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Rebecca West

Dame Cicily Isabel Fairfield DBE (21 December 1892 – 15 March 1983), known as Rebecca West, or Dame Rebecca West, was a British author, journalist, literary critic and travel writer. An author who wrote in many genres, West reviewed books for The Times, the New York Herald Tribune, The Sunday Telegraph and The New Republic, and she was a correspondent for The Bookman. Her major works include Black Lamb and Grey Falcon (1941), on the history and culture of Yugoslavia; A Train of Powder (1955), her coverage of the Nuremberg trials, published originally in The New Yorker; The Meaning of Treason (first published as a magazine article in 1945 and then expanded to the book in 1947), later The New Meaning of Treason (1964), a study of the trial of the British fascist William Joyce and others; The Return of the Soldier (1918), a modernist World War I novel; and the "Aubrey trilogy" of autobiographical novels, The Fountain Overflows (1956), This Real Night (published posthumously in 1984), and Cousin Rosamund (1985). Time called her "indisputably the world's number one woman writer" in 1947. She was made CBE in 1949,[1] and DBE in 1959;[2] in each case, the citation reads: "writer and literary critic". She took the pseudonym "Rebecca West" from the rebellious young heroine in Rosmersholm by Henrik Ibsen. She was a recipient of the Benson Medal.


Rebecca West

Portrait of West by Madame Yevonde
BornCicily Isabel Fairfield
(1892-12-21)21 December 1892
London, England
Died15 March 1983(1983-03-15) (aged 90)
London, England
OccupationWriter
ChildrenAnthony West

Biography Edit

Rebecca West was born Cicily Isabel Fairfield[3] in 1892 in London, England, and grew up in a home full of intellectual stimulation, political debate, lively company, books and music.[4] Her mother, Isabella, a Scotswoman, was an accomplished pianist but did not pursue a musical career after her marriage to Charles Fairfield. The Anglo-Irish Charles had been a Confederate stretcher-bearer at the siege of Richmond in the US Civil War,[5] and had returned to the UK to become a journalist of considerable reputation but financial incompetence. He deserted his family when Cicily was eight years old. He never rejoined them, and died impoverished and alone in a boarding house in Liverpool in 1906, when Cicily was 14.[6] The rest of the family moved to Edinburgh, Scotland, where Cicily was educated at George Watson's Ladies College. She had to leave school in 1907 due to a bout of tuberculosis.[7] She chose not to return after recovering from the illness, later describing her schooling at Watson's as akin to a "prison".[8]

West had two older sisters. Letitia ("Lettie"), who was the best educated of the three, became one of the first fully qualified female doctors in Britain, as well as a barrister at the Inns of Court. Winifred ("Winnie"), the middle sister, married Norman Macleod, Principal Assistant Secretary in the Admiralty, and eventually director general of Greenwich Hospital. Winnie's two children, Alison and Norman, became closely involved in Rebecca's life as she got older;[9] Alison Macleod would achieve a literary career of her own.[10] West trained as an actress in London, taking the name "Rebecca West" from the rebellious young heroine in Rosmersholm by Henrik Ibsen.[5] She and Lettie became involved in the women's suffrage movement, participating in street protests. Meanwhile, West worked as a journalist for the feminist weekly Freewoman and the Clarion, drumming up support for the suffragette cause.[5]

Affairs and motherhood Edit

In September 1912, West accused the famously libertine writer H. G. Wells of being "the Old Maid among novelists." This was part of a provocative review of his novel Marriage published in Freewoman,[11] an obscure and short-lived feminist weekly review. The review attracted Wells's interest and an invitation to lunch at his home. The two writers became lovers in late 1913, despite Wells being both married and twenty-six years older than West.[12] Their 10-year relationship produced a son, Anthony West, born on 4 August 1914. Wells was behind her move to Marine Parade, Leigh-on-Sea in Essex, where she lived between 1917 and 1919.[13][14] Their friendship lasted until Wells's death in 1946.

West is also said to have had relationships with Charlie Chaplin, newspaper magnate Lord Beaverbrook,[15] and journalist John Gunther.[16]

Early career and marriage Edit

West established her reputation as a spokeswoman for feminist and socialist causes and as a critic, turning out essays and reviews for The New Republic, New York Herald Tribune, New York American, New Statesman, The Daily Telegraph, and many more newspapers and magazines. George Bernard Shaw said in 1916 that "Rebecca West could handle a pen as brilliantly as ever I could and much more savagely."[17] During the 1920s, West began a lifelong habit of visits to the United States to give lectures, meet artists, and get involved in the political scene. She was a great friend of the novelist G. B. Stern, and Stern and Clemence Dane stayed with her in America in 1924.[18] There, she befriended CIA founder Allen Dulles, Charlie Chaplin, Harold Ross of The New Yorker, and historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr., among many other significant figures of the day. Her lifelong fascination with the United States culminated in 1948 when President Truman presented her with the Women's Press Club Award for Journalism, calling her "the world's best reporter."[17]

In 1930, at the age of 37, she married a banker, Henry Maxwell Andrews, and they remained nominally together, despite one public affair just before his death in 1968.[19] West's writing brought her considerable wealth, and, by 1940, she owned a Rolls-Royce and a grand country estate, Ibstone House, in the Chiltern Hills of southern England. During World War II, West housed Yugoslav refugees in the spare rooms of her blacked-out manor, and she used the grounds as a small dairy farm and vegetable plot, agricultural pursuits that continued long after the war had ended.

Later life Edit

As West grew older, she turned to broader political and social issues, including Mankind's propensity to inflict violent injustice on itself. Before and during World War II, West travelled widely, collecting material for books on travel and politics. In 1936–38, she made three trips to Yugoslavia, a country she came to love, seeing it as the nexus of European history since the late Middle Ages. Her non-fiction masterpiece, Black Lamb and Grey Falcon is an amalgamation of her impressions from these trips. New York Times reviewer Katherine Woods wrote: "In two almost incredibly full-packed volumes one of the most gifted and searching of modern English novelists and critics has produced not only the magnification and intensification of the travel book form, but, one may say, its apotheosis." West was assigned by Ross' magazine to cover the Nuremberg trials for The New Yorker, an experience she memorialized in the book A Train of Powder. In 1950, she was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.[20] She also went to South Africa in 1960 to report on apartheid in a series of articles for The Sunday Times, particularly regarding a prominent trial for a seditious uprising aiming to establish Communist rule. She accidentally misidentified a South African judge[21] for some questions put by another judge and was sued for libel along with the Sunday Times whose editor, Harry Hodson, failed to support West.[22] She wrote "My problem is complicated by the fact that the defence, the people who would naturally be against the Judge and for me, are mostly Communist and won't lift a finger for me. It worries me a lot. It's so hard to work with this hanging over me." She felt her only support was her friends, the anti-apartheid politician Bernard Friedman and his wife, with whom she stayed in Johannesburg. "I will get over this case. But it isn't easy to feel that some people are for no reason that you know of possessed by an intention to ruin you; and I also felt I was letting you down in South Africa. I have been deeply grateful for all the kindness and sympathy you have shown me and I thought of Tall Trees as a warm place in a chilly world."[22]

She travelled extensively well into old age. In 1966 and 1969, she undertook two long journeys to Mexico, becoming fascinated by the indigenous culture of the country and its mestizo population. She stayed with actor Romney Brent in Mexico City and with Katherine (Kit) Wright, a long-time friend, in Cuernavaca.[23]

Old age Edit

Her husband became both sleepy and inattentive as he got older. The sleepiness led to a car accident where no one was hurt but Henry was charged with dangerous driving. He became obsessed with the Norwegian ballerina Gerd Larsen; he would refuse to travel with West, instead preferring to return to London to be with Larsen. West initially considered this to be purely her husband's infatuation, but came to think that Larsen was driven by money. At her husband's funeral West had the upsetting problem of Larsen's request to be amongst the mourners, even though she had only known him for 18 months. Henry's will left £5,000 for Larsen.[19] After her husband's death in 1968, West discovered that he had been unfaithful with other women.[19]

After she was widowed, she moved to London, where she bought a spacious apartment overlooking Hyde Park. Unfortunately, it was next door to the Iranian embassy. During the May 1980 incident, West, then 87, had to be evacuated.[24] In the last two decades of her life, West kept up a very active social life, making friends with Martha Gellhorn, Doris Lessing, Bernard Levin, comedian Frankie Howerd, and film star and director Warren Beatty, who filmed her for the production Reds, a biography of journalist John Reed and his connection with the Russian Revolution. She also spent time with scholars such as Jane Marcus and Bonnie Kime Scott, who began to chronicle her feminist career and varied work.[25] She wrote at an unabated pace, penning masterful reviews for The Sunday Telegraph, publishing her last novel The Birds Fall Down (1966), and overseeing the film version of the story by BBC in 1978. The last work published in her lifetime was 1900 (1982). 1900 explored the last year of Queen Victoria's long reign, which was a watershed in many cultural and political respects.

