1911 in literature
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This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1911.
Events
- April – Hugo Gernsback begins to publish his pioneering science fiction novel Ralph 124C 41+ in his monthly magazine Modern Electrics in the United States.
- c. April 8 – English poet Lascelles Abercrombie and his family move to live near Dymock in rural Gloucestershire, first of the Dymock poets.[1]
- September 7 – Wilhelm Apollinaris de Kostrowitzky, who writes as "Guillaume Apollinaire", is suspected in the theft of the Mona Lisa from Louvre museum in Paris on August 21 and imprisoned for six days; this year he also publishes his first book of poetry, Le Bestiaire ou Cortège d'Orphée.[2]
- October 16 – New building for Mitchell Library opens in Glasgow.[3]
- October 17 – Rudolf Wilhelm Friedrich Ditzen, the later novelist Hans Fallada, kills his best friend in a suicide pact staged as a duel.
- November
- The Kalem Company of New York agrees to pay the estate of author Lew Wallace $25,000 in legal settlement for having adapted Ben Hur (1907 film) from his novel without securing prior rights.
- Virginia Stephen begins to share a London house at 38 Brunswick Square with other members of the Bloomsbury Group: Leonard Woolf (her future husband), Adrian Stephen (her brother), John Maynard Keynes and Duncan Grant.[4]
- December 16 – The Copyright Act in the United Kingdom consolidates copyright law in the British Empire and confirms the six libraries in each of which a copy of every book published in the U.K. must be deposited by the publisher: the British Museum Library (London); the Bodleian Library (Oxford); the Advocates Library (Edinburgh); the National Library of Wales (Aberystwyth); Trinity College, Dublin; and Cambridge University Library.
- Jaroslav Hašek begins publishing stories of The Good Soldier Švejk (Dobrý voják Švejk) in the Prague newspaper Karikatura edited by the illustrator Josef Lada.
- Irish novelist George Moore publishes Ave, the first part of his 3-volume autobiographical Hail and Farewell (last in 1914) in the same year that he leaves Dublin to settle in London.
- French publishing house Éditions Gallimard founded in Paris by Gaston Gallimard as Les Éditions de la Nouvelle Revue Française (nrf). Its first publication is Paul Claudel's play L'Otage.
New fiction
- Pío Baroja
- Las inquietudes de Shanti Andía
- The Tree of Knowledge (El árbol de la ciencia)
- Lima Barreto – Triste Fim de Policarpo Quaresma ("The Sad End of Policarpo Quaresma")
- J. M. Barrie – Peter and Wendy
- L. Frank Baum
- The Sea Fairies
- The Daring Twins
- Aunt Jane's Nieces and Uncle John (as "Edith Van Dyne")
- The Flying Girl (as "Edith Van Dyne")
- Max Beerbohm – Zuleika Dobson
- Hilaire Belloc – The Four Men: a Farrago
- Arnold Bennett – The Card
- J. D. Beresford – The Hampdenshire Wonder
- Ambrose Bierce – The Devil's Dictionary
- Algernon Blackwood – The Centaur
- Frances Hodgson Burnett – The Secret Garden
- J. E. Casely-Hayford – Ethiopia Unbound
- G. K. Chesterton – The Innocence of Father Brown
- Hugh Clifford – The Downfall of the Gods
- Joseph Conrad – Under Western Eyes
- Marie Corelli – Life Everlasting
- Penelope Delta – Paramythi Horis Onoma ("A Tale Without a Name")
- Theodore Dreiser – Jennie Gerhardt
- W. E. B. Du Bois – The Quest of the Silver Fleece
- Edna Ferber – Dawn O'Hara
- Ford Madox Ford – Ladies Whose Bright Eyes
- E. M. Forster – The Celestial Omnibus
- R. Austin Freeman – The Eye of Osiris
- Charlotte Perkins Gilman – Moving the Mountain
- Anna Katherine Green – Initials Only
- Violet Jacob – Flemington
- Pauline Johnson – Legends of Vancouver
- Mary Johnston – The Long Roll
- Eduard von Keyserling – Wellen
- Valery Larbaud – Fermina Márquez
- D. H. Lawrence – The White Peacock
- Stephen Leacock – Nonsense Novels
- Gaston Leroux
- Balaoo
- The Phantom of the Opera (Le Fantôme de l'Opéra, book publication)
- Katherine Mansfield – In A German Pension
- John Masefield
- Jim Davis; or, The Captive of Smugglers
- The Street of Today
- A.E.W. Mason – Miranda of the Balcony
- L. M. Montgomery – The Story Girl
- Mori Ōgai – The Wild Geese (雁, Gan, serialization begins)
- Baroness Orczy – A True Woman
- Beatrix Potter – The Tale of Timmy Tiptoes
- Forrest Reid – The Bracknels
- Ameen Rihani – The Book of Khalid
- Saki – The Chronicles of Clovis
- Bram Stoker – The Lair of the White Worm
- Gene Stratton-Porter – The Harvester
- Kathleen Thompson Norris – Mother
- Sigrid Undset – Jenny
- Hugh Walpole – Mr. Perrin and Mr. Traill
- Mary Augusta Ward – The Case of Richard Meynell
- Jean Webster – Just Patty
- H. G. Wells – The New Machiavelli
- Edith Wharton – Ethan Frome
- Owen Wister – Padre Ignacio
- Jerzy Żuławski – Stara Ziemia ("The Old Earth"), last of the Trylogia Księżycowa ("Lunar Trilogy")
New drama
- Tristan Bernard – Le petit café
- George Diamandy – Dolorosa
- St. John Greer Ervine – Mixed Marriage
- Gregorio Martínez Sierra
- Canción de cuna ("Cradle Song")
- Primavera en otoño ("Spring in Autumn")
- Emma Orczy – The Duke's Wager
- Louis N. Parker – Disraeli
- Rainis – Indulis un Ārija ("Indulis and Ārija")
- Arthur Schnitzler – Das weite Land ("The Vast Domain", "The Distant Land" or "Undiscovered Country")
- George Bernard Shaw – Fanny's First Play
- Karl Vollmöller – Das Mirakel
- Hugo von Hofmannsthal – Jedermann
- W. B. Yeats – The Countess Cathleen (adapted for performance)
Poetry
Main article: 1911 in poetry
- Edwin James Brady – River Rovers
- Else Lasker-Schüler – Meine Wunder
- John Masefield – The Everlasting Mercy
Non-fiction
- Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition.
