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Nancy Cunard

Nancy Clara Cunard (10 March 1896 – 17 March 1965) was a British writer, heiress and political activist. She was born into the British upper class, and devoted much of her life to fighting racism and fascism. She became a muse to some of the 20th century's most distinguished writers and artists, including Wyndham Lewis, Aldous Huxley, Tristan Tzara, Ezra Pound and Louis Aragon—who were among her lovers—as well as Ernest Hemingway, James Joyce, Constantin Brâncuși, Langston Hughes, Man Ray and William Carlos Williams. MI5 documents reveal that she was involved with Indian socialist leader V. K. Krishna Menon.

Nancy Cunard
BornNancy Clara Cunard
(1896-03-10)10 March 1896
London, England
Died17 March 1965(1965-03-17) (aged 69)
Paris, France
OccupationWriter
Political activist
NationalityBritish
GenrePoetry
Spouse
(m. 1916; div. 1925)
RelativesSir Bache Cunard (father)
Maud Cunard (mother)

In later years she suffered from mental illness, and her physical health deteriorated. When she died in the Hôpital Cochin, Paris, she weighed only 26 kg (57 pounds / 4 stone, 1lb).

1910s Edit

Cunard's father was Sir Bache Cunard, an heir to the Cunard Line shipping businesses, interested in polo and fox hunting, and a baronet. Her mother was Maud Alice Burke, an American heiress, who adopted the first name Emerald and became a leading London society hostess. Nancy had been brought up on the family estate at Nevill Holt, Leicestershire. When her parents separated in 1911, she moved to London with her mother. Her education was at various boarding schools, including time in France and Germany.

In London, she spent a good deal of her childhood with her mother's long-time admirer, the novelist George Moore. It was even rumoured that Moore was her father, and although this has been largely dismissed, there is no question that he played an important role in her life while she was growing up. She would later write a memoir about her affection for "GM".

On 15 November 1916 she married Sydney Fairbairn, a cricketer and army officer who had been wounded at Gallipoli. After a honeymoon in Devon and Cornwall, they lived in London in a house given to them by Nancy's mother as a wedding present. The couple separated in 1919 and divorced in 1925.[1]

At this time she was on the edge of the influential group The Coterie, associating in particular with Iris Tree.

She contributed to the anthology Wheels, edited by the Sitwells, for which she provided the title poem; it has been said that the venture was originally her project.[citation needed]

Cunard's lover Peter Broughton-Adderley was killed in action in France less than a month before Armistice Day.[2] Many who knew her claimed that she never fully recovered from Adderley's loss.

 
Nancy Cunard by Ambrose McEvoy

Paris Edit

Nancy Cunard moved to Paris in 1920. There, she became involved with literary Modernism, Surrealists and Dada. Much of her published poetry dates from this period. During her early years in Paris, she was close to Michael Arlen.

In 1920 she had a near-fatal hysterectomy, for reasons that are not entirely clear. She recovered, and was then able to lead an active sexual life without the fear of pregnancy.[3]

A brief relationship with Aldous Huxley influenced several of his novels. She was the model for Myra Viveash in Antic Hay (1923) and for Lucy Tantamount in Point Counter Point (1928).[4]

In Paris, Cunard spent much time with Eugene McCown, an American artist from the hard-drinking set whom she made her protégé. It has been suggested that she became dependent on alcohol at this time, and may have used other drugs.[5]

In 1928, the year she founded her publishing company, Hours Press, she met Henry Crowder, with whom she lived until 1933.[6]

Personal style Edit

Cunard's style, informed by her devotion to the artefacts of African culture, was startlingly unconventional. The large-scale jewellery she favoured, crafted of wood, bone and ivory, the natural materials used by native crafts people, was provocative and controversial. The bangles she wore on both arms snaking from wrist to elbow were considered outré adornments, which provoked media attention, visually compelling subject matter for photographers of the day. She was often photographed wearing her collection, those of African inspiration and neckpieces of wooden cubes, which paid homage to the concepts of Cubism.[7]

At first considered the bohemian affectation of an eccentric heiress, the fashion world came to legitimize this style as avant garde, dubbing it the "barbaric look". Prestigious jewellery houses such as Boucheron created their own African-inspired cuff of gold beads. Boucheron, eschewing costly gemstones, incorporated into the finished creation green malachite and a striking purple mineral, purpurite, instead. It exhibited this high-end piece at the Exposition Coloniale in 1931.[7]