At the same time, West worked on sequels to her autobiographically inspired novel The Fountain Overflows (1957); although she had written the equivalent of two more novels for the planned trilogy, she was never satisfied with the sequels and did not publish them. She also tinkered at great length with an autobiography, without coming to closure, and started scores of stories without finishing them. Much of her work from the late phase of her life was published posthumously, including Family Memories (1987), This Real Night (1984), Cousin Rosamund (1985), The Only Poet (1992), and Survivors in Mexico (2003). Unfinished works from her early period, notably Sunflower (1986) and The Sentinel (2001) were also published after her death, so that her oeuvre was augmented by about one third by posthumous publications.

Relationship with her son Edit

West's relationship with her son, Anthony West, was not a happy one. The rancour between them came to a head when Anthony, himself a gifted writer, his father's biographer (H. G. Wells: Aspects of a Life [1984]), and a novelist, published Heritage (1955), a fictionalised autobiography. West never forgave her son for depicting in Heritage the relationship between an illegitimate son and his two world-famous, unmarried parents, and for portraying the mother in unflattering terms. The depiction of West's alter ego in Heritage as a deceitful, unloving actress (West had trained as an actress in her youth) and poor caregiver so wounded West that she broke off relations with her son and threatened to sue any publisher who would bring out Heritage in England. She successfully suppressed an English edition of the novel, which was only published there after her death, in 1984. Although there were temporary rapprochements between her and Anthony, a state of alienation persisted between them, causing West grief until her dying hour. She fretted about her son's absence from her deathbed, but when asked whether he should be sent for, answered: "perhaps not, if he hates me so much."[26]

Death Edit

 
West's grave in Brookwood Cemetery

West suffered from failing eyesight and high blood pressure in the late 1970s, and became increasingly frail. Her last months were mostly spent in bed, at times delirious and other times lucid; she complained that she was dying too slowly.[26] She died on 15 March 1983, and is buried at Brookwood Cemetery, Woking.[27]

Upon hearing of her death, William Shawn, then editor in chief of The New Yorker, said:

Rebecca West was one of the giants and will have a lasting place in English literature. No one in this century wrote more dazzling prose, or had more wit, or looked at the intricacies of human character and the ways of the world more intelligently.[17]

She is honoured with a blue plaque at Hope Park Square, Edinburgh, her childhood home which also provided the setting for her novel The Judge.[28]

Politics Edit

West grew up in a home filled with discussions of world affairs. Her father was a journalist who often involved himself in controversial issues. He brought home Russian revolutionaries and other political activists, and their debates helped to form West's sensibility, which took shape in novels such as The Birds Fall Down, set in pre-revolution Russia.[29] But the crucial event that moulded West's politics was the Dreyfus affair.[30] The impressionable Rebecca learned early on just how powerful was the will to persecute minorities and to subject individuals to unreasonable suspicion based on flimsy evidence and mass frenzy.[31] West had a keen understanding of the psychology of politics, how movements and causes could sustain themselves on the profound need to believe or disbelieve in a core of values—even in contradiction of reality.[32]

It would seem that her father's ironic, sceptical temper so penetrated her sensibility that she could not regard any body of ideas as other than a starting point for argument. Although she was a militant feminist and active suffragette, and published a perceptive and admiring profile of Emmeline Pankhurst, West also criticised the tactics of Pankhurst's daughter, Christabel, and the sometimes doctrinaire aspects of the Pankhursts' Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU).[33]

The first major test of West's political outlook was the Bolshevik Revolution. Many on the left saw it as the beginning of a new, better world, and the end of the crimes of capitalism. West regarded herself as a member of the left, having attended Fabian socialist summer schools as a girl. Yet to West, both the Revolution and the revolutionaries were suspect. Even before the Bolsheviks took power in October 1917, West expressed her doubts that events in Russia could serve as a model for socialists in Britain or anywhere else.[5][34]

West paid a heavy price for her cool reaction to the Russian Revolution; her positions increasingly isolated her. When Emma Goldman visited Britain in 1924 after seeing Bolshevik violence firsthand, West was exasperated that British intellectuals ignored Goldman's testimony and her warning against Bolshevik tyranny.[35]

For all her censures of communism, however, West was hardly an uncritical supporter of Western democracies. Thus in 1919–1920, she excoriated the US government for deporting Goldman and for the infamous Palmer Raids.[36] She was also appalled at the failure of Western democracies to come to the aid of Republican Spain, and she gave money to the Republican cause.

A staunch anti-fascist, West attacked both the Conservative governments of her own country for appeasing Adolf Hitler and her colleagues on the left for their pacifism. Neither side, in her view, understood the evil Nazism posed. Unlike many on the left, she also distrusted Joseph Stalin. To West, Stalin had a criminal mentality that communism facilitated.[37] She was outraged when the Allies switched their loyalties as to Yugoslav resistance movements by deciding in 1943 to start backing the Communist-led Partisans led by Tito in Yugoslavia, thus abandoning their support of Draža Mihailović's Chetniks, whom she considered the legitimate Yugoslav resistance. She expressed her feelings and opinions on the Allies' switch in Yugoslavia by writing the satirical short story titled "Madame Sara's Magic Crystal", but decided not to publish it upon discussion with Orme Sargent, Assistant Under-Secretary of State at the Foreign Office.[38] Writing in her diary, West mentioned that Sargent had persuaded her that "the recognition of Tito was made by reason of British military necessities, and for no other reason." Following Sargent's claim, she described her decision not to publish the story as an expression of "personal willingness to sacrifice myself to the needs of my country."[39] After the war, West's anti-Communism hardened as she saw Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, and other Eastern and Central European states succumb to Soviet domination.

In 1951 she provided a critical review of Alistair Cooke's sympathetic portrait of Alger Hiss during his postwar trials from a classical liberalism point of view.[40] It is not surprising in this context that West reacted to US Senator Joseph McCarthy differently from her colleagues. They saw a demagogue terrorising liberals and leftists with baseless accusations of Communist conspiracy. West saw an oaf blundering into the minefield of Communist subversion. For her, McCarthy was right to pursue Communists with fervour, even if his methods were roughshod, though her mild reaction to McCarthy provoked powerful revulsion among those on the left and dismay even among anti-Communist liberals. She refused, however, to amend her views.[41]

Although West's anti-communism earned the high regard of conservatives, she never considered herself one of them. In postwar Britain, West voted Labour and welcomed the Labour landslide of 1945 but spoke out against domination of the Labour Party by British trade unions, and thought left-wing politicians such as Michael Foot unimpressive. She had mixed feelings about the Callaghan government. West admired Margaret Thatcher, not for Thatcher's policies, but for Thatcher's achievement in rising to the top of a male-dominated sphere.[42] She admired Thatcher's willingness to stand up to trade union bullying.

In the end, West's anti-communism remained the centrepiece of her politics because she so consistently challenged the communists as legitimate foes of the status quo in capitalist countries. In West's view, communism, like fascism, was merely a form of authoritarianism. Communists were under party discipline, and therefore could never speak for themselves; West was a supreme example of an intellectual who spoke for herself, no matter how her comments might injure her. Indeed, few writers explicitly acknowledged how much West's embrace of unpopular positions hurt her on the left. A whole generation of writers abandoned West and refused to read her, as Doris Lessing suggested.[43]

Religion Edit

West's parents had her baptised into the Church of England two months after birth[44] and she considered herself a Christian, though an unconventional believer. At times, she found God to be wicked; at other times she considered him merely ineffectual and defeated.[45] However, she revered Christ as the quintessentially good man,[46] she had great respect for the literary, pictorial, and architectural manifestations of the Christian ethos, and she considered faith a valid tool to grapple with the conundrums of life and the mysteries of the cosmos.[47] Although her writings are full of references to the Bible and ecclesiastical history, she was essentially anti-doctrinaire and occasionally blasphemous. In 1926 she expressed the unorthodox belief that "Christianity must be regarded not as a final revelation but as a phase of revelation."[48] Moreover, she rejected specific articles of belief such as the virgin birth, Original sin, the Atonement, and Providence. Her contribution to Virginia Woolf's Hogarth Letters Series, Letter to a Grandfather (1933), is a declaration of "my faith, which seems to some unfaith"[49] disguised as philosophical fiction. Written in the midst of the Great Depression, Letter to a Grandfather traces the progressive degeneration of the notion of Providence through the ages, concluding skeptically that "the redemptive power of divine grace no longer seemed credible, nor very respectable in the arbitrary performance that was claimed for it."[50] As for the Atonement, Black Lamb and Grey Falcon is in part meant as a refutation of that very doctrine, which she saw as having sparked a fatal obsession with sacrifice throughout the Christian era and, specifically, as having prompted Neville Chamberlain to formulate his policy of appeasement, which she vehemently opposed. She wrote:

All our Western thought is founded on this repulsive pretence that pain is the proper price of any good thing ... [Augustine] developed a theory of the Atonement which was pure nonsense, yet had the power to convince ... This monstrous theory supposes that God was angry with man for his sins and that He wanted to punish him for these, not in any way that might lead to his reformation, but simply by inflicting pain on him; and that He allowed Christ to suffer this pain instead of man and thereafter was willing on certain terms to treat man as if he had not committed these sins. This theory flouts reason at all points, for it is not possible that a just God should forgive people who are wicked because another person who was good endured agony by being nailed to a cross.[51]

