-winner Doris Lessing", Reuters, 21 August 2015.
  21. ^ Norton-Taylor, Richard, "MI5 spied on Doris Lessing for 20 years, declassified documents reveal", The Guardian, 21 August 2015.
  22. ^ Lessing, Doris. "Biography (From the pamphlet: A Reader's Guide to The Golden Notebook & Under My Skin, HarperPerennial, 1995)".
  23. ^ Kennedy, Maev (17 November 2013). "Doris Lessing dies aged 94". The Guardian.
  24. ^ "The Diary of a Good Neighbour by Doris Lessing". Doris Lessing. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  25. ^ "If the Old Could by Doris Lessing". www.dorislessing.org.
  26. ^ Hanft, Adam. "When Doris Lessing Became Jane Somers and Tricked the Publishing World (And Possibly Herself In the Process)". The Huffington Post, 10 November 2007. Updated 25 May 2011. Retrieved 7 September 2017.
  27. ^ Flood, Alison (22 October 2008). "Doris Lessing donates revelatory letters to university". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
  28. ^ . BBC Radio. Archived from the original (Audio) on 14 October 2007. Retrieved 11 October 2007.
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on 7 July 2007. Retrieved 11 October 2007.
  30. ^ Rich, Motoko and Lyall, Sarah. "Doris Lessing Wins Nobel Prize in Literature". The New York Times. Retrieved 11 October 2007.
  31. ^ Hurwicz won the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Science in 2007 aged 90. Davis received the 2002 Physics Prize at 88 years 57 days. Their birth dates are shown in their biographies at the Nobel Prize web site, which states that the awards are given annually on 10 December.
  32. ^ Pierre-Henry Deshayes. "Doris Lessing wins Nobel Literature Prize". Herald Sun. Retrieved 16 October 2007.
  33. ^ Reynolds, Nigel. . The Telegraph. Retrieved 15 October 2007.
  34. ^ "Valuable Books and Manuscripts". Cristies. 13 December 2017. Retrieved 7 December 2017.
  35. ^ a b Alison Flood (7 December 2017). "Doris Lessing's Nobel medal goes up for auction". The Guardian. Retrieved 7 December 2017.
  36. ^ a b c Raskin, Jonah (June 1999). "The Progressive Interview: Doris Lessing". The Progressive (reprint). dorislessing.org. Retrieved 17 November 2013.
  37. ^ Helen T. Verongos (17 November 2013). "Doris Lessing, Novelist Who Won 2007 Nobel, is Dead at 94". The New York Times. Retrieved 17 November 2013.
  38. ^ "Author Doris Lessing dies aged 94", BBC. Retrieved 17 November 2013.
  39. ^ "Humanists UK launches first ever funeral tribute archive". Humanists UK. 24 April 2018. Retrieved 23 October 2010.
  40. ^ a b Lessing, Doris. "On the Death of Idries Shah (excerpt from Shah's obituary in the London The Daily Telegraph)". dorislessing.org. Retrieved 3 October 2008.
  41. ^ Leonard, John (27 March 1980). "Books of the Times; Gentle Book". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 December 2020.
  42. ^ Leonard, John (7 February 1982). "The Spacing Out of Doris Lessing". The New York Times. Retrieved 16 October 2008.
  43. ^ Doris Lessing: Hot Dawns, interview by Harvey Blume in Boston Book Review
  44. ^ "Guest of Honor Speech", in Worldcon Guest of Honor Speeches, edited by Mike Resnick and Joe Siclari (Deerfield, IL: ISFIC Press, 2006), p. 192.
  45. ^ "Postcolonial Nostalgias: Writing, Representation and Memory", Volume 31 of Routledge research in postcolonial literatures, Dennis Walder, Taylor & Francis ltd, 2010, p92. ISBN 9780203840382.
  46. ^ "Fresh Air Remembers 'Golden Notebook' Author Doris Lessing". NPR. 18 November 2013. Retrieved 19 November 2013.
  47. ^ Scott, Lynda, "Lessing's Early and Transitional Novels: The Beginnings of a Sense of Selfhood", Deepsouth, vol. 4, no. 1 (Autumn 1998). Retrieved 17 October 2007.