The Hours Press Edit

In 1927, Cunard moved into a farmhouse in La Chapelle-Réanville, Normandy. It was there in 1928 that she set up the Hours Press. Previously the small press had been called Three Mountains Press and run by William Bird, an American journalist in Paris, who had published books by its editor from 1923, Ezra Pound, William Carlos Williams' The Great American Novel, Robert McAlmond and Ernest Hemingway's In Our Time. Cunard wanted to support experimental poetry and provide a higher-paying market for young writers. Her inherited wealth allowed her to take financial risks that other publishers could not. The Hours Press became known for its beautiful book designs and high-quality production.[8]

It brought out the first separately published work of Samuel Beckett, a poem called Whoroscope (1930); Bob Brown's Words; and Pound's A Draft of XXX Cantos. Cunard published old friends such as George Moore, Norman Douglas, Richard Aldington and Arthur Symons, and brought out Henry-Music, a book of poems from various authors with music by Henry Crowder, two books by Laura Riding, the Collected Poems of John Rodker, poems by Roy Campbell, Harold Acton, Brian Howard and Walter Lowenfels. Wyn Henderson had taken over day-to-day operation of the press by 1931; in the same year it published its last book, The Revaluation of Obscenity by sexologist Havelock Ellis.[9]

Political activism Edit

In 1928 (after a two-year affair with Louis Aragon) Cunard began a relationship with Henry Crowder, an African-American jazz musician who was working in Paris. She became an activist in matters concerning racial politics and civil rights in the USA, and visited Harlem. In 1931, she published the pamphlet Black Man and White Ladyship, an attack on racist attitudes as exemplified by Cunard's mother, whom she quoted as saying: "Is it true that my daughter knows a Negro?"[10]

She edited the massive Negro Anthology, collecting poetry, fiction, and nonfiction primarily by African-American writers, including Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston.[11] It included writing by George Padmore and Cunard's own account of the Scottsboro Boys case. Press attention to this project in May 1932, two years before it was published, led to Cunard's receiving anonymous threats and hate mail, some of which she published in the book, expressing regret that "[others] are obscene, so this portion of American culture cannot be made public."[citation needed]

She identified as an anarchist.[12]

Anti-fascism Edit

In the mid-1930s Cunard took up the anti-fascist fight, writing about Mussolini's annexation of Ethiopia and the Spanish Civil War. She predicted, accurately, that the "events in Spain were a prelude to another world war". Her stories about the suffering of Spanish refugees became the basis for a fundraising appeal in the Manchester Guardian. Cunard herself helped deliver supplies and organize the relief effort, but poor health – caused in part by exhaustion and the conditions in the camps – forced her to return to Paris, where she stood on the streets collecting funds for the refugees.[11] In the pages of Sylvia Pankhurst's The New Times and Ethiopia News, in a comment on how ingrained race and colonial prejudices were even among the Left, she suggested that had the Spanish Popular Front government engaged the good-will of its colonial subjects, the fascist rebellion against the republic might have strangled where it first broke out – in Spanish Morocco.[13]

In 1937 she published a series of pamphlets of war poetry, including the work of W. H. Auden, Tristan Tzara and Pablo Neruda. Later in 1937, together with Auden and Stephen Spender, she distributed a questionnaire about the war to writers in Europe. The results were published by the Left Review as Authors Take Sides on the Spanish War.[14]

The questionnaire to 200 writers asked the following question: "Are you for, or against, the legal government and people of Republican Spain? Are you for, or against, Franco and Fascism? For it is impossible any longer to take no side."

There were 147 answers, of which 126 supported the Republic, including W. H. Auden, Samuel Beckett and Rebecca West.[15][16]

Five writers explicitly responded in favour of Franco: they were Evelyn Waugh, Edmund Blunden,[16] Arthur Machen, Geoffrey Moss and Eleanor Smith.[17]

Among sixteen responses that Cunard, in her eventually published compendium, grouped under the sceptical heading "Neutral?" were H. G. Wells, Ezra Pound, T. S. Eliot[16] and Vera Brittain.[18]

The most famous response was not included: it came from George Orwell, and began:

Will you please stop sending me this bloody rubbish. This is the second or third time I have had it. I am not one of your fashionable pansies like Auden or Spender, I was six months in Spain, most of the time fighting, I have a bullet hole in me at present and I am not going to write blah about defending democracy or gallant little anybody... .[19]

Several other writers also declined to contribute, including Virginia Woolf, Bertrand Russell,[15] E. M. Forster,[20] and James Joyce.[21]

During World War II, Cunard worked, to the point of physical exhaustion, as a translator in London on behalf of the French Resistance.