World War II shocked her into a more conventional belief: "I believe if people are looking for the truth, the truth of the Christian religion will come out and meet them."[52] In the early 1950s, she thought she had a mystical revelation in France and actively tried to convert to Catholicism.[53] There was a precedent in her family for this action, as her sister, Letitia, had earlier converted to Catholicism, thereby causing quite a stir, but West's attempt was short-lived, and she confessed to a friend: "I could not go on with being a Catholic ... I don't want, I can't bear to, become a Graham Greene and Evelyn Waugh, and I cannot believe that I am required to pay such a price for salvation."[54] Her writings of the 1960s and early 1970s again betray a profound mistrust towards God: "The case against religion is the responsibility of God for the sufferings of mankind, which makes it impossible to believe the good things said about Him in the Bible, and consequently to believe anything it says about Him."[55]

Alongside her fluctuating Christianity, West was fascinated with Manichaeanism.[56] She describes the Manichean idea that the world is a mixture of two primeval kingdoms, one of light the other of darkness, as an "extremely useful conception of life" affirming that a "fusion of light and darkness" is "the essential human character."[57] On the other hand, West criticised "the strictly literal mind of the founder [of Manichaeanism] and his followers" and what she perceived as the meanness of Christian heretics who adopted Manichaean ideas.[58] West states that "the whole of modern history could be deduced from the popularity of this heresy in Western Europe: its inner sourness, its preference for hate over love and for war over peace, its courage about dying, its cowardice about living." Regarding the suppression of Manichaean heresies by the Christian authorities West says that whilst "it is our tendency to sympathise with the hunted hare... much that we read of Western European heretics makes us suspect that here the quarry was less of a hare than a priggish skunk."[58] Nonetheless, Manichean influence persists in an unpublished draft of West's own memoirs where she writes: "I had almost no possibility of holding faith of any religious kind except a belief in a wholly and finally defeated God, a hypothesis which I now accept but tried for a long time to reject, I could not face it."[59]

West's interest in Manichaeanism reflects her lifelong struggle with the question of how to deal with dualisms. At times she appears to favour the merging of opposites, for which Byzantium served as a model: "church and state, love and violence, life and death, were to be fused again as in Byzantium."[60] More dominant, however, was her tendency to view the tensions generated in the space between dualistic terms as life-sustaining and creative; hence, her aversion to homosexuality and her warning not to confuse the drive for feminist emancipation with the woman's desire to become like a man. Her insistence on the fundamental difference between men and women reveals her essentialism,[61] but it also bespeaks her innate Manichaean sensibility. She wanted respect and equal rights for women, but at the same time she required that women retain their specifically feminine qualities, notably an affinity with life: "Men have a disposition to violence; women have not. If one says that men are on the side of death, women on the side of life, one seems to be making an accusation against men. One is not doing that."[62] One reason why she does not want to make an accusation against men is that they are simply playing their assigned role in a flawed universe. Only love can alleviate destructive aspects of the sex-antagonism: "I loathe the way the two cancers of sadism and masochism eat into the sexual life of humanity, so that the one lifts the lash and the other offers blood to the blow, and both are drunken with the beastly pleasure of misery and do not proceed with love's business of building a shelter from the cruelty of the universe."[63] In addition to the operations of love, female emancipation is crucial to removing the moral, professional, and social stigma associated with the notion of the "weaker sex," without trying to do away altogether with the temperamental and metaphysical aspects of the gender dualism itself.[citation needed] Thus, the "sex war" described in West's early short story "Indissoluble Matrimony" (1914) elevates the female character, Evadne, in the end because she accepts the terms of the contest without superficially trying to "win" that war.

The task of reconciling dualisms can also be seen in West's political propensities. As Bernard Schweizer has argued: "St. Augustine and Schopenhauer emphasized the fallenness of human life, implying a quietistic stance that could be confused with conservatism, while the Reclus brothers [famous French anarchists] urged her to revolt against such pessimistic determinism. West's characteristically heroic personal and historic vision is a result of these two contending forces."[64] West's conviction that humanity will only fulfill its highest potentials if it adheres to the principle of process reflects the same preoccupation: "Process is her most encompassing doctrine," states Peter Wolfe. "Reconciling her dualism, it captures the best aspects of the male and female principles."[65]

Cultural references Edit

Long time book reviewer and senior editor at Time, Whittaker Chambers, considered West "a novelist of note ... a distinguished literary critic ... above all ... one of the greatest of living journalists."[5]

Virginia Woolf questioned Rebecca West being labelled as an "arrant feminist" because she offended men by saying they are snobs in chapter two of A Room of One's Own: "[W]hy was Miss West an arrant feminist for making a possibly true if uncomplimentary statement about the other sex?"

Bill Moyers's interview "A Visit With Dame Rebecca West," recorded in her London home when she was 89, was aired by PBS in July 1981. In a review of the interview, John O'Connor wrote that "Dame Rebecca emerges as a formidable presence. When she finds something or somebody disagreeable, the adjective suddenly becomes withering."[66]

West's first novel, The Return of the Soldier, was turned into a major motion picture in 1982, directed by Alan Bridges, starring Alan Bates, Glenda Jackson, and Julie Christie. More recently, an adaptation of The Return of the Soldier for the stage by Kelly Younger titled Once a Marine took West's theme of shell-shock-induced amnesia and applied it to a soldier returning from the war in Iraq with PTSD.

There have been two plays about Rebecca West produced since 2004. That Woman: Rebecca West Remembers, by Carl Rollyson, Helen Macleod, and Anne Bobby, is a one-woman monologue in which an actress playing Rebecca West recounts her life through some of her most famous articles, letters, and books. Tosca's Kiss, a 2006 play by Kenneth Jupp, retells West's experience covering the Nuremberg trials for The New Yorker.

Robert D. Kaplan's influential book Balkan Ghosts (1994) is an homage to West's Black Lamb and Grey Falcon (1941), which he calls "this century's greatest travel book."[67]

In February 2006, BBC broadcast a radio version of West's novel The Fountain Overflows, dramatized by Robin Brook, in six 55-minute installments.

Bibliography Edit

Fiction Edit

  • 1914 – Indissoluble Matrimony, a controversial short story which was first published in Blast No. 1. Edited by Yolanda Morató for the Spanish publishing house Zut, it was also published in the Spanish edition of Blast No. 1 (Madrid: Juan March Foundation, 2010). This novella challenges many issues about feminism and women's involvement in politics in pre-war Britain.
  • 1918 – The Return of the Soldier, the first World War I novel written by a woman, about a shell-shocked, amnesiac soldier returning from World War I in hopes of being reunited with his first love, a working-class woman, instead of continuing to live with his upper-class wife.
  • 1922 – The Judge, a brooding, passionate novel combining Freudian Oedipal themes with suffragism and an existential take on cosmic absurdity.
  • 1929 – Harriet Hume, a modernist story about a piano-playing prodigy and her obsessive lover, a corrupt politician.
  • 1935 – The Harsh Voice: Four Short Novels, contains the short story "The Salt of the Earth," featuring Alice Pemberton, whose obsessive altruism becomes so smothering that her husband plots her murder. This was adapted for The Alfred Hitchcock Hour as "The Paragon" starring Joan Fontaine (season 1, episode 20) in 1963.[68] An additional story from the collection, "There is No Conversation", is the tale of a romance as told in hindsight by both parties, one a caddish Frenchman and the other a coarse American woman. This story was adapted for an hour-long radio drama in 1950 on NBC University Theatre and featured a commentary on West's story and writing skills by Katherine Anne Porter.
  • 1936 – The Thinking Reed, a novel about the corrupting influence of wealth even on originally decent people. Perhaps a disguised self-critique of her own elegant lifestyle.
  • 1956 – The Fountain Overflows, a semi-autobiographical novel weaving a fascinating cultural, historical, and psychological tapestry of the first decade of the 20th century, reflected through the prism of the gifted, eccentric Aubrey family.
  • 1966 – The Birds Fall Down, spy thriller based on the deeds of the historical double agent Yevno Azef.[69]
  • 1984 – This Real Night, sequel to The Fountain Overflows published posthumously
  • 1985 – Cousin Rosamund, final, unfinished installment of the "Aubrey Trilogy" published posthumously[70]
  • 1986 – Sunflower, published posthumously, about a tense love-relationship between an actress and a politician, reminiscent of West's relationship with H. G. Wells.
  • 2002 – The Sentinel, edited by Kathryn Laing and published posthumously, West's very first extended piece of fiction, an unfinished novel about the suffragist struggle in Britain, including grim scenes of female incarceration and force-feeding.