  48. ^ "Doris Lessing Society". Doris Lessing Society.
  49. ^ "Harry Ransom Center Holds Archive of Nobel Laureate Doris Lessing". hrc.utexas.edu. Retrieved 17 March 2008.
  50. ^ "Doris Lessing manuscripts". lib.utulsa.edu. Retrieved 17 October 2007.
  51. ^ "Doris Lessing Archive". University of Tulsa. Retrieved 5 July 2016.
  52. ^ "Memòria del Departament de Cultura 1999" (PDF) (in Catalan). Generalitat de Catalunya. 1999. p. 38. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 17 November 2013.
  53. ^ "Golden Pen Award, official website". English PEN. Retrieved 3 December 2012.
  54. ^ . South African History Online. 28 October 2008. Archived from the original on 22 January 2016. Retrieved 6 August 2018.

Further reading

  • Diski, Jenny (2016). In gratitude. London, UK: Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-408-87992-4.
  • Fahim, Shadia S. (1995). Doris Lessing: Sufi Equilibrium and the Form of the Novel. Basingstoke, UK/New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan/St. Martins Press. ISBN 0-312-10293-3.
  • Frick, Thomas (Spring 1988). "Doris Lessing, The Art of Fiction No. 102". The Paris Review. Spring 1988 (106).
  • Galin, Müge (1997). Between East and West: Sufism in the Novels of Doris Lessing. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-3383-8.
  • Raschke, Debrah; Sternberg Perrakis, Phyllis; Singer, Sandra (2010). Doris Lessing: Interrogating the Times. Columbus, OH: Ohio State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8142-1136-6.
  • Ridout, Alice (2010). Contemporary Women Writers Look Back: From Irony to Nostalgia. London: Continuum International Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4411-3023-5.
  • Ridout, Alice; Watkins, Susan (2009). Doris Lessing: Border Crossings. London: Continuum International Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4411-0416-8.
  • Skille, Nan Bentzen (1977). Fragmentation and Integration. A Critical Study of Doris Lessing, The Golden Notebook. University of Bergen.
  • Watkins, Susan (2010). Doris Lessing. Manchester UP. ISBN 978-0-7190-7481-3.
  • Wolfe, Graham (2019). Theatre-Fiction in Britain from Henry James to Doris Lessing: Writing in the Wings. Routledge. ISBN 9781000124361.

External links

  • Doris Lessing Society
  • Doris Lessing Papers at the Harry Ransom Center
  • Doris Lessing Papers at the University of East Anglia
  • Doris Lessing Collection at the University of Tulsa
  • Works by Doris Lessing at Open Library  
  • List of Works
  • Doris Lessing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database  
  • Doris Lessing at British Council: Literature
  • Doris Lessing on Nobelprize.org   with the Nobel Lecture 7 December 2007 On not winning the Nobel Prize
  • Doris Lessing at IMDb
  • Doris Lessing at Curlie
  • Transcript of Doris Lessing's "Dame" rejection letter to the John Major Government
  • Doris Lessing, Excerpts 'On Cats'
  • Doris Lessing homepage created by Jan Hanford
  • "The shadow of the fifth": patterns of exclusion in Doris Lessing’s The Fifth Child (Anne-Laure Brevet)
  • Doris Lessing at Web of Stories (videos)
  • Doris Lessing Page at Guardian Unlimited
  • Doris Lessing, Author Who Swept Aside Convention, Is Dead at 94, by Helen T Virongos & Emma G. Fitzsimmons, New York Times, 2013-11-18. (Page A1, 2013-11-17).