Later life Edit

After the war, Cunard gave up her home at Réanville and travelled extensively. In June 1948, she travelled from Trinidad[22] to the United Kingdom, on board the HMT Empire Windrush.[23] The voyage and the ship later became well-known because the other passengers on board included one of the first large groups of post-war West Indian immigrants to the United Kingdom.[24]

In September 1948 she started renting a small house in the French village Lamothe-Fénelon in the Dordogne Valley. In later years she suffered from mental illness and poor physical health, worsened by alcoholism, poverty, and self-destructive behaviour.[11] She was committed to a mental hospital after a fight with London police. After her release, her health declined even further, and she weighed less than 60 pounds when she was found on the street in Paris and brought to the Hôpital Cochin, where she died two days later.[11][25]

Her body was returned to England for cremation and the remains were sent back to the Cimetière du Père-Lachaise in Paris. Her ashes rest in urn number 9016.[citation needed]

Tributes Edit

Constantin Brâncuși's La Jeune Fille Sophistiquée (Portrait de Nancy Cunard), a polished bronze on a carved marble base (1932), sold in May 2018 for US$71 million (with fees) at Christie's New York, setting a world record auction price for the artist.[26]

According to an account of drafts of the poem "Nancy Cunard" by Mina Loy held in Yale University Library,

Drafts of Loy's poem about Nancy Cunard, her friend, fellow poet, and editor of The Hours Press, provide a window on her [Loy's] creative process. The final, published version of the poem ends with lines derived from this draft's beginning and its final lines are now the poem's centre:

The vermilion wall
receding as a sin
beyond your moonstone whiteness,
Your chiffon voice.[27]

Works Edit

  • Outlaws (1921), poems
  • Sublunary (1923), poems
  • Parallax (1925, Hogarth Press), poems
  • Poems (Two) (1925, Aquila Press), poems
  • Poems (1930)
  • Black Man and White Ladyship (1931) polemic pamphlet
  • Negro (1934) anthology of African literature and art, editor[28]
  • Authors Take Sides (1937) pamphlet, compiler
  • Los poetas del mundo defienden al pueblo español (1937, Paris), co-editor with Pablo Neruda
  • The White Man's Duty: An analysis of the colonial question in the light of the Atlantic Charter (with George Padmore) (1942)
  • Poems for France, La France libre, London, 1944 and Poèmes à la France, Seghers, Paris, 1947
  • Releve into Marquis (1944)
  • Grand Man: Memories of Norman Douglas (1954)
  • GM: Memories of George Moore (1956)
  • These Were the Hours: Memories of My Hours Press, Réanville and Paris, 1928–1931 (1969), autobiography
  • Poems of Nancy Cunard: from the Bodleian Library (2005), edited with an introduction by John Lucas.
  • Selected Poems (2016), edited with an introduction by Sandeep Parmar.