Non-fiction Edit

  • 1916 – Henry James
  • 1928 – The Strange Necessity: Essays and Reviews, a blend of modernist literary criticism and cognitive science, including a long essay explaining why West disliked James Joyce's Ulysses, though she judged it an important book
  • 1931 – Ending in Earnest: A Literary Log
  • 1932 – Arnold Bennett Himself, John Day
  • 1933 – St. Augustine, first psycho-biography of the Christian Church Father
  • 1934 – The Modern Rake's Progress (co-authored with cartoonist David Low)
  • 1941 – Black Lamb and Grey Falcon, a 1,181-page classic of travel literature, giving an account of Balkan history and ethnography, and the significance of Nazism, structured around her trip to Yugoslavia in 1937
  • 1949 – The Meaning of Treason , edit new 1964 – The New Meaning of Treason
  • 1955 – A Train of Powder
  • 1958 – The Court and the Castle: some treatments of a recurring theme, excellent revisionist interpretations of literary classics, including Hamlet and Kafka's stories
  • 1963 – The Vassall Affair
  • 1982 – 1900, cultural history and fascinating "thick description" of this pivotal year
  • 1982 – The Young Rebecca, West's early, radical journalism for The Freewoman and Clarion, edited by Jane Marcus
  • 1987 – Family Memories: An Autobiographical Journey, West's autobiographical musings which remained unpublished during her life, assembled and edited by Faith Evans
  • 2000 – The Selected Letters of Rebecca West, edited by Bonnie Kime Scott
  • 2003 – Survivors in Mexico,[71] posthumous work about West's two trips to Mexico in 1966 and 1969, edited by Bernard Schweizer
  • 2005 – Woman as Artist and Thinker, re-issues of some of West's best essays, together with her short-story "Parthenope"
  • 2010 – The Essential Rebecca West: Uncollected Prose,[72]

Select criticism and biography Edit

  • Wolfe, Peter (1 November 1971). Rebecca West: artist and thinker. Southern Illinois University Press. ISBN 978-0-8093-0483-7.
  • Deakin, Motley F. (1980). Rebecca West. Twayne Authors. Twayne. ISBN 978-0-8057-6788-9.
  • Orel, Harold (1986). The literary achievement of Rebecca West. Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-333-23672-7.
  • Glendinning, Victoria (1987). Rebecca West: A Life. Knopf. ISBN 0394539354.
  • Rollyson, Carl E. (1996). Rebecca West: a life. Scribner. ISBN 0684194309.
  • Rollyson, Carl (March 2007) [1998]. The Literary Legacy of Rebecca West. iUniverse. ISBN 978-0-595-43804-4.
  • Norton, Ann V. (2000). Paradoxical Feminism: The Novels of Rebecca West. International Scholars Publications. ISBN 978-1-57309-392-7.
  • Schweizer, Bernard (2002). Rebecca West: heroism, rebellion, and the female epic. Greenwood. ISBN 978-0-313-32360-7.
  • Rollyson, Carl (2005). Rebecca West and the God That Failed: Essays. iUniverse. ISBN 978-0-595-36227-1.
  • Schweizer, Bernard, ed. (2006). Rebecca West Today: Contemporary Critical Approaches. University of Delaware Press. ISBN 978-0-87413-950-1.

References Edit

  1. ^ The London Gazette, 3 June 1949, Supplement: 38628, p. 2804.
  2. ^ The London Gazette, 30 December 1958, Supplement: 41589, p. 10.
  3. ^ Encyclopedia Britannica, 17 December 2018
  4. ^ Glendinning 1987, p. 9
  5. ^ a b c d e Chambers, Whittaker (8 December 1947). "Circles of Perdition: The Meaning of Treason". Time. Retrieved 26 March 2017.
  6. ^ Glendinning 1987, pp. 21–22
  7. ^ Rollyson 1996, p. 29
  8. ^ West, Rebecca (22 January 1916). "The World's Worst Failure". The New Republic.
  9. ^ Rollyson 1996, pp. 418–27
  10. ^ "Archives Hub". Archives Hub. Retrieved 4 April 2012.
  11. ^ West, Rebecca (19 September 1912). "Marriage". The Freewoman a Weekly Humanist Review. 2 (44): 346–348 – via Modernist Journals Project.
  12. ^ Ray, Gordon N. H.G. Wells & Rebecca West (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1974), pp. 1–32
  13. ^ Howeson, Louise (5 November 2022). "The house in Leigh where Dame Rebecca West lived with HG Wells' love child". Eastern Daily Press. Retrieved 7 November 2022.
  14. ^ Gibb, Lorna The Extraordinary Life of Rebecca West (Berkeley, CA: Counterpoint, 2014), pp. 66, 70
  15. ^ Rollyson 1996, pp. 100, 115
  16. ^ Schlesinger, Arthur Jr. (April 1997). "A Man From Mars". The Atlantic. pp. 113–118.
  17. ^ a b c Linda Charlton, "Dame Rebecca West Dies in London, The New York Times, 16 March 1983.
  18. ^ Nottingham Evening Post, 4 August 1924, p.3.
  19. ^ a b c Gibb, Lorna (2013). West's World: The Life and Times of Rebecca West. London: Macmillan. p. contents. ISBN 978-0230771499.
  20. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter W" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
  21. ^ "Lingua Franca Book Review". linguafranca.mirror.theinfo.org.
  22. ^ a b "Rebecca West and the Flowers of Evil". www.newenglishreview.org.
  23. ^ Rollyson 1996, pp. 353–9
  24. ^ Rollyson 1996, pp. 413–4
  25. ^ Jane Marcus, The Young Rebecca: Writings of Rebecca West 1911–17, Indiana University Press, 1982, p. x; Bonnie Kime Scott, Refiguring Modernism (Vol. 1), Indiana University Press, 1995, p. xli.
  26. ^ a b Rollyson 1996, p. 427
  27. ^ . Necropolis Notables. The Brookwood Cemetery Society. Archived from the original on 11 June 2011. Retrieved 23 February 2007.
  28. ^ "Six Scotswomen 'overlooked' by history to be honoured". The Scotsman. Retrieved 28 April 2020.
  29. ^ Schweizer 2006, Rollyson, Carl p. 10
  30. ^ Rollyson 1996, p. 25
  31. ^ Rollyson 1996, p. 286
  32. ^ Rollyson 2005, pp. 51–52
  33. ^ West, Rebecca (1982). Marcus, Jane (ed.). The young Rebecca: writings of Rebecca West, 1911–17. Indiana University Press. pp. 108–110, 206–9, 243–62. ISBN 978-0-253-23101-7.
  34. ^ Rollyson 2005, pp. 51–57
  35. ^ Glendinning 1987, pp. 105–8 Rollyson 2005, p. 53
  36. ^ Rebecca West, Introduction to Emma Goldman's My Disillusionment with Russia, Doubleday, 1923
  37. ^ Rebecca West, "The men we sacrificed to Stalin," Sunday Telegraph, n.d.
  38. ^ It was published posthumously in The Only Poet (1992), edited by Antonia Till, Virago, pp. 167–78.
  39. ^ West, Rebecca (21 December 2010). The Only Poet: And Short Stories. Open Road Media. ISBN 9781453206867 – via Google Books.
  40. ^ Book Review, West, Rebecca (1951) "Review of A Generation on Trial: U.S.A. v. Alger Hiss by Alistair Cooke," University of Chicago Law Review: Vol. 18: Iss. 3, p. 662-677. Article 18.
  41. ^ Rebecca West, "McCarthyism," U.S. News & World Report, 22 May 1953; "Miss West Files and Answer," The Herald Tribune, 22 June 1953, p. 12; "Memo from Rebecca West: More about McCarthyism," U.S. News & World Report, 3 July 1953, pp. 34–35
  42. ^ Rebecca West, "Margaret Thatcher: The Politician as Woman," Vogue, September 1979
  43. ^ Rollyson 2005, p. 54
  44. ^ London Metropolitan Archives, Bryanston Square St Mary, Register of Baptism, p89/mry2, Item 040
  45. ^ Schweizer 2002, pp. 72–76
  46. ^ West, Rebecca (1994). Black Lamb and Grey Falcon. Penguin. p. 827. ISBN 9780140188479.
  47. ^ Rebecca West, "My Religion" in My Religion, edited by Arnold Bennett, Appleton, 1926. pp. 21–22
  48. ^ Rebecca West My Religion, pp. 22–23
  49. ^ West, Rebecca (1933). Letter to a Grandfather. Hogarth. p. 43.
  50. ^ West 1933, p. 30
  51. ^ West 1994, pp. 827–8
  52. ^ Rebecca West, "Can Christian faith survive this war?" interview conducted by the Daily Express, 17 January 1945
  53. ^ Glendinning 1987, p. 221
  54. ^ Rebecca West, Letter dated 22 June 1952, to Margaret and Evelyn Hutchinson. Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library
  55. ^ Rebecca West, Survivors in Mexico, Yale, 2003, p. 81
  56. ^ Schweizer 2002, p. 71
  57. ^ West 1994, pp. 172, 186
  58. ^ a b West 1994, pp. 172
  59. ^ Rebecca West, unpublished typescript, McFarlin Special Collections, University of Tulsa
  60. ^ West 1994, p. 579
  61. ^ Bonnie Kime Scott, Refiguring Modernism (Vol. 2), p. 161
  62. ^ Rebecca West, Woman as Artist and Thinker, iUniverse, 2005, p. 19
  63. ^ West 1933, p. 34
  64. ^ Schweizer 2002, p. 141
  65. ^ Peter Wolfe, Rebecca West: Artist and Thinker, Southern Illinois, 1971, p. 12
  66. ^ John J. O'Connor, "Moyers and a Provocative Dame Rebecca West." The New York Times, 8 July 1981.
  67. ^ Robert, D. Kaplan, Balkan Ghosts (1994), p. 3
  68. ^ Opening credit reads, "From a story by Rebecca West."
  69. ^ First published in the UK by Macmillan in 1966, and published in the US by Viking Press also in 1966.
  70. ^ From a copy of Cousin Rosamund with an afterword by Victoria Glendinning; Macmillan, 1995.
  71. ^ Rebecca West; Edited and Introduced by Bernard Schweizer (18 October 2004). "Survivors in Mexico – West, Rebecca; Schweizer, Bernard – Yale University Press". Yalepress.yale.edu. Retrieved 4 April 2012. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  72. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 February 2011. Retrieved 23 November 2010.