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • Portraits of Doris Lessing at the National Portrait Gallery, London  
  • Cats in Literature – Doris Lessing

doris, lessing, doris, lessing, née, tayler, october, 1919, november, 2013, british, zimbabwean, novelist, born, british, parents, iran, where, lived, until, 1925, family, then, moved, southern, rhodesia, zimbabwe, where, remained, until, moving, 1949, london,. Doris May Lessing CH OMG nee Tayler 22 October 1919 17 November 2013 was a British Zimbabwean novelist She was born to British parents in Iran where she lived until 1925 Her family then moved to Southern Rhodesia now Zimbabwe where she remained until moving in 1949 to London England Her novels include The Grass Is Singing 1950 the sequence of five novels collectively called Children of Violence 1952 1969 The Golden Notebook 1962 The Good Terrorist 1985 and five novels collectively known as Canopus in Argos Archives 1979 1983 Doris LessingCH OMGLessing in 2006BornDoris May Tayler 1919 10 22 22 October 1919Kermanshah IranDied17 November 2013 2013 11 17 aged 94 London EnglandPen nameJane SomersOccupationWriterNationalityBritishPeriod1950 2013GenreNovel short story biography drama libretto poetryLiterary movementModernism postmodernism Sufism socialism feminism scepticism science fictionNotable worksThe Grass Is Singing Children of Violence series The Golden Notebook Briefing for a Descent into Hell The Good TerroristNotable awardsSomerset Maugham Award 1954 Austrian State Prize for European Literature 1981 WH Smith Literary Award 1986 Grinzane Cavour Prize 1989 James Tait Black Memorial Prize 1995 David Cohen Prize 2001 Premio Principe de Asturias 2001 Nobel Prize in Literature 2007SpouseFrank Charles Wisdom m 1939 div 1943 wbr Gottfried Anton Nicolai Lessing m 1943 div 1949 wbr ChildrenJohn 1940 1992 Jean b 1941 Peter 1946 2013 1 Websitedorislessing wbr orgLessing was awarded the 2007 Nobel Prize in Literature In awarding the prize the Swedish Academy described her as that epicist of the female experience who with scepticism fire and visionary power has subjected a divided civilisation to scrutiny 2 Lessing was the oldest person ever to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature 3 4 5 In 2001 Lessing was awarded the David Cohen Prize for a lifetime s achievement in British literature In 2008 The Times ranked her fifth on a list of The 50 greatest British writers since 1945 6 Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early life 1 2 Move to London political views 1 3 Literary career 1 4 Illness and death 2 Fiction 3 Doris Lessing Society 4 Archives 5 Awards 6 Publications 6 1 Novels 6 2 Opera libretti 6 3 Comics 6 4 Drama 6 5 Poetry collections 6 6 Short story collections 6 7 Autobiography and memoirs 6 8 Other non fiction 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksLife EditEarly life Edit Lessing was born Doris May Tayler in Kermanshah Iran on 22 October 1919 to Captain Alfred Tayler and Emily Maude Tayler nee McVeagh both British subjects 7 Her father who had lost a leg during his service in World War I met his future wife a nurse at the Royal Free Hospital in London where he was recovering from his amputation 8 9 The couple moved to Iran for Alfred to take a job as a clerk for the Imperial Bank of Persia 10 11 In 1925 the family moved to the British colony of Southern Rhodesia now Zimbabwe to farm maize and other crops on about 1 000 acres 400 ha of bush that Alfred bought In the rough environment his wife Emily aspired to lead an Edwardian lifestyle It might have been possible had the family been wealthy in reality they were short of money and the farm delivered very little income 12 As a girl Doris was educated first at the Dominican Convent High School a Roman Catholic convent all girls school in the Southern Rhodesian capital of Salisbury now Harare citation needed Then followed a year at Girls High School in Salisbury 13 She left school at age 13 and was self educated from then on She left home at 15 and worked as a nursemaid She started reading material that her employer gave her on politics and sociology 9 and began writing around this time In 1937 Doris moved to Salisbury to work as a telephone operator and she soon married her first husband civil servant Frank Wisdom with whom she had two children John 1940 1992 and Jean born in 1941 before the marriage ended in 1943 9 Lessing left the family home in 1943 leaving the two children with their father 