- Wassily Kandinsky – Über das Geistige in der Kunst ("Concerning the Spiritual in Art"; dated 1912)
- Walter John Kilner – The Human Atmosphere
- Jack London – The Cruise of the Snark
- Robert Michels – Political Parties: A Sociological Study of the Oligarchical Tendencies of Modern Democracy (Zur Soziologie des Parteiwesens in der modernen Demokratie; Untersuchungen über die oligarchischen Tendenzen des Gruppenlebens)
- John Muir – My First Summer in the Sierra
- Rudolf Steiner – Mystics of the Renaissance (English translation)
- Evelyn Underhill – Mysticism: A Study of the Nature and Development of Man's Spiritual Consciousness
- A. E. Waite
- The Pictorial Key to the Tarot
- The Secret Tradition in Freemasonry
Births
- January 18 – José María Arguedas, Peruvian author (died 1969)
- January 24 – C. L. Moore, American science fiction author (died 1987)
- February 4 – Geoffrey Willans, English novelist and comic writer (died 1958)
- February 8 – Elizabeth Bishop, American poet, Pulitzer Prize winner (died 1979)
- March 11 – Fitzroy Maclean, Scottish political writer and autobiographer (died 1996)
- March 19 – Sybille Bedford, German-born English novelist and journalist (died 2006)
- March 26 – Tennessee Williams, American playwright (died 1983)
- April 8 – Emil Cioran, Romanian-born French philosopher and essayist (died 1995)
- May 15 – Max Frisch, Swiss author (died 1991)
- May 20 – Annie M. G. Schmidt, Dutch children's author (died 1995)
- May 28 – Fritz Hochwälder, Austrian playwright (died 1986)
- June 2 – Xiao Hong (Qiao Yin, 張廼瑩) Chinese author (died 1942)
- June 6 – Verna Aardema (Verna Norberg), American children's author (died 2000)
- June 30 – Czesław Miłosz, Lithuanian-born Polish author, Nobel Prize in Literature winner (died 2004)
- July 21 – Marshall McLuhan, Canadian media theorist (died 1980)
- October 13 – Millosh Gjergj Nikolla, Albanian poet and writer (died 1938)
- November 2 – Odysseas Elytis, Greek poet, Nobel Prize winner (died 1996)
- November 19 – Mary Elizabeth Counselman, American author and poet (died 1995)
- December 11 – Naguib Mahfouz, Egyptian novelist, Nobel Prize in literature winner (died 2006)
- December 25 – Noel Langley, South African-born American screenwriter (died 1980)
Deaths
- January 23 – David Graham Phillips, American journalist and novelist (murdered, born 1867)
- February 7 – Hannah Whitall Smith, American Quaker author (born 1832)
- February 25 – Friedrich Spielhagen, German novelist, literary theorist and translator (born 1829)
- March 7 – Antonio Fogazzaro, Italian novelist (born 1842)
- April 14 – George Cary Eggleston, American memoirist (born 1839)
- April 25 – Emilio Salgari, Italian novelist (suicide, born 1862)[5]
- April 30 – Stanisław Brzozowski, Polish philosopher, publicist and critic (tuberculosis, born 1878)
- May 9 – Thomas Wentworth Higginson, American writer, abolitionist and advocate of women's suffrage (born 1823)
- May 29 – W. S. Gilbert, English librettist, dramatist and comic poet (born 1836)
- June 10 – Adolf Wilbrandt, German novelist and dramatist (born 1837)
- July 21 – Philippe Monnier, Swiss writer in French (born 1864)
- September 5 – Katherine Thurston, Irish novelist (born 1875)
- September 9 – Francis March, American lexicographer and philologist (born 1825)
- October 8 – Hesba Stretton (Sarah Smith), English children's writer (born 1832)
- October 29 – Joseph Pulitzer, Hungarian-born American journalist and publisher (born 1847)
- November 9 – Howard Pyle, American children's author (born 1853)
- December 1 – Richard Barham Middleton, English poet and editor (born 1882)
- December 29 – Rosamund Marriott Watson, English poet (born 1860)
Awards
- Nobel Prize for Literature: Count Maurice (Mooris) Polidore Marie Bernhard Maeterlinck, Belgian poet, playwright, and essayist
References
- ↑ Cooper, Jeff. "Timeline of the Dymock Poets". Friends of the Dymock Poets. Retrieved 2014-07-03.
- ↑ Auster, Paul, ed. (1982). The Random House Book of Twentieth-Century French Poetry: with Translations by American and British Poets. New York: Random House. ISBN 0-394-52197-8.
- ↑ "Lord Rosebery On Books: The Mitchell Library in Glasgow". The Times (39718) (London). 1911-10-17. p. 4.
- ↑ Chronology in Oxford World's Classics editions of her works.
- ↑ Francesco Troiano. "Biography of Emilio Salgari". Italica Rai. Retrieved 2009-04-30.
External links
- "100 years on: The best books of 1911", Stuart Kelly, The Scotsman, 24 December 2011
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