External links Edit

  • Portraits of Rebecca West at the National Portrait Gallery, London  
  • Works by Rebecca West at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Rebecca West at Internet Archive
  • Works by Rebecca West at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Rebecca West Papers. General Collection, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University.
  • New York Times obituary, 16 March 1983
  • Petri Liukkonen. "Rebecca West". Books and Writers.
  • "Archival material relating to Rebecca West". UK National Archives.  
  • Marina Warner (Spring 1981). "Rebecca West, The Art of Fiction No. 65". The Paris Review. Spring 1981 (79).
  • Rebecca West at Library of Congress, with 97 library catalogue records
  • Rebecca West Collection. General Collection, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University.
  • Rebecca West Papers review Hitler's Children. . Lib.utulsa.edu. Archived from the original on 28 July 2009. Retrieved 20 June 2015.

rebecca, west, ibsen, character, rosmersholm, dame, cicily, isabel, fairfield, december, 1892, march, 1983, known, dame, british, author, journalist, literary, critic, travel, writer, author, wrote, many, genres, west, reviewed, books, times, york, herald, tri. For the Ibsen character see Rosmersholm Dame Cicily Isabel Fairfield DBE 21 December 1892 15 March 1983 known as Rebecca West or Dame Rebecca West was a British author journalist literary critic and travel writer An author who wrote in many genres West reviewed books for The Times the New York Herald Tribune The Sunday Telegraph and The New Republic and she was a correspondent for The Bookman Her major works include Black Lamb and Grey Falcon 1941 on the history and culture of Yugoslavia A Train of Powder 1955 her coverage of the Nuremberg trials published originally in The New Yorker The Meaning of Treason first published as a magazine article in 1945 and then expanded to the book in 1947 later The New Meaning of Treason 1964 a study of the trial of the British fascist William Joyce and others The Return of the Soldier 1918 a modernist World War I novel and the Aubrey trilogy of autobiographical novels The Fountain Overflows 1956 This Real Night published posthumously in 1984 and Cousin Rosamund 1985 Time called her indisputably the world s number one woman writer in 1947 She was made CBE in 1949 1 and DBE in 1959 2 in each case the citation reads writer and literary critic She took the pseudonym Rebecca West from the rebellious young heroine in Rosmersholm by Henrik Ibsen She was a recipient of the Benson Medal DameRebecca WestDBEPortrait of West by Madame YevondeBornCicily Isabel Fairfield 1892 12 21 21 December 1892London EnglandDied15 March 1983 1983 03 15 aged 90 London EnglandOccupationWriterChildrenAnthony West Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Affairs and motherhood 1 2 Early career and marriage 1 3 Later life 1 4 Old age 1 5 Relationship with her son 1 6 Death 2 Politics 3 Religion 4 Cultural references 5 Bibliography 5 1 Fiction 5 2 Non fiction 5 3 Select criticism and biography 6 References 7 External linksBiography EditRebecca West was born Cicily Isabel Fairfield 3 in 1892 in London England and grew up in a home full of intellectual stimulation political debate lively company books and music 4 Her mother Isabella a Scotswoman was an accomplished pianist but did not pursue a musical career after her marriage to Charles Fairfield The Anglo Irish Charles had been a Confederate stretcher bearer at the siege of Richmond in the US Civil War 5 and had returned to the UK to become a journalist of considerable reputation but financial incompetence He deserted his family when Cicily was eight years old He never rejoined them and died impoverished and alone in a boarding house in Liverpool in 1906 when Cicily was 14 6 The rest of the family moved to Edinburgh Scotland where Cicily was educated at George Watson s Ladies College She had to leave school in 1907 due to a bout of tuberculosis 7 She chose not to return after recovering from the illness later describing her schooling at Watson s as akin to a prison 8 West had two older sisters Letitia Lettie who was the best educated of the three became one of the first fully qualified female doctors in Britain as well as a barrister at the Inns of Court Winifred Winnie the middle sister married Norman Macleod Principal Assistant Secretary in the Admiralty and eventually director general of Greenwich Hospital Winnie s two children Alison and Norman became closely involved in Rebecca s life as she got older 9 Alison Macleod would achieve a literary career of her own 10 West trained as an actress in London taking the name Rebecca West from the rebellious young heroine in Rosmersholm by Henrik Ibsen 5 She and Lettie became involved in the women s suffrage movement participating in street protests Meanwhile West worked as a journalist for the feminist weekly Freewoman and the Clarion drumming up support for the suffragette cause 5 Affairs and motherhood Edit In September 1912 West accused the famously libertine writer H G Wells of being the Old Maid among novelists This was part of a provocative review of his novel Marriage published in Freewoman 11 an obscure and short lived feminist weekly review The review attracted Wells s interest and an invitation to lunch at his home The two writers became lovers in late 1913 despite Wells being both married and twenty six years older than West 12 Their 10 year relationship produced a son Anthony West born on 4 August 1914 Wells was behind her move to Marine Parade Leigh on Sea in Essex where she lived between 1917 and 1919 13 14 Their friendship lasted until Wells s death in 1946 West is also said to have had relationships with Charlie Chaplin newspaper magnate Lord Beaverbrook 15 and journalist John Gunther 16 Early career and marriage Edit West established her reputation as a spokeswoman for feminist and socialist causes and as a critic turning out essays and reviews for The New Republic New York Herald Tribune New York American New Statesman The Daily Telegraph and many more newspapers and magazines George Bernard Shaw said in 1916 that Rebecca West could handle a pen as brilliantly as ever I could and much more savagely 17 During the 1920s West began a lifelong habit of visits to the United States to give lectures meet artists and get involved in the political scene She was a great friend of the novelist G B Stern and Stern and Clemence Dane stayed with her in America in 1924 18 There she befriended CIA founder Allen Dulles Charlie Chaplin Harold Ross of The New Yorker and historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr among many other significant figures of the day Her lifelong fascination with the United States culminated in 1948 when President Truman presented her with the Women s Press Club Award for Journalism calling her the world s best reporter 17 In 1930 at the age of 37 she married a banker Henry Maxwell Andrews and they remained nominally together despite one public affair just before his death in 1968 19 West s writing brought her considerable wealth and by 1940 she owned a Rolls Royce and a grand country estate Ibstone House in the Chiltern Hills of southern England During World War II West housed Yugoslav refugees in the spare rooms of her blacked out manor and she used the grounds as a small dairy farm and vegetable plot agricultural pursuits that continued long after the war had ended Later life Edit As West grew older she turned to broader political and social issues including Mankind s propensity to inflict violent injustice on itself Before and during World War II West travelled widely collecting material for books on travel and politics In 1936 38 she made three trips to Yugoslavia a country she came to love seeing it as the nexus of European history since the late Middle Ages Her non fiction masterpiece Black Lamb and Grey Falcon is an amalgamation of her impressions from these trips New York Times reviewer Katherine Woods wrote In two almost incredibly full packed volumes one of the most gifted and searching of modern English novelists and critics has produced not only the magnification and intensification of the travel book form but one may say its apotheosis West was assigned by Ross magazine to cover the Nuremberg trials for The New Yorker an experience she memorialized in the book A Train of Powder In 1950 she was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 20 She also went to South Africa in 1960 to report on apartheid in a series of articles for The Sunday Times particularly regarding a prominent trial for a seditious uprising aiming to establish Communist rule She accidentally misidentified a South African judge 21 for some questions put by another judge and was sued for libel along with the Sunday Times whose editor Harry Hodson failed to support West 22 She wrote My problem is complicated by the fact that the defence the people who would naturally be against the Judge and for me are mostly Communist and won t lift a finger for me It worries me a lot It s so hard to work with this hanging over me She felt her only support was her friends the anti apartheid politician Bernard Friedman and his wife with whom she stayed in Johannesburg I will get over this case But it isn t easy to feel that some people are for no reason that you know of possessed by an intention to ruin you and I also felt I was letting you down in South Africa I have been deeply grateful for all the kindness and sympathy you have shown me and I thought of Tall Trees as a warm place in a chilly world 22 She travelled extensively well into old age In 1966 and 1969 she undertook two long journeys to Mexico becoming fascinated by the indigenous culture of the country and its mestizo population She stayed with actor Romney Brent in Mexico City and with Katherine Kit Wright a long time friend in Cuernavaca 23 Old age Edit Her husband became both sleepy and inattentive as he got older The sleepiness led to a car accident where no one was hurt but Henry was charged with dangerous driving He became obsessed with the Norwegian ballerina Gerd Larsen he would refuse to travel with West instead preferring to return to London to be with Larsen West initially considered this to be purely her husband s infatuation but came to think that Larsen was driven by money At her husband s funeral West had the upsetting problem of Larsen s request to be