1 Move to London political views Edit After the divorce Doris s interest was drawn to the community around the Left Book Club an organisation she had joined the year before 12 14 It was here that she met her future second husband Gottfried Lessing They married shortly after she joined the group and had a child together Peter 1946 2013 before they divorced in 1949 She did not marry again 9 Lessing also had a love affair with RAF serviceman John Whitehorn brother of journalist Katharine Whitehorn who was stationed in Southern Rhodesia and wrote him ninety letters between 1943 and 1949 15 Lessing moved to London in 1949 with her younger son Peter to pursue her writing career and socialist beliefs but left the two older children with their father Frank Wisdom in South Africa She later said that at the time she saw no choice For a long time I felt I had done a very brave thing There is nothing more boring for an intelligent woman than to spend endless amounts of time with small children I felt I wasn t the best person to bring them up I would have ended up an alcoholic or a frustrated intellectual like my mother 16 As well as campaigning against nuclear arms she was an active opponent of apartheid which led her to being banned from South Africa and Rhodesia in 1956 for many years 17 In the same year following the Soviet invasion of Hungary she left the British Communist Party 18 In the 1980s when Lessing was vocal in her opposition to Soviet actions in Afghanistan 19 she gave her views on feminism communism and science fiction in an interview with The New York Times 10 On 21 August 2015 a five volume secret file on Lessing built up by the British intelligence agencies MI5 and MI6 was made public 20 and placed in The National Archives The file which contains documents that are redacted in parts shows Lessing was under surveillance by British spies for around twenty years from the early 1940s onwards Her associations with Communism and her anti racist activism are reported 21 to be the reasons for the secret service interest in Lessing Literary career Edit At the age of fifteen Lessing began to sell her stories to magazines 22 Her first novel The Grass Is Singing was published in 1950 12 The work that gained her international attention The Golden Notebook was published in 1962 11 By the time of her death she had published more than 50 novels some under a pseudonym 23 Lessing in 1984 In 1982 Lessing wrote two novels under the literary pseudonym Jane Somers to show the difficulty new authors face in trying to get their work printed The novels were rejected by Lessing s UK publisher but later accepted by another English publisher Michael Joseph and in the US by Alfred A Knopf The Diary of a Good Neighbour 24 was published in Britain and the US in 1983 and If the Old Could in both countries in 1984 25 both as written by Jane Somers In 1984 both novels were republished in both countries Viking Books publishing in the US this time under one cover with the title The Diaries of Jane Somers The Diary of a Good Neighbour and If the Old Could listing Doris Lessing as author 26 Lessing declined a damehood DBE in 1992 as an honour linked to a non existent Empire she had previously declined an OBE in 1977 27 Later she accepted appointment as a Companion of Honour at the end of 1999 for conspicuous national service 28 She was also made a Companion of Literature by the Royal Society of Literature 29 In 2007 Lessing was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature 30 She received the prize at the age of 88 years 52 days making her the oldest winner of the literature prize at the time of the award and the third oldest Nobel laureate in any category after Leonid Hurwicz and Raymond Davis Jr 31 32 She was also only the eleventh woman to be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature by the Swedish Academy in its 106 year history 33 In 2017 just 10 years later her Nobel medal was put up for auction 34 35 Previously only one Nobel medal for literature had been sold at auction for Andre Gide in 2016 35 Illness and death Edit During the late 1990s Lessing suffered a stroke 36 which stopped her from travelling during her later years 37 She was still able to attend the theatre and opera 36 She began to focus her mind on death for example asking herself if she would have time to finish a new book 17 36 She died on 17 November 2013 aged 94 at her home in London predeceased by her two sons but was survived by her daughter