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Horn 2015, pp. 29–30.
  2. ^ "Player profile:Peter Broughton-Adderley". CricketArchive. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
  3. ^ Lois Gordon, Nancy Cunard: Heiress, Muse, Political Idealist, p. 99.
  4. ^ Anne Chisholm, Nancy Cunard (New York: Penguin Books, 1981), 110–20. ISBN 0-14-005572-X.
  5. ^ "Nancy Cunard, 1896–1965: Biographical Sketch" 8 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center (University of Texas at Austin).
  6. ^ Florian Illies, Liebe in den Zeiten des Hasses, Frankfurt am Main, 2021.
  7. ^ a b Cox, Caroline, "Vintage jewellery design: classics to collect and wear," Lark Crafts, 2010, p. 55.
  8. ^ Shari Benstock, Women of the Left Bank: Paris, 1900–1940 (1986; Austin: U of Texas P, 1987) 389–90. ISBN 0-292-79040-6.
  9. ^ Benstock 393–94.
  10. ^ Renata Morresi, Set Apart: Nancy Cunard, HOW2 1.4 (September 2000).
  11. ^ a b c d Gordon, as reviewed by Caroline Weber, "The Rebel Heiress", The New York Times Book Review, 1 April 2007. 2 pages.
  12. ^ Beckett, Samuel; Friedman, Alan Warren (2000). Beckett in Black and Red: The Translations for Nancy Cunard's Negro (1934). University Press of Kentucky. p. 13. ISBN 0-8131-2129-9.
  13. ^ Srivastava, Neelam (2 October 2021). "The intellectual as partisan: Sylvia Pankhurst and the Italian invasion of Ethiopia". Postcolonial Studies. 24 (4): (448–463), 455. doi:10.1080/13688790.2021.1985235. ISSN 1368-8790. S2CID 244404206.
  14. ^ Benstock, 418–422.
  15. ^ a b Gayle Rogers, Modernism and the New Spain: Britain, Cosmopolitan Europe, and Literary History, Oxford University Press, 2012 ISBN 0199914974 (p. 147).
  16. ^ a b c Stevens, Michael R. (20 July 2010). "T. S. Eliot's Political 'Middle Way'". Religion & Liberty. Acton Institute. 9 (5): 5–7.
  17. ^ Nancy Cunard: Heiress, Muse, Political Idealist by Lois G. Gordon. Columbia University Press, 2007.
  18. ^ Hoskins, Katherine Bail, Today the struggle: literature and politics in England during the Spanish Civil War, University of Texas Press, 1969 (p. 19).
  19. ^ D. J. Taylor, Orwell: The Life, 2003.
  20. ^ Although Forster sympathised with the Republican side, he did not believe in signing political manifestos. See Jennifer Birkett and Stan Smith, Right/left/right revolving commitments: France and Britain, 1929–1950, Cambridge Scholars, 2008 ISBN 1847185118 (pp. 61–2).
  21. ^ Joyce declined on the grounds that he never "got involved with politics". See Valentine Cunningham, The Penguin Book of Spanish Civil War Verse, Penguin Books, 1980 (p. 50).
  22. ^ The National Archives of the UK; Kew, Surrey, England; Board of Trade: Commercial and Statistical Department and successors: Inwards Passenger Lists.; Class: BT26; Piece: 1237. Passenger #15 on the first page of the passenger list, passengers boarded at Trinidad. After Trinidad, the Empire Windrush picked up passengers at ports in Mexico, Jamaica and Bermuda, until finally discharging everyone at Tilbury Docks for London on 21 June 1948.
  23. ^ Jo Stanley, "The non-conformist heiress who sailed on the Windrush", Morning Star, 22 June 2018.
  24. ^ David Kynaston, Austerity Britain 1945–1951, London: Bloomsbury, 2007, p. 276; ISBN 978-0-7475-9923-4.
  25. ^ Benstock 423.
  26. ^ Reyburn, Scott (16 May 2018). "A Malevich and a Bronze by Brancusi Set Auction Highs for the Artists". The New York Times. 15 May 2018
  27. ^ Mina Loy, "Nancy Cunard" 12 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine, n.d., "Mina Loy: Drafts of 'Nancy Cunard' ", Mina Loy Papers, Intimate Circles: American Women in the Arts: Mina Loy and Djuna Barnes, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University. Retrieved 30 January 2008.
  28. ^ Digital Collections, The New York Public Library. Cunard, Nancy (ed.). "Negro anthology, (1934)". The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox, and Tilden Foundations. OCLC 470515647. Retrieved 12 February 2022.

References Edit

  • Bankes, Ariane. "Nancy Cunard, Rebel Lover". The Times Literary Supplement, 7 April 2007. (Review of Gordon.)
  • Chisholm, Anne. Nancy Cunard: A Biography. 1979. New York: Penguin Books, 1981.
  • Fielding, Daphne. Those Remarkable Cunards, Emerald and Nancy (1968).
  • Ford, Hugh, ed. Nancy Cunard: Brave Poet, Indomitable Rebel 1896–1965 (1968).
  • Gordon, Lois. Nancy Cunard: Heiress, Muse, Political Idealist. New York: Columbia UP, 2007. ISBN 0-231-13938-1 (10). ISBN 978-0-231-13938-0 (13).
  • Horn, Pamela (2015). Country House Society: the private lives of the English upper class after the First World War. Stroud, UK: Amberly Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4456-4477-6.
  • Loy, Mina. "Nancy Cunard". 103 in The Lost Lunar Baedeker: Poems. Selected and ed. Roger L. Conover. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 1996.
  • Lyden, Jackie. "Nancy Cunard: Rebellious Heiress, Inspired Life". Interview of Lois Gordon and featured excerpts from her biography of Cunard (includes NPR Media Player link). All Things Considered. National Public Radio. 21 July 2007. Accessed 30 January 2008.
  • Mackrell, Judith. Flappers: Six Women of a Dangerous Generation. 2013. ISBN 978-0-330-52952-5
  • Weber, Caroline. "The Rebel Heiress". The New York Times Book Review, 1 April 2007. 2 pages. (Review of Gordon.)
  • Weiss, Andrea. Paris Was a Woman: Portraits from the Left Bank (2001).