amongst the mourners even though she had only known him for 18 months Henry s will left 5 000 for Larsen 19 After her husband s death in 1968 West discovered that he had been unfaithful with other women 19 After she was widowed she moved to London where she bought a spacious apartment overlooking Hyde Park Unfortunately it was next door to the Iranian embassy During the May 1980 incident West then 87 had to be evacuated 24 In the last two decades of her life West kept up a very active social life making friends with Martha Gellhorn Doris Lessing Bernard Levin comedian Frankie Howerd and film star and director Warren Beatty who filmed her for the production Reds a biography of journalist John Reed and his connection with the Russian Revolution She also spent time with scholars such as Jane Marcus and Bonnie Kime Scott who began to chronicle her feminist career and varied work 25 She wrote at an unabated pace penning masterful reviews for The Sunday Telegraph publishing her last novel The Birds Fall Down 1966 and overseeing the film version of the story by BBC in 1978 The last work published in her lifetime was 1900 1982 1900 explored the last year of Queen Victoria s long reign which was a watershed in many cultural and political respects At the same time West worked on sequels to her autobiographically inspired novel The Fountain Overflows 1957 although she had written the equivalent of two more novels for the planned trilogy she was never satisfied with the sequels and did not publish them She also tinkered at great length with an autobiography without coming to closure and started scores of stories without finishing them Much of her work from the late phase of her life was published posthumously including Family Memories 1987 This Real Night 1984 Cousin Rosamund 1985 The Only Poet 1992 and Survivors in Mexico 2003 Unfinished works from her early period notably Sunflower 1986 and The Sentinel 2001 were also published after her death so that her oeuvre was augmented by about one third by posthumous publications Relationship with her son Edit West s relationship with her son Anthony West was not a happy one The rancour between them came to a head when Anthony himself a gifted writer his father s biographer H G Wells Aspects of a Life 1984 and a novelist published Heritage 1955 a fictionalised autobiography West never forgave her son for depicting in Heritage the relationship between an illegitimate son and his two world famous unmarried parents and for portraying the mother in unflattering terms The depiction of West s alter ego in Heritage as a deceitful unloving actress West had trained as an actress in her youth and poor caregiver so wounded West that she broke off relations with her son and threatened to sue any publisher who would bring out Heritage in England She successfully suppressed an English edition of the novel which was only published there after her death in 1984 Although there were temporary rapprochements between her and Anthony a state of alienation persisted between them causing West grief until her dying hour She fretted about her son s absence from her deathbed but when asked whether he should be sent for answered perhaps not if he hates me so much 26 Death Edit nbsp West s grave in Brookwood CemeteryWest suffered from failing eyesight and high blood pressure in the late 1970s and became increasingly frail Her last months were mostly spent in bed at times delirious and other times lucid she complained that she was dying too slowly 26 She died on 15 March 1983 and is buried at Brookwood Cemetery Woking 27 Upon hearing of her death William Shawn then editor in chief of The New Yorker said Rebecca West was one of the giants and will have a lasting place in English literature No one in this century wrote more dazzling prose or had more wit or looked at the intricacies of human character and the ways of the world more intelligently 17 She is honoured with a blue plaque at Hope Park Square Edinburgh her childhood home which also provided the setting for her novel The Judge 28 Politics EditWest grew up in a home filled with discussions of world affairs Her father was a journalist who often involved himself in controversial issues He brought home Russian revolutionaries and other political activists and their debates helped to form West s sensibility which took shape in novels such as The Birds Fall Down set in pre revolution Russia 29 But the crucial event that moulded West s politics was the Dreyfus affair 30 The impressionable Rebecca learned early on just how powerful was the will to persecute minorities and to subject individuals to unreasonable suspicion based on flimsy evidence and mass frenzy 31 West had a keen understanding of the psychology of politics how movements and causes could sustain themselves on the profound need to believe or disbelieve in a core of values even in contradiction of reality 32 It would seem that her father s ironic sceptical temper so penetrated her sensibility that she could not regard any body of ideas as other than a starting point for argument Although she was a militant feminist and active suffragette and published a perceptive and admiring profile of Emmeline Pankhurst West also criticised the tactics of Pankhurst s daughter Christabel and the sometimes doctrinaire aspects of the Pankhursts Women s Social and Political Union WSPU 33 The first major test of West s political outlook was the Bolshevik Revolution Many on the left saw it as the beginning of a new better world and the end of the crimes of capitalism West regarded herself as a member of the left having attended Fabian socialist summer schools as a girl Yet to West both the Revolution and the revolutionaries were suspect Even before the Bolsheviks took power in October 1917 West expressed her doubts that events in Russia could serve as a model for socialists in Britain or anywhere else 5 34 West paid a heavy price for her cool reaction to the Russian Revolution her positions increasingly isolated her When Emma Goldman visited Britain in 1924 after seeing Bolshevik violence firsthand West was exasperated that British intellectuals ignored Goldman s testimony and her warning against Bolshevik tyranny 35 For all her censures of communism however West was hardly an uncritical supporter of Western democracies Thus in 1919 1920 she excoriated the US government for deporting Goldman and for the infamous Palmer Raids 36 She was also appalled at the failure of Western democracies to come to the aid of Republican Spain and she gave money to the Republican cause A staunch anti fascist West attacked both the Conservative governments of her own country for appeasing Adolf Hitler and her colleagues on the left for their pacifism Neither side in her view understood the evil Nazism posed Unlike many on the left she also distrusted Joseph Stalin To West Stalin had a criminal mentality that communism facilitated 37 She was outraged when the Allies switched their loyalties as to Yugoslav resistance movements by deciding in 1943 to start backing the Communist led Partisans led by Tito in Yugoslavia thus abandoning their support of Draza Mihailovic s Chetniks whom she considered the legitimate Yugoslav resistance She expressed her feelings and opinions on the Allies switch in Yugoslavia by writing the satirical short story titled Madame Sara s Magic Crystal but decided not to publish it upon discussion with Orme Sargent Assistant Under Secretary of State at the Foreign Office 38 Writing in her diary West mentioned that Sargent had persuaded her that the recognition of Tito was made by reason of British military necessities and for no other reason Following Sargent s claim she described her decision not to publish the story as an expression of personal willingness to sacrifice myself to the needs of my country 39 After the war West s anti Communism hardened as she saw Poland Czechoslovakia Hungary and other Eastern and Central European states succumb to Soviet domination In 1951 she provided a critical review of Alistair Cooke s sympathetic portrait of Alger Hiss during his postwar trials from a classical liberalism point of view 40 It is not surprising in this context that West reacted to US Senator Joseph McCarthy differently from her colleagues They saw a demagogue terrorising liberals and leftists with baseless accusations of Communist conspiracy West saw an oaf blundering into the minefield of Communist subversion For her McCarthy was right to pursue Communists with fervour even if his methods were roughshod though her mild reaction to McCarthy provoked powerful revulsion among those on the left and dismay even among anti Communist liberals She refused however to amend her views 41 Although West s anti communism earned the high regard of conservatives she never considered herself one of them In postwar Britain West voted Labour and welcomed the Labour landslide of 1945 but spoke out against domination of the Labour Party by British trade unions and thought left wing politicians such as Michael Foot unimpressive She had mixed feelings about the Callaghan government West admired Margaret Thatcher not for Thatcher s policies but for Thatcher s achievement in rising to the top of a male dominated sphere 42 She admired Thatcher s willingness to stand up to trade union bullying In the end West s anti communism remained the centrepiece of her politics because she so consistently challenged the communists as legitimate foes of the status quo in capitalist countries In West s view communism like fascism was merely a form of authoritarianism Communists were under party discipline and therefore could never speak for themselves West was a supreme example of an intellectual who spoke for herself no matter how her comments might injure her Indeed few writers explicitly acknowledged how much West s embrace of unpopular positions hurt her on the left A whole generation of writers abandoned West and refused to read her as Doris Lessing suggested 43 Religion EditWest s parents had her baptised into the Church of England two months after birth 44 and she considered herself a Christian though an unconventional believer At times she found God to be wicked at other times she considered him merely ineffectual and defeated 45 However she revered Christ as the quintessentially good man 46 she had great respect for the literary pictorial and architectural manifestations of the Christian ethos and she considered faith a valid