Jean who lives in South Africa 38 She was remembered with a humanist funeral service 39 Fiction Edit Idries Shah who introduced Lessing to Sufism 40 Lessing s fiction is commonly divided into three distinct phases During her Communist phase 1944 56 she wrote radically about social issues a theme to which she returned in The Good Terrorist 1985 Doris Lessing s first novel The Grass Is Singing as well as the short stories later collected in African Stories are set in Southern Rhodesia today Zimbabwe where she was then living citation needed This was followed by a psychological phase from 1956 to 1969 including the Golden Notebook and the Children of Violence quartet citation needed Third came the Sufi phase explored in her 70s work and in the Canopus in Argos sequence of science fiction or as she preferred to put it space fiction novels and novellas citation needed Lessing s Canopus sequence received a mixed reception from mainstream literary critics John Leonard praised her 1980 novel The Marriages Between Zones Three Four and Five in The New York Times 41 but in 1982 John Leonard wrote in reference to The Making of the Representative for Planet 8 that o ne of the many sins for which the 20th century will be held accountable is that it has discouraged Mrs Lessing She now propagandises on behalf of our insignificance in the cosmic razzmatazz 42 to which Lessing replied What they didn t realise was that in science fiction is some of the best social fiction of our time I also admire the classic sort of science fiction like Blood Music by Greg Bear He s a great writer 43 She attended the 1987 World Science Fiction Convention as its Writer Guest of Honor Here she made a speech in which she described her dystopian novel Memoirs of a Survivor as an attempt at an autobiography 44 The Canopus in Argos novels present an advanced interstellar society s efforts to accelerate the evolution of other worlds including Earth Using Sufi concepts to which Lessing had been introduced in the mid 1960s by her good friend and teacher Idries Shah 40 the series of novels also uses an approach similar to that employed by the early 20th century mystic G I Gurdjieff in his work All and Everything Earlier works of inner space fiction like Briefing for a Descent into Hell 1971 and Memoirs of a Survivor 1974 also connect to this theme Lessing s interest had turned to Sufism after coming to the realisation that Marxism ignored spiritual matters leaving her disillusioned 45 Lessing s novel The Golden Notebook is considered a feminist classic by some scholars 46 but notably not by the author herself who later wrote that its theme of mental breakdowns as a means of healing and freeing one s self from illusions had been overlooked by critics She also regretted that critics failed to appreciate the exceptional structure of the novel She explained in Walking in the Shade that she modelled Molly partly on her good friend Joan Rodker the daughter of the modernist poet and publisher John Rodker 47 Lessing did not like being pigeon holed as a feminist author When asked why she explained What the feminists want of me is something they haven t examined because it comes from religion They want me to bear witness What they would really like me to say is Ha sisters I stand with you side by side in your struggle toward the golden dawn where all those beastly men are no more Do they really want people to make oversimplified statements about men and women In fact they do I ve come with great regret to this conclusion Doris Lessing The New York Times 25 July 1982 10 Doris Lessing Society EditThe Doris Lessing Society is dedicated to supporting the scholarly study of Lessing s work The formal structure of the Society dates from January 1977 when the first issue of the Doris Lessing Newsletter was published In 2002 the Newsletter became the academic journal Doris Lessing Studies The Society also organises panels at the Modern Languages Association MLA annual Conventions and has held two international conferences in New Orleans in 2004 and Leeds in 2007 48 Archives EditLessing s literary archive is held by the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin The 45 archival boxes of Lessing s materials at the Ransom Center contain nearly all of her extant manuscripts and typescripts up to 1999 Original material for Lessing s early books is assumed not to exist because she kept none of her early manuscripts 49 The McFarlin Library at the University of Tulsa