“Looking
back, I imagine I was always writing. Twaddle it was too. But better by far to write
twaddle or anything, anything, than nothing at all.”
– Katherine Mansfield
Kathleen
Mansfield Beauchamp was a modernist short story writer,
born on this date in 1888 and raised in colonial New Zealand. She wrote under the pen name of Katherine Mansfield both there and
after emigrating to Great Britain. Her first published stories appeared
in the High School Reporter, a New Zealand-wide journal, and the
Wellington Girls' High School magazine, including stories about the repression
of the native Maori people, a stand that got her in trouble with some of the
New Zealand elite.
She left New Zealand at age 19 and
settled in Britain, where she became close friends with modernist writers D.H.
Lawrence (author of Lady Chatterley’s
Lover) and Virginia Woolf.
Just when she was getting into her
most prolific writing period – in the 19-teens – she was diagnosed with
tuberculosis. It was also during this
time that she met, then married John Middleton Murry, editor of the Avant-garde
magazine Rhythm. Murry was responsible for publishing many
of her works both then and after her death in 1923.
miniseries A Picture of Katherine Mansfield starring Vanessa
Redgrave, and in 2011 the film Bliss focused on her early beginnings as
a writer.
She always said that writing not
only was her life but her chance to experience other lives. “Would you not like to try all sorts of lives?”
she asked. “That is the satisfaction of
writing - one can impersonate so many people.”
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