tool to grapple with the conundrums of life and the mysteries of the cosmos 47 Although her writings are full of references to the Bible and ecclesiastical history she was essentially anti doctrinaire and occasionally blasphemous In 1926 she expressed the unorthodox belief that Christianity must be regarded not as a final revelation but as a phase of revelation 48 Moreover she rejected specific articles of belief such as the virgin birth Original sin the Atonement and Providence Her contribution to Virginia Woolf s Hogarth Letters Series Letter to a Grandfather 1933 is a declaration of my faith which seems to some unfaith 49 disguised as philosophical fiction Written in the midst of the Great Depression Letter to a Grandfather traces the progressive degeneration of the notion of Providence through the ages concluding skeptically that the redemptive power of divine grace no longer seemed credible nor very respectable in the arbitrary performance that was claimed for it 50 As for the Atonement Black Lamb and Grey Falcon is in part meant as a refutation of that very doctrine which she saw as having sparked a fatal obsession with sacrifice throughout the Christian era and specifically as having prompted Neville Chamberlain to formulate his policy of appeasement which she vehemently opposed She wrote All our Western thought is founded on this repulsive pretence that pain is the proper price of any good thing Augustine developed a theory of the Atonement which was pure nonsense yet had the power to convince This monstrous theory supposes that God was angry with man for his sins and that He wanted to punish him for these not in any way that might lead to his reformation but simply by inflicting pain on him and that He allowed Christ to suffer this pain instead of man and thereafter was willing on certain terms to treat man as if he had not committed these sins This theory flouts reason at all points for it is not possible that a just God should forgive people who are wicked because another person who was good endured agony by being nailed to a cross 51 World War II shocked her into a more conventional belief I believe if people are looking for the truth the truth of the Christian religion will come out and meet them 52 In the early 1950s she thought she had a mystical revelation in France and actively tried to convert to Catholicism 53 There was a precedent in her family for this action as her sister Letitia had earlier converted to Catholicism thereby causing quite a stir but West s attempt was short lived and she confessed to a friend I could not go on with being a Catholic I don t want I can t bear to become a Graham Greene and Evelyn Waugh and I cannot believe that I am required to pay such a price for salvation 54 Her writings of the 1960s and early 1970s again betray a profound mistrust towards God The case against religion is the responsibility of God for the sufferings of mankind which makes it impossible to believe the good things said about Him in the Bible and consequently to believe anything it says about Him 55 Alongside her fluctuating Christianity West was fascinated with Manichaeanism 56 She describes the Manichean idea that the world is a mixture of two primeval kingdoms one of light the other of darkness as an extremely useful conception of life affirming that a fusion of light and darkness is the essential human character 57 On the other hand West criticised the strictly literal mind of the founder of Manichaeanism and his followers and what she perceived as the meanness of Christian heretics who adopted Manichaean ideas 58 West states that the whole of modern history could be deduced from the popularity of this heresy in Western Europe its inner sourness its preference for hate over love and for war over peace its courage about dying its cowardice about living Regarding the suppression of Manichaean heresies by the Christian authorities West says that whilst it is our tendency to sympathise with the hunted hare much that we read of Western European heretics makes us suspect that here the quarry was less of a hare than a priggish skunk 58 Nonetheless Manichean influence persists in an unpublished draft of West s own memoirs where she writes I had almost no possibility of holding faith of any religious kind except a belief in a wholly and finally defeated God a hypothesis which I now accept but tried for a long time to reject I could not face it 59 West s interest in Manichaeanism reflects her lifelong struggle with the question of how to deal with dualisms At times she appears to favour the merging of opposites for which Byzantium served as a model church and state love and violence life and death were to be fused again as in Byzantium 60 More dominant however was her tendency to view the tensions generated in the space between dualistic terms as life sustaining and creative hence her aversion to homosexuality and her warning not to confuse the drive for feminist emancipation with the woman s desire to become like a man Her insistence on the fundamental difference between men and women reveals her essentialism 61 but it also bespeaks her innate Manichaean sensibility She wanted respect and equal rights for women but at the same time she required that women retain their specifically feminine qualities notably an affinity with life Men have a disposition to violence women have not If one says that men are on the side of death women on the side of life one seems to be making an accusation against men One is not doing that 62 One reason why she does not want to make an accusation against men is that they are simply playing their assigned role in a flawed universe Only love can alleviate destructive aspects of the sex antagonism I loathe the way the two cancers of sadism and masochism eat into the sexual life of humanity so that the one lifts the lash and the other offers blood to the blow and both are drunken with the beastly pleasure of misery and do not proceed with love s business of building a shelter from the cruelty of the universe 63 In addition to the operations of love female emancipation is crucial to removing the moral professional and social stigma associated with the notion of the weaker sex without trying to do away altogether with the temperamental and metaphysical aspects of the gender dualism itself citation needed Thus the sex war described in West s early short story Indissoluble Matrimony 1914 elevates the female character Evadne in the end because she accepts the terms of the contest without superficially trying to win that war The task of reconciling dualisms can also be seen in West s political propensities As Bernard Schweizer has argued St Augustine and Schopenhauer emphasized the fallenness of human life implying a quietistic stance that could be confused with conservatism while the Reclus brothers famous French anarchists urged her to revolt against such pessimistic determinism West s characteristically heroic personal and historic vision is a result of these two contending forces 64 West s conviction that humanity will only fulfill its highest potentials if it adheres to the principle of process reflects the same preoccupation Process is her most encompassing doctrine states Peter Wolfe Reconciling her dualism it captures the best aspects of the male and female principles 65 Cultural references EditLong time book reviewer and senior editor at Time Whittaker Chambers considered West a novelist of note a distinguished literary critic above all one of the greatest of living journalists 5 Virginia Woolf questioned Rebecca West being labelled as an arrant feminist because she offended men by saying they are snobs in chapter two of A Room of One s Own W hy was Miss West an arrant feminist for making a possibly true if uncomplimentary statement about the other sex Bill Moyers s interview A Visit With Dame Rebecca West recorded in her London home when she was 89 was aired by PBS in July 1981 In a review of the interview John O Connor wrote that Dame Rebecca emerges as a formidable presence When she finds something or somebody disagreeable the adjective suddenly becomes withering 66 West s first novel The Return of the Soldier was turned into a major motion picture in 1982 directed by Alan Bridges starring Alan Bates Glenda Jackson and Julie Christie More recently an adaptation of The Return of the Soldier for the stage by Kelly Younger titled Once a Marine took West s theme of shell shock induced amnesia and applied it to a soldier returning from the war in Iraq with PTSD There have been two plays about Rebecca West produced since 2004 That Woman Rebecca West Remembers by Carl Rollyson Helen Macleod and Anne Bobby is a one woman monologue in which an actress playing Rebecca West recounts her life through some of her most famous articles letters and books Tosca s Kiss a 2006 play by Kenneth Jupp retells West s experience covering the Nuremberg trials for The New Yorker Robert D Kaplan s influential book Balkan Ghosts 1994 is an homage to West s Black Lamb and Grey Falcon 1941 which he calls this century s greatest travel book 67 In February 2006 BBC broadcast a radio version of West s novel The Fountain Overflows dramatized by Robin Brook in six 55 minute installments Bibliography EditFiction Edit 1914 Indissoluble Matrimony a controversial short story which was first published in Blast No 1 Edited by Yolanda Morato for the Spanish publishing house Zut it was also published in the Spanish edition of Blast No 1 Madrid Juan March Foundation 2010 This novella challenges many issues about feminism and women s involvement in politics in pre war Britain 1918 The Return of the Soldier the first World War I novel written by a woman about a shell shocked amnesiac soldier returning from World War I in hopes of being reunited with his first love a working class woman instead of continuing to live with his upper class wife 1922 The Judge a brooding passionate novel combining Freudian Oedipal themes with suffragism and an existential take on cosmic absurdity 1929 Harriet Hume a modernist story about a piano playing prodigy and her obsessive lover a corrupt politician 1935 The Harsh Voice Four Short Novels contains the short story The Salt of the Earth featuring Alice Pemberton whose obsessive altruism becomes so smothering that her husband plots her murder This was adapted for The Alfred Hitchcock Hour as The Paragon starring Joan Fontaine season 1 episode 20 in 1963 68 An additional