holds a smaller collection 50 The University of East Anglia s British Archive for Contemporary Writing holds Doris Lessing s personal archive a vast collection of professional and personal correspondence including the Whitehorn letters a collection of love letters from the 1940s written when Lessing was still living in Zimbabwe then Southern Rhodesia The collection also includes forty years of personal diaries Some of the archive remains embargoed during the writing of Lessing s official biography 51 Awards EditSomerset Maugham Award 1954 Prix Medicis etranger 1976 Austrian State Prize for European Literature 1981 Shakespeare Preis der Alfred Toepfer Stiftung F V S Hamburg 1982 WH Smith Literary Award 1986 Palermo Prize 1987 Premio Internazionale Mondello 1987 Grinzane Cavour Prize 1989 James Tait Black Memorial Prize for biography 1995 Los Angeles Times Book Prize 1995 Catalonia International Prize 1999 52 Order of the Companions of Honour 1999 Companion of Literature of the Royal Society of Literature 2000 David Cohen Prize 2001 Premio Principe de Asturias 2001 S T Dupont Golden PEN Award 2002 53 Nobel Prize in Literature 2007 Order of Mapungubwe Category II Gold 2008 54 Publications EditNovels Edit The Grass Is Singing 1950 filmed as Killing Heat 1981 Retreat to Innocence 1956 The Golden Notebook 1962 Briefing for a Descent into Hell 1971 The Summer Before the Dark 1973 The Memoirs of a Survivor 1974 The Diary of a Good Neighbour as Jane Somers 1983 If the Old Could as Jane Somers 1984 The Good Terrorist 1985 The Fifth Child 1988 Love Again 1996 Mara and Dann 1999 Ben in the World 2000 sequel to The Fifth Child The Sweetest Dream 2001 The Story of General Dann and Mara s Daughter Griot and the Snow Dog 2005 sequel to Mara and Dann The Cleft 2007 Children of Violence series 1952 1969 Martha Quest 1952 A Proper Marriage 1954 A Ripple from the Storm 1958 Landlocked 1965 The Four Gated City 1969 The Canopus in Argos Archives series 1979 1983 Shikasta 1979 The Marriages Between Zones Three Four and Five 1980 The Sirian Experiments 1980 The Making of the Representative for Planet 8 1982 The Sentimental Agents in the Volyen Empire 1983 Opera libretti Edit The Making of the Representative for Planet 8 music by Philip Glass 1986 The Marriages Between Zones Three Four and Five music by Philip Glass 1997 Comics Edit Playing the Game graphic novel illustrated by Charlie Adlard 1995 Drama Edit Each His Own Wilderness three plays 1959 Play with a Tiger 1962 Poetry collections Edit Fourteen Poems 1959 The Wolf People INPOPA Anthology 2002 poems by Lessing Robert Twigger and T H Benson 2002 Short story collections Edit This Was the Old Chief s Country 1951 Five Short Novels 1953 The Habit of Loving 1957 A Man and Two Women 1963 African Stories 1964 Winter in July 1966 The Black Madonna 1966 The Story of a Non Marrying Man 1972 This Was the Old Chief s Country Collected African Stories Vol 1 1973 The Sun Between Their Feet Collected African Stories Vol 2 1973 To Room Nineteen Collected Stories Vol 1 1978 The Temptation of Jack Orkney Collected Stories Vol 2 1978 Stories 1978 Through the Tunnel 1990 London Observed Stories and Sketches 1992 The Real Thing Stories and Sketches 1992 Spies I Have Known 1995 The Pit 1996 The Grandmothers Four Short Novels 2003 filmed as Two Mothers Cat TalesParticularly Cats stories and nonfiction 1967 Particularly Cats and Rufus the Survivor stories and nonfiction 1993 The Old Age of El Magnifico stories and nonfiction 2000 On Cats 2002 omnibus edition containing the above three booksAutobiography and memoirs Edit Going Home memoir 1957 African Laughter Four Visits to Zimbabwe memoir 1992 Under My Skin Volume One of My Autobiography to 1949 1994 Walking in the Shade Volume Two of My Autobiography 1949 to 1962 1997 Alfred and Emily memoir fiction hybrid 2008 Other non fiction Edit In Pursuit of the English 1960 Prisons We Choose to Live Inside essays 1987 The Wind Blows Away Our Words 1987 A Small Personal Voice essays 1994 Conversations interviews edited by Earl G Ingersoll 1994 Putting the Questions Differently interviews edited by Earl G Ingersoll 1996 Time Bites Views and Reviews essays 2004 On Not Winning the Nobel Prize Nobel Lecture 2007 published 2008 See also EditList of female Nobel laureates Declining a British honourReferences Edit a b Stanford Peter 22 November 2013 Doris Lessing A mother much misunderstood The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 8 October 2019 NobelPrize