Further reading Edit

  • Burkhart, Charles. Herman and Nancy and Ivy: Three Lives in Art (Victor Gollancz, 1977)
  • de Courcy, Anne (2022). Five Love Affairs and a Friendship: The Paris Life of Nancy Cunard, Icon of the Jazz Age (Hardcover). London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ISBN 9781474617413.

External links Edit

  • Nancy Cunard – Biography on SchoolNet at Spartacus Educational. Accessed 30 January 2008.
  • Henry Crowder and Nancy Cunard
  • Nancy Cunard's Collection at the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin. Retrieved 30 January 2008.
  • Nancy Cunard correspondence and other archival material at Southern Illinois University Carbondale, Special Collections Research Center
  • Works by Nancy Cunard at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  

nancy, cunard, nancy, clara, cunard, march, 1896, march, 1965, british, writer, heiress, political, activist, born, into, british, upper, class, devoted, much, life, fighting, racism, fascism, became, muse, some, 20th, century, most, distinguished, writers, ar. Nancy Clara Cunard 10 March 1896 17 March 1965 was a British writer heiress and political activist She was born into the British upper class and devoted much of her life to fighting racism and fascism She became a muse to some of the 20th century s most distinguished writers and artists including Wyndham Lewis Aldous Huxley Tristan Tzara Ezra Pound and Louis Aragon who were among her lovers as well as Ernest Hemingway James Joyce Constantin Brancuși Langston Hughes Man Ray and William Carlos Williams MI5 documents reveal that she was involved with Indian socialist leader V K Krishna Menon Nancy CunardBornNancy Clara Cunard 1896 03 10 10 March 1896London EnglandDied17 March 1965 1965 03 17 aged 69 Paris FranceOccupationWriterPolitical activistNationalityBritishGenrePoetrySpouseSydney Fairbairn m 1916 div 1925 wbr RelativesSir Bache Cunard father Maud Cunard mother In later years she suffered from mental illness and her physical health deteriorated When she died in the Hopital Cochin Paris she weighed only 26 kg 57 pounds 4 stone 1lb Contents 1 1910s 2 Paris 3 Personal style 4 The Hours Press 5 Political activism 6 Anti fascism 7 Later life 8 Tributes 9 Works 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External links1910s EditCunard s father was Sir Bache Cunard an heir to the Cunard Line shipping businesses interested in polo and fox hunting and a baronet Her mother was Maud Alice Burke an American heiress who adopted the first name Emerald and became a leading London society hostess Nancy had been brought up on the family estate at Nevill Holt Leicestershire When her parents separated in 1911 she moved to London with her mother Her education was at various boarding schools including time in France and Germany In London she spent a good deal of her childhood with her mother s long time admirer the novelist George Moore It was even rumoured that Moore was her father and although this has been largely dismissed there is no question that he played an important role in her life while she was growing up She would later write a memoir about her affection for GM On 15 November 1916 she married Sydney Fairbairn a cricketer and army officer who had been wounded at Gallipoli After a honeymoon in Devon and Cornwall they lived in London in a house given to them by Nancy s mother as a wedding present The couple separated in 1919 and divorced in 1925 1 At this time she was on the edge of the influential group The Coterie associating in particular with Iris Tree She contributed to the anthology Wheels edited by the Sitwells for which she provided the title poem it has been said that the venture was originally her project citation needed Cunard s lover Peter Broughton Adderley was killed in action in France less than a month before Armistice Day 2 Many who knew her claimed that she never fully recovered from Adderley s loss nbsp Nancy Cunard by Ambrose McEvoyParis EditNancy Cunard moved to Paris in 1920 There she became involved with literary Modernism Surrealists and Dada Much of her published poetry dates from this period During her early years in Paris she was close to Michael Arlen In 1920 she had a near fatal hysterectomy for reasons that are not entirely clear She recovered and was then able to lead an active sexual life without the fear of pregnancy 3 A brief relationship with Aldous Huxley influenced several of his novels She was the model for Myra Viveash in Antic Hay 1923 and for Lucy Tantamount in Point Counter Point 1928 4 In Paris Cunard spent much time with Eugene McCown an American artist from the hard drinking set whom she made her protege It has been suggested that she became dependent on alcohol at this time and may have used other drugs 5 In 1928 the year she founded her publishing company Hours Press she met Henry