Charlotte brontë

Jean Toomer

American poet and novelist

Jean Toomer

Toomer circa 1920–1930

BornNathan Pinchback Toomer
(1894-12-26)December 26, 1894
Washington, D.C., United States
DiedMarch 30, 1967(1967-03-30) (aged 72)
Doylestown, Pennsylvania, United States
OccupationPoet, novelist
Literary movementModernism
Notable worksCane (1923)
Spouse
Children1

Jean Toomer (born Nathan Pinchback Toomer; December 26, 1894 – March 30, 1967) was an American poet and novelist commonly associated with the Harlem Renaissance, though he actively resisted the association, and with modernism. His reputation stems from his novel Cane (1923), which Toomer wrote during and after a stint as a school principal at a black school in rural Sparta, Georgia. The novel intertwines the stories of six women and includes an apparently autobiographical thread; sociologist Charles S. Johnson called it "the most astonishingly brilliant beginning of any Negro writer of his generation".[1] He resisted being classified as a "Negro" writer, as he ident

Biography

E.R. Eddison taken by George Beresford c.1922

Background

Eric Rücker Eddison was born 24 November 1882 in Adel, Yorkshire, the eldest of two sons of Octavius Eddison, solicitor, and his wife, Helen Louisa (née Rücker). Adel was then a village, five miles north of Leeds, surrounded by countryside and close to open moorland.

Education

His early education was conducted at home by a series of tutors whom he shared with Arthur Ransome (the future author of Swallows and Amazons), the child of a neighbouring family. The two became lifelong friends and spent many hours in adventurous and imaginative play, some of which included the germs of Eddison’s later fiction. Afterwards Eddison attended Sunningdale Preparatory School in Berkshire before going to Eton, where he developed an interest in Icelandic. He went to Trinity College, Oxford in 1901 to study classics (Literae Humaniores), graduating with a 2nd class degree in 1905.

Civil Service career

The following year he joined the Board of Trade, where he remained for the next 22 years in a variety of roles. During th

Jane Eyre

1847 novel by Charlotte Brontë

This article is about the novel. For its title character, see Jane Eyre (character). For other uses, see Jane Eyre (disambiguation).

Jane Eyre (AIR; originally published as Jane Eyre: An Autobiography) is a novel by the English writer Charlotte Brontë. It was published under her pen name "Currer Bell" on 19 October 1847 by Smith, Elder & Co. of London. The first American edition was published the following year by Harper & Brothers of New York.[2]Jane Eyre is a bildungsroman that follows the experiences of its eponymous heroine, including her growth to adulthood and her love for Mr Rochester, the brooding master of Thornfield Hall.[3]

The novel revolutionised prose fiction, being the first to focus on the moral and spiritual development of its protagonist through an intimate first-person narrative, where actions and events are coloured by a psychological intensity. Charlotte Brontë has been called the "first historian of the private consciousness" and the literary ancestor of writers such a

Copyright ©bilders.pages.dev 2025