org Retrieved 11 October 2007 Crown Sarah 11 October 2007 Doris Lessing wins Nobel prize The Guardian Retrieved 18 March 2022 Editors at BBC Author Lessing wins Nobel honour BBC News 23 October 2007 Retrieved 12 October 2007 Marchand Philip Doris Lessing oldest to win literature award Toronto Star 12 October 2007 Retrieved 13 October 2007 5 January 2008 The 50 greatest British writers since 1945 Archived from the original on 25 April 2011 Retrieved 17 April 2008 The Times Retrieved 25 April 2011 Hazelton Lesley 11 October 2007 Golden Notebook Author Lessing Wins Nobel Prize Bloomberg Archived from the original on 24 October 2013 Retrieved 11 October 2007 Carole Klein Doris Lessing The New York Times Retrieved 11 October 2007 a b c d Liukkonen Petri Doris Lessing Books and Writers kirjasto sci fi Finland Kuusankoski Public Library Archived from the original on 8 June 2008 a b c Hazelton Lesley 25 July 1982 Doris Lessing on Feminism Communism and Space Fiction The New York Times Retrieved 11 October 2007 a b Author Lessing wins Nobel honour BBC News 11 October 2007 Retrieved 11 October 2007 a b c Biography A Reader s Guide to The Golden Notebook and Under My Skin HarperCollins 1995 Retrieved 11 October 2007 Lessing Doris 1994 Under My Skin Volume One of My Autobiography to 1949 London Harper Collins p 147 ISBN 000255545X Brief Chronology A Home for the Highland Cattle amp The Antheap Broadview Press 2003 ISBN 9781551113630 Retrieved 29 December 2010 Flood Alison 22 October 2008 Doris Lessing donates revelatory letters to university The Guardian Lowering the Bar When bad mothers give us hope Archived 30 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine Newsweek 6 May 2010 Retrieved 9 May 2010 a b Peter Guttridge 17 November 2013 Doris Lessing Nobel Prize winning author whose work ranged from social and political realism to science fiction The Independent Retrieved 17 November 2013 Miller Stephen 17 November 2013 Nobel Author Doris Lessing Dies at 94 The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 23 November 2013 Doris Lessing blows the veil of romanticism off Afghanistan The Christian Science Monitor 14 January 1988 Shirbon Estelle British spies reveal file on Nobel winner Doris Lessing Reuters 21 August 2015 Norton Taylor Richard MI5 spied on Doris Lessing for 20 years declassified documents reveal The Guardian 21 August 2015 Lessing Doris Biography From the pamphlet A Reader s Guide to The Golden Notebook amp Under My Skin HarperPerennial 1995 Kennedy Maev 17 November 2013 Doris Lessing dies aged 94 The Guardian The Diary of a Good Neighbour by Doris Lessing Doris Lessing Retrieved 13 August 2012 If the Old Could by Doris Lessing www dorislessing org Hanft Adam When Doris Lessing Became Jane Somers and Tricked the Publishing World And Possibly Herself In the Process The Huffington Post 10 November 2007 Updated 25 May 2011 Retrieved 7 September 2017 Flood Alison 22 October 2008 Doris Lessing donates revelatory letters to university The Guardian Retrieved 15 October 2012 Doris Lessing interview BBC Radio Archived from the original Audio on 14 October 2007 Retrieved 11 October 2007 Companions of Literature list Archived from the original on 7 July 2007 Retrieved 11 October 2007 Rich Motoko and Lyall Sarah Doris Lessing Wins Nobel Prize in Literature The New York Times Retrieved 11 October 2007 Hurwicz won the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Science in 2007 aged 90 Davis received the 2002 Physics Prize at 88 years 57 days Their birth dates are shown in their biographies at the Nobel Prize web site which states that the awards are given annually on 10 December Pierre Henry Deshayes Doris Lessing wins Nobel Literature Prize Herald Sun Retrieved 16 October 2007 Reynolds Nigel Doris Lessing wins Nobel prize for literature The Telegraph Retrieved 15 October 2007 Valuable Books and Manuscripts Cristies 13 December 2017 Retrieved 7 December 2017 a b Alison Flood 7 December 2017 Doris Lessing s Nobel medal goes up for auction The Guardian Retrieved 7 December 2017 a b c Raskin Jonah June 1999 The Progressive Interview Doris Lessing The Progressive reprint dorislessing org Retrieved 17 November 2013 Helen T Verongos 17 November 2013 Doris Lessing Novelist Who Won 2007 Nobel is Dead at 94 The New York Times Retrieved 17 November 2013 Author Doris Lessing dies aged 94 BBC Retrieved 17 November 2013 Humanists UK launches first ever funeral tribute archive Humanists UK 24 April 2018 Retrieved 