Joan Frankau

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Joan Bennett (1896-1986) was the daughter of London cigar importer Arthur Frankau (1849-1904) and writer Julia Frankau (1859-1916). Though she was known as Joan throughout her life, she was actually christened Aline.[1] She married the Cambridge literary historian Henry Stanley Bennett (1889-1972) in 1920.[2] As a don at Girton College, Cambridge, Bennett wrote one of the first critical studies of Virginia Woolf.[3] She was among the "constellation of critics" called by the defence in the Lady Chatterley Trial.[4] It is interesting to note that Joan Bennett's mother had earlier been credited by Mrs Belloc Lowndes with having been "one of the very few to recognise the genius of D. H. Lawrence".[5]

Works

Publications by Joan Bennett include—

  • Four Metaphysical Poets – Donne, Herbert, Vaughan, Crashaw, Cambridge University Press 1934
  • Virginia Woolf – Her Art as a Novelist, Cambridge University Press 1945
  • George Eliot – Her Mind and her Art, Cambridge University Press 1948
  • Sir Thomas Browne – "A Man of Achievement in Literature", Cambridge University Press 1962
  • Five Metaphysical Poets – Donne, Herbert, Vaughan, Crashaw, Marvell, Cambridge University Press 1964

Further reading

  • C. H. Rolph (ed.), The Trial of Lady Chatterley: Regina v. Penguin Books Limited, Penguin Books 1961
  • Aryeh Newman, "From exile to exit: the Frankau Jewish connection", The Jewish Quarterly Vol. 34 No. 4 (128), 1987
  • Todd M. Endelman, "The Frankaus of London: A Study in Radical Assimilation, 1837-1967", Jewish History Vol. 8 Nos 1-2, 1994
  • Derek Brewer, A list of his writings presented to H. S. Bennett on his eightieth birthday, 15th January 1969, Cambridge University Press 1969

References and Notes

  1. Gilbert Frankau, Self-Portrait, Hutchinson 1940 p82
  2. Gilbert Frankau, Self-Portrait, Hutchinson 1940 p234
  3. Roden, Frederick S. Jewish/Christian/Queer: Crossroads and Identities Queer Interventions, Ashgate Publishing, 2009 ISBN 0754673758, p. 183
  4. Michael Squires (ed.), Lady Chatterley's Lover and "À Propos of Lady Chatterley's Lover", Cambridge University Press 1993, Introduction ppxxxviii-xxxix
  5. Mrs Belloc Lowndes, The Merry Wives of Westminster, Macmillan 1946 p62
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