‘The men think us incapable of real friendship – Jane Austen
Friendships are complicated, full of conflict, love and, hopefully, lots of fun. They encouraged the sexual escapades of Percy Shelley and Lord Byron and the riotous drinking excursions of Ernest Hemingway and F. Scott Fitzgerald. Tragically the relationships between literary women have been side-lined. However, like the scientific whisper networks discussed in week seven, female authors sought to be challenged and emotionally supported by their peers, famously Virginia Woolf and Katherine Mansfield.
Picture of a Bloomsbury Group picnic, of which both Virginia Woolf and Katherine Mansfield were a part of
1902 image of Virginia Woolf
Short story writer Katherine Mansfield formed a complicated relationship filled with jealousy, admiration, and romance with the mad mother of modernism, Virginia Woolf. Friends with a foundation in rivalry, Mansfield’s works were ‘the only writing I [Virginia] have ever been jealous of’. When the pair met in 1917, Mansfield was much more successful in the literary world than Woolf. Both writers had similar artistic aspirations and ideas of how literature should present the world. These similarities led to friction and conflict between them, often misinterpreted as having malicious intent. Particularly when Woolf described Mansfield as an ‘utterly unscrupulous character’. Despite the tempestuous nature of their relationship, Woolf and Mansfield had a high degree of appreciation for each other and their writing. Woolf was the first person that Mansfield considered her ‘intellectual equal’ and the writers both benefited from the professional rivalry. Woolf reciprocated this regard, and when Mansfield’s collection Prelude received little critical attention, Woolf defended it, claiming that Mansfield ‘is the very best of women writers’. Each writer’s personality influenced the other’s writing style. For example, in Mansfield’s homoerotic short story Bliss the main character Pearl Fulton shares some of Woolf’s most prominent characteristics. The namesakes of Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway and Mansfield’s Miss Brill both perform acts that affirm the patriarchal definition of their gender identity. Through the use of extreme isolation, readers are warned against unwittingly adhering to patriarchal expectations of gender. Invariably both writers were drawn to themes of mental illness, feminism, and homosexuality, exposing the social hierarchies of the early 1900s.
A painting imagining one of Mrs Dalloway’s lonely parties
Woolf’s and Mansfield’s relationship was also romantic …
Woolf’s and Mansfield’s relationship was also romantic, acting beyond just challenging the other to improve. Woolf’s diary demonstrates the depth of romantic attachment between the pair. In a very relatable fashion, Woolf overthought and questioned all aspects of their relationship. Pining away as she asked: ‘did she care for me? Sometimes she would say so – would kiss me – would look at me as if her eyes would like always to be faithful’. Unable to fully understand her sexual feelings towards Mansfield, Woolf referred to them as ‘the chaste and the unchaste’. Although frequently ignored or simply forgotten, the Sapphic nature of their friendship is undeniable.
Photo of Katherine Mansfield
Consistently creative collaborations between women have been neglected. In a world