Crowder with whom she lived until 1933 6 Personal style EditCunard s style informed by her devotion to the artefacts of African culture was startlingly unconventional The large scale jewellery she favoured crafted of wood bone and ivory the natural materials used by native crafts people was provocative and controversial The bangles she wore on both arms snaking from wrist to elbow were considered outre adornments which provoked media attention visually compelling subject matter for photographers of the day She was often photographed wearing her collection those of African inspiration and neckpieces of wooden cubes which paid homage to the concepts of Cubism 7 At first considered the bohemian affectation of an eccentric heiress the fashion world came to legitimize this style as avant garde dubbing it the barbaric look Prestigious jewellery houses such as Boucheron created their own African inspired cuff of gold beads Boucheron eschewing costly gemstones incorporated into the finished creation green malachite and a striking purple mineral purpurite instead It exhibited this high end piece at the Exposition Coloniale in 1931 7 The Hours Press EditIn 1927 Cunard moved into a farmhouse in La Chapelle Reanville Normandy It was there in 1928 that she set up the Hours Press Previously the small press had been called Three Mountains Press and run by William Bird an American journalist in Paris who had published books by its editor from 1923 Ezra Pound William Carlos Williams The Great American Novel Robert McAlmond and Ernest Hemingway s In Our Time Cunard wanted to support experimental poetry and provide a higher paying market for young writers Her inherited wealth allowed her to take financial risks that other publishers could not The Hours Press became known for its beautiful book designs and high quality production 8 It brought out the first separately published work of Samuel Beckett a poem called Whoroscope 1930 Bob Brown s Words and Pound s A Draft of XXX Cantos Cunard published old friends such as George Moore Norman Douglas Richard Aldington and Arthur Symons and brought out Henry Music a book of poems from various authors with music by Henry Crowder two books by Laura Riding the Collected Poems of John Rodker poems by Roy Campbell Harold Acton Brian Howard and Walter Lowenfels Wyn Henderson had taken over day to day operation of the press by 1931 in the same year it published its last book The Revaluation of Obscenity by sexologist Havelock Ellis 9 Political activism EditIn 1928 after a two year affair with Louis Aragon Cunard began a relationship with Henry Crowder an African American jazz musician who was working in Paris She became an activist in matters concerning racial politics and civil rights in the USA and visited Harlem In 1931 she published the pamphlet Black Man and White Ladyship an attack on racist attitudes as exemplified by Cunard s mother whom she quoted as saying Is it true that my daughter knows a Negro 10 She edited the massive Negro Anthology collecting poetry fiction and nonfiction primarily by African American writers including Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston 11 It included writing by George Padmore and Cunard s own account of the Scottsboro Boys case Press attention to this project in May 1932 two years before it was published led to Cunard s receiving anonymous threats and hate mail some of which she published in the book expressing regret that others are obscene so this portion of American culture cannot be made public citation needed She identified as an anarchist 12 Anti fascism EditIn the mid 1930s Cunard took up the anti fascist fight writing about Mussolini s annexation of Ethiopia and the Spanish Civil War She predicted accurately that the events in Spain were a prelude to another world war Her stories about the suffering of Spanish refugees became the basis for a fundraising appeal in the Manchester Guardian Cunard herself helped deliver supplies and organize the relief effort but poor health caused in part by exhaustion and the conditions in the camps forced her to return to Paris where she stood on the streets collecting funds for the refugees 11 In the pages of Sylvia Pankhurst s The New Times and Ethiopia News in a comment on how ingrained race and colonial prejudices were even among the Left she suggested that had the Spanish Popular Front government engaged the good will of its colonial subjects the fascist rebellion against the republic might have strangled where it first broke out in Spanish Morocco 13 In 1937 she published a series of pamphlets of war poetry including the work of W H Auden Tristan Tzara and Pablo Neruda Later in 1937 together with Auden and Stephen Spender she distributed a questionnaire about the war to writers in Europe The results were published by the Left Review as Authors Take Sides on the Spanish