story from the collection There is No Conversation is the tale of a romance as told in hindsight by both parties one a caddish Frenchman and the other a coarse American woman This story was adapted for an hour long radio drama in 1950 on NBC University Theatre and featured a commentary on West s story and writing skills by Katherine Anne Porter 1936 The Thinking Reed a novel about the corrupting influence of wealth even on originally decent people Perhaps a disguised self critique of her own elegant lifestyle 1956 The Fountain Overflows a semi autobiographical novel weaving a fascinating cultural historical and psychological tapestry of the first decade of the 20th century reflected through the prism of the gifted eccentric Aubrey family 1966 The Birds Fall Down spy thriller based on the deeds of the historical double agent Yevno Azef 69 1984 This Real Night sequel to The Fountain Overflows published posthumously 1985 Cousin Rosamund final unfinished installment of the Aubrey Trilogy published posthumously 70 1986 Sunflower published posthumously about a tense love relationship between an actress and a politician reminiscent of West s relationship with H G Wells 2002 The Sentinel edited by Kathryn Laing and published posthumously West s very first extended piece of fiction an unfinished novel about the suffragist struggle in Britain including grim scenes of female incarceration and force feeding Non fiction Edit 1916 Henry James 1928 The Strange Necessity Essays and Reviews a blend of modernist literary criticism and cognitive science including a long essay explaining why West disliked James Joyce s Ulysses though she judged it an important book 1931 Ending in Earnest A Literary Log 1932 Arnold Bennett Himself John Day 1933 St Augustine first psycho biography of the Christian Church Father 1934 The Modern Rake s Progress co authored with cartoonist David Low 1941 Black Lamb and Grey Falcon a 1 181 page classic of travel literature giving an account of Balkan history and ethnography and the significance of Nazism structured around her trip to Yugoslavia in 1937 1949 The Meaning of Treason edit new 1964 The New Meaning of Treason 1955 A Train of Powder 1958 The Court and the Castle some treatments of a recurring theme excellent revisionist interpretations of literary classics including Hamlet and Kafka s stories 1963 The Vassall Affair 1982 1900 cultural history and fascinating thick description of this pivotal year 1982 The Young Rebecca West s early radical journalism for The Freewoman and Clarion edited by Jane Marcus 1987 Family Memories An Autobiographical Journey West s autobiographical musings which remained unpublished during her life assembled and edited by Faith Evans 2000 The Selected Letters of Rebecca West edited by Bonnie Kime Scott 2003 Survivors in Mexico 71 posthumous work about West s two trips to Mexico in 1966 and 1969 edited by Bernard Schweizer 2005 Woman as Artist and Thinker re issues of some of West s best essays together with her short story Parthenope 2010 The Essential Rebecca West Uncollected Prose 72 Select criticism and biography Edit Wolfe Peter 1 November 1971 Rebecca West artist and thinker Southern Illinois University Press ISBN 978 0 8093 0483 7 Deakin Motley F 1980 Rebecca West Twayne Authors Twayne ISBN 978 0 8057 6788 9 Orel Harold 1986 The literary achievement of Rebecca West Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 23672 7 Glendinning Victoria 1987 Rebecca West A Life Knopf ISBN 0394539354 Rollyson Carl E 1996 Rebecca West a life Scribner ISBN 0684194309 Rollyson Carl March 2007 1998 The Literary Legacy of Rebecca West iUniverse ISBN 978 0 595 43804 4 Norton Ann V 2000 Paradoxical Feminism The Novels of Rebecca West International Scholars Publications ISBN 978 1 57309 392 7 Schweizer Bernard 2002 Rebecca West heroism rebellion and the female epic Greenwood ISBN 978 0 313 32360 7 Rollyson Carl 2005 Rebecca West and the God That Failed Essays iUniverse ISBN 978 0 595 36227 1 Schweizer Bernard ed 2006 Rebecca West Today Contemporary Critical Approaches University of Delaware Press ISBN 978 0 87413 950 1 References Edit The London Gazette 3 June 1949 Supplement 38628 p 2804 The London Gazette 30 December 1958 Supplement 41589 p 10 Encyclopedia Britannica 17 December 2018 Glendinning 1987 p 9 a b c d e Chambers Whittaker 8 December 1947 Circles of Perdition The Meaning of Treason Time Retrieved 26 March 2017 Glendinning 1987 pp 21 22 Rollyson 1996 p 29 West Rebecca 22 January 1916 The World s Worst Failure The New Republic Rollyson 1996 pp 418 27 Archives Hub Archives Hub Retrieved 4 April 2012 West Rebecca 19 September 1912 Marriage The Freewoman a Weekly Humanist Review 2 44 346 348 via Modernist Journals Project Ray Gordon N H G Wells amp Rebecca West New Haven Yale University Press 1974 pp 1 32 Howeson Louise 5 November 2022 The house in Leigh where Dame Rebecca West lived with HG Wells love child Eastern Daily Press Retrieved 7 November 2022 Gibb Lorna The Extraordinary Life of Rebecca West Berkeley CA Counterpoint 2014 pp 66 70 Rollyson 1996 pp 100 115 Schlesinger Arthur Jr April 1997 A Man From Mars The Atlantic pp 113 118 a b c Linda Charlton Dame Rebecca West Dies in London The New York Times 16 March 1983 Nottingham Evening Post 4 August 1924 p 3 a b c Gibb Lorna 2013 West s World The Life and Times of Rebecca West London Macmillan p contents ISBN 978 0230771499 Book of Members 1780 2010 Chapter W PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved 29 July 2014 Lingua Franca Book Review linguafranca mirror theinfo org a b Rebecca West and the Flowers of Evil www newenglishreview org Rollyson 1996 pp 353 9 Rollyson 1996 pp 413 4 Jane Marcus The Young Rebecca Writings of Rebecca West 1911 17 Indiana University Press 1982 p x Bonnie Kime Scott Refiguring Modernism Vol 1 Indiana University Press 1995 p xli a b Rollyson 1996 p 427 Rebecca West Necropolis Notables The Brookwood Cemetery Society Archived from the original on 11 June 2011 Retrieved 23 February 2007 Six Scotswomen overlooked by history to be honoured The Scotsman Retrieved 28 April 2020 Schweizer 2006 Rollyson Carl p 10 Rollyson 1996 p 25 Rollyson 1996 p 286 Rollyson 2005 pp 51 52 West Rebecca 1982 Marcus Jane ed The young Rebecca writings of Rebecca West 1911 17 Indiana University Press pp 108 110 206 9 243 62 ISBN 978 0 253 23101 7 Rollyson 2005 pp 51 57 Glendinning 1987 pp 105 8 Rollyson 2005 p 53 Rebecca West Introduction to Emma Goldman s My Disillusionment with Russia Doubleday 1923 Rebecca West The men we sacrificed to Stalin Sunday Telegraph n d It was published posthumously in The Only Poet 1992 edited by Antonia Till Virago pp 167 78 West Rebecca 21 December 2010 The Only Poet And Short Stories Open Road Media ISBN 9781453206867 via Google Books Book Review West Rebecca 1951 Review of A Generation on Trial U S A v Alger Hiss by Alistair Cooke University of Chicago Law Review Vol 18 Iss 3 p 662 677 Article 18 Rebecca West McCarthyism U S News amp World Report 22 May 1953 Miss West Files and Answer The Herald Tribune 22 June 1953 p 12 Memo from Rebecca West More about McCarthyism U S News amp World Report 3 July 1953 pp 34 35 Rebecca West Margaret Thatcher The Politician as Woman Vogue September 1979 Rollyson 2005 p 54 London Metropolitan Archives Bryanston Square St Mary Register of Baptism p89 mry2 Item 040 Schweizer 2002 pp 72 76 West Rebecca 1994 Black Lamb and Grey Falcon Penguin p 827 ISBN 9780140188479 Rebecca West My Religion in My Religion edited by Arnold Bennett Appleton 1926 pp 21 22 Rebecca West My Religion pp 22 23 West Rebecca 1933 Letter to a Grandfather Hogarth p 43 West 1933 p 30 West 1994 pp 827 8 Rebecca West Can Christian faith survive this war interview conducted by the Daily Express 17 January 1945 Glendinning 1987 p 221 Rebecca West Letter dated 22 June 1952 to Margaret and Evelyn Hutchinson Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Rebecca West Survivors in Mexico Yale 2003 p 81 Schweizer 2002 p 71 West 1994 pp 172 186 a b West 1994 pp 172 Rebecca West unpublished typescript McFarlin Special Collections University of Tulsa West 1994 p 579 Bonnie Kime Scott Refiguring Modernism Vol 2 p 161 Rebecca West Woman as Artist and Thinker iUniverse 2005 p 19 West 1933 p 34 Schweizer 2002 p 141 Peter Wolfe Rebecca West Artist and Thinker Southern Illinois 1971 p 12 John J O Connor Moyers and a Provocative Dame Rebecca West The New York Times 8 July 1981 Robert D Kaplan Balkan Ghosts 1994 p 3 Opening credit reads From a story by Rebecca West First published in the UK by Macmillan in 1966 and published in the US by Viking Press also in 1966 From a copy of Cousin Rosamund with an afterword by Victoria Glendinning Macmillan 1995 Rebecca West Edited and Introduced by Bernard Schweizer 18 October 2004 Survivors in Mexico West Rebecca Schweizer Bernard Yale University Press Yalepress yale edu Retrieved 4 April 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link The Essential Rebecca West Archived from the original on 3 February 2011 Retrieved 23 November 2010 External links EditRebecca West at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Data from Wikidata Portraits of Rebecca West at the National Portrait Gallery London nbsp Works by Rebecca West at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Rebecca West at Internet Archive Works by Rebecca West at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Rebecca West papers at The University of Tulsa McFarlin Library s Department of Special Collections and University Archives Rebecca West Papers General Collection Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Yale University New York Times obituary 16 March 1983 Petri Liukkonen Rebecca West Books and Writers Archival material relating to Rebecca West UK National Archives nbsp Biography of Rebecca West on the Yale Modernism Lab Marina Warner Spring 1981 Rebecca West The Art of Fiction No 65 The Paris Review Spring 1981 79 Rebecca West at Library of Congress with 97 library catalogue records Rebecca West Collection General Collection Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Yale University Rebecca West Papers review Hitler s Children Rebecca West papers Lib utulsa edu Archived from the original on 28 July 2009 Retrieved 20 June 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rebecca West amp oldid 1179608698, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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