23 October 2010 a b Lessing Doris On the Death of Idries Shah excerpt from Shah s obituary in the London The Daily Telegraph dorislessing org Retrieved 3 October 2008 Leonard John 27 March 1980 Books of the Times Gentle Book The New York Times Retrieved 24 December 2020 Leonard John 7 February 1982 The Spacing Out of Doris Lessing The New York Times Retrieved 16 October 2008 Doris Lessing Hot Dawns interview by Harvey Blume in Boston Book Review Guest of Honor Speech in Worldcon Guest of Honor Speeches edited by Mike Resnick and Joe Siclari Deerfield IL ISFIC Press 2006 p 192 Postcolonial Nostalgias Writing Representation and Memory Volume 31 of Routledge research in postcolonial literatures Dennis Walder Taylor amp Francis ltd 2010 p92 ISBN 9780203840382 Fresh Air Remembers Golden Notebook Author Doris Lessing NPR 18 November 2013 Retrieved 19 November 2013 Scott Lynda Lessing s Early and Transitional Novels The Beginnings of a Sense of Selfhood Deepsouth vol 4 no 1 Autumn 1998 Retrieved 17 October 2007 Doris Lessing Society Doris Lessing Society Harry Ransom Center Holds Archive of Nobel Laureate Doris Lessing hrc utexas edu Retrieved 17 March 2008 Doris Lessing manuscripts lib utulsa edu Retrieved 17 October 2007 Doris Lessing Archive University of Tulsa Retrieved 5 July 2016 Memoria del Departament de Cultura 1999 PDF in Catalan Generalitat de Catalunya 1999 p 38 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 17 November 2013 Golden Pen Award official website English PEN Retrieved 3 December 2012 National Orders Recipients 2008 South African History Online 28 October 2008 Archived from the original on 22 January 2016 Retrieved 6 August 2018 Further reading EditDiski Jenny 2016 In gratitude London UK Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 408 87992 4 Fahim Shadia S 1995 Doris Lessing Sufi Equilibrium and the Form of the Novel Basingstoke UK New York NY Palgrave Macmillan St Martins Press ISBN 0 312 10293 3 Frick Thomas Spring 1988 Doris Lessing The Art of Fiction No 102 The Paris Review Spring 1988 106 Galin Muge 1997 Between East and West Sufism in the Novels of Doris Lessing Albany NY State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 3383 8 Raschke Debrah Sternberg Perrakis Phyllis Singer Sandra 2010 Doris Lessing Interrogating the Times Columbus OH Ohio State University Press ISBN 978 0 8142 1136 6 Ridout Alice 2010 Contemporary Women Writers Look Back From Irony to Nostalgia London Continuum International Publishing ISBN 978 1 4411 3023 5 Ridout Alice Watkins Susan 2009 Doris Lessing Border Crossings London Continuum International Publishing ISBN 978 1 4411 0416 8 Skille Nan Bentzen 1977 Fragmentation and Integration A Critical Study of Doris Lessing The Golden Notebook University of Bergen Watkins Susan 2010 Doris Lessing Manchester UP ISBN 978 0 7190 7481 3 Wolfe Graham 2019 Theatre Fiction in Britain from Henry James to Doris Lessing Writing in the Wings Routledge ISBN 9781000124361 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Doris Lessing Wikiquote has quotations related to Doris Lessing Doris Lessing Society Doris Lessing Papers at the Harry Ransom Center Doris Lessing Papers at the University of East Anglia Doris Lessing Collection at the University of Tulsa Works by Doris Lessing at Open Library List of Works Doris Lessing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database Doris Lessing at British Council Literature Doris Lessing on Nobelprize org with the Nobel Lecture 7 December 2007 On not winning the Nobel Prize Doris Lessing at IMDb Doris Lessing at Curlie Transcript of Doris Lessing s Dame rejection letter to the John Major Government Doris Lessing Excerpts On Cats Doris Lessing homepage created by Jan Hanford The shadow of the fifth patterns of exclusion in Doris Lessing s The Fifth Child Anne Laure Brevet Doris Lessing at Web of Stories videos Joyce Carol Oates on Doris Lessing Doris Lessing Page at Guardian Unlimited Doris Lessing Author Who Swept Aside Convention Is Dead at 94 by Helen T Virongos amp Emma G Fitzsimmons New York Times 2013 11 18 Page A1 2013 11 17 Appearances on C SPAN Portraits of Doris Lessing at the National Portrait Gallery London Cats in Literature Doris Lessing Portals Poetry Novels Opera Psychology Islam Speculative fiction Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Doris Lessing amp oldid 1130365424, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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