War 14 The questionnaire to 200 writers asked the following question Are you for or against the legal government and people of Republican Spain Are you for or against Franco and Fascism For it is impossible any longer to take no side There were 147 answers of which 126 supported the Republic including W H Auden Samuel Beckett and Rebecca West 15 16 Five writers explicitly responded in favour of Franco they were Evelyn Waugh Edmund Blunden 16 Arthur Machen Geoffrey Moss and Eleanor Smith 17 Among sixteen responses that Cunard in her eventually published compendium grouped under the sceptical heading Neutral were H G Wells Ezra Pound T S Eliot 16 and Vera Brittain 18 The most famous response was not included it came from George Orwell and began Will you please stop sending me this bloody rubbish This is the second or third time I have had it I am not one of your fashionable pansies like Auden or Spender I was six months in Spain most of the time fighting I have a bullet hole in me at present and I am not going to write blah about defending democracy or gallant little anybody 19 Several other writers also declined to contribute including Virginia Woolf Bertrand Russell 15 E M Forster 20 and James Joyce 21 During World War II Cunard worked to the point of physical exhaustion as a translator in London on behalf of the French Resistance Later life EditAfter the war Cunard gave up her home at Reanville and travelled extensively In June 1948 she travelled from Trinidad 22 to the United Kingdom on board the HMT Empire Windrush 23 The voyage and the ship later became well known because the other passengers on board included one of the first large groups of post war West Indian immigrants to the United Kingdom 24 In September 1948 she started renting a small house in the French village Lamothe Fenelon in the Dordogne Valley In later years she suffered from mental illness and poor physical health worsened by alcoholism poverty and self destructive behaviour 11 She was committed to a mental hospital after a fight with London police After her release her health declined even further and she weighed less than 60 pounds when she was found on the street in Paris and brought to the Hopital Cochin where she died two days later 11 25 Her body was returned to England for cremation and the remains were sent back to the Cimetiere du Pere Lachaise in Paris Her ashes rest in urn number 9016 citation needed Tributes EditConstantin Brancuși s La Jeune Fille Sophistiquee Portrait de Nancy Cunard a polished bronze on a carved marble base 1932 sold in May 2018 for US 71 million with fees at Christie s New York setting a world record auction price for the artist 26 According to an account of drafts of the poem Nancy Cunard by Mina Loy held in Yale University Library Drafts of Loy s poem about Nancy Cunard her friend fellow poet and editor of The Hours Press provide a window on her Loy s creative process The final published version of the poem ends with lines derived from this draft s beginning and its final lines are now the poem s centre The vermilion wall receding as a sin beyond your moonstone whiteness Your chiffon voice 27 Works EditOutlaws 1921 poems Sublunary 1923 poems Parallax 1925 Hogarth Press poems Poems Two 1925 Aquila Press poems Poems 1930 Black Man and White Ladyship 1931 polemic pamphlet Negro 1934 anthology of African literature and art editor 28 Authors Take Sides 1937 pamphlet compiler Los poetas del mundo defienden al pueblo espanol 1937 Paris co editor with Pablo Neruda The White Man s Duty An analysis of the colonial question in the light of the Atlantic Charter with George Padmore 1942 Poems for France La France libre London 1944 and Poemes a la France Seghers Paris 1947 Releve into Marquis 1944 Grand Man Memories of Norman Douglas 1954 GM Memories of George Moore 1956 These Were the Hours Memories of My Hours Press Reanville and Paris 1928 1931 1969 autobiography Poems of Nancy Cunard from the Bodleian Library 2005 edited with an introduction by John Lucas Selected Poems 2016 edited with an introduction by Sandeep Parmar Notes Edit Horn 2015 pp 29 30 Player profile Peter Broughton Adderley CricketArchive Retrieved 8 May 2011 Lois Gordon Nancy Cunard Heiress Muse Political Idealist p 99 Anne Chisholm Nancy Cunard New York Penguin Books 1981 110 20 ISBN 0 14 005572 X Nancy Cunard 1896 1965 Biographical Sketch Archived 8 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center University of Texas at Austin Florian Illies Liebe in den Zeiten des Hasses Frankfurt am Main 2021 a b Cox Caroline Vintage jewellery design classics to collect and wear Lark Crafts 2010 p 55 Shari Benstock Women of the Left Bank Paris 1900 1940 1986 Austin U of Texas P 1987 389 90 ISBN 0 292 79040 6 Benstock 393 94 Renata Morresi Set Apart Nancy Cunard HOW2 1 4 September 2000 a b c d Gordon as reviewed by Caroline Weber The Rebel Heiress The New York Times Book Review 1 April 2007 2 pages Beckett Samuel Friedman Alan Warren 2000 Beckett in Black and Red The Translations for Nancy Cunard s Negro 1934 University Press of Kentucky p 13 ISBN 0 8131 2129 9 Srivastava Neelam 2 October 2021 The intellectual as partisan Sylvia Pankhurst and the Italian invasion of Ethiopia Postcolonial Studies 24 4 448 463 455 doi 10 1080 13688790 2021 1985235 ISSN 1368 8790 S2CID 244404206 Benstock 418 422 a b Gayle Rogers Modernism and the New Spain Britain Cosmopolitan Europe and Literary History Oxford University Press 2012 ISBN 0199914974 p 147 a b c Stevens Michael R 20 July 2010 T S Eliot s Political Middle Way Religion amp Liberty Acton Institute 9 5 5 7 Nancy Cunard Heiress Muse Political Idealist by Lois G Gordon Columbia University Press 2007 Hoskins Katherine Bail Today the struggle literature and politics in England during the Spanish Civil War University of Texas Press 1969 p 19 D J Taylor Orwell The Life 2003 Although Forster sympathised with the Republican side he did not believe in signing political manifestos See Jennifer Birkett and Stan Smith Right left right revolving commitments France and Britain 1929 1950 Cambridge Scholars 2008 ISBN 1847185118 pp 61 2 Joyce declined on the grounds that he never got involved with politics See Valentine Cunningham The Penguin Book of Spanish Civil War Verse Penguin Books 1980 p 50 The National Archives of the UK Kew Surrey England Board of Trade Commercial and Statistical Department and successors Inwards Passenger Lists Class BT26 Piece 1237 Passenger 15 on the first page of the passenger list passengers boarded at Trinidad After Trinidad the Empire Windrush picked up passengers at ports in Mexico Jamaica and Bermuda until finally discharging everyone at Tilbury Docks for London on 21 June 1948 Jo Stanley The non conformist heiress who sailed on the Windrush Morning Star 22 June 2018 David Kynaston Austerity Britain 1945 1951 London Bloomsbury 2007 p 276 ISBN 978 0 7475 9923 4 Benstock 423 Reyburn Scott 16 May 2018 A Malevich and a Bronze by Brancusi Set Auction Highs for the Artists The New York Times 15 May 2018 Mina Loy Nancy Cunard Archived 12 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine n d Mina Loy Drafts of Nancy Cunard Mina Loy Papers Intimate Circles American Women in the Arts Mina Loy and Djuna Barnes Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Yale University Retrieved 30 January 2008 Digital Collections The New York Public Library Cunard Nancy ed Negro anthology 1934 The New York Public Library Astor Lenox and Tilden Foundations OCLC 470515647 Retrieved 12 February 2022 References EditBankes Ariane Nancy Cunard Rebel Lover The Times Literary Supplement 7 April 2007 Review of Gordon Chisholm Anne Nancy Cunard A Biography 1979 New York Penguin Books 1981 Fielding Daphne Those Remarkable Cunards Emerald and Nancy 1968 Ford Hugh ed Nancy Cunard Brave Poet Indomitable Rebel 1896 1965 1968 Gordon Lois Nancy Cunard Heiress Muse Political Idealist New York Columbia UP 2007 ISBN 0 231 13938 1 10 ISBN 978 0 231 13938 0 13 Horn Pamela 2015 Country House Society the private lives of the English upper class after the First World War Stroud UK Amberly Publishing ISBN 978 1 4456 4477 6 Loy Mina Nancy Cunard 103 in The Lost Lunar Baedeker Poems Selected and ed Roger L Conover New York Farrar Straus and Giroux 1996 Lyden Jackie Nancy Cunard Rebellious Heiress Inspired Life Interview of Lois Gordon and featured excerpts from her biography of Cunard includes NPR Media Player link All Things Considered National Public Radio 21 July 2007 Accessed 30 January 2008 Mackrell Judith Flappers Six Women of a Dangerous Generation 2013 ISBN 978 0 330 52952 5 Weber Caroline The Rebel Heiress The New York Times Book Review 1 April 2007 2 pages Review of Gordon Weiss Andrea Paris Was a Woman Portraits from the Left Bank 2001 Further reading EditBurkhart Charles Herman and Nancy and Ivy Three Lives in Art Victor Gollancz 1977 de Courcy Anne 2022 Five Love Affairs and a Friendship The Paris Life of Nancy Cunard Icon of the Jazz Age Hardcover London Weidenfeld and Nicolson ISBN 9781474617413 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nancy Cunard Nancy Cunard Biography on SchoolNet at Spartacus Educational Accessed 30 January 2008 Henry Crowder and Nancy Cunard Nancy Cunard on Josephine Baker Nancy Cunard s Collection at the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin Retrieved 30 January 2008 Nancy Cunard correspondence and other archival material at Southern Illinois University Carbondale Special Collections Research Center Works by Nancy Cunard at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nancy Cunard amp oldid 1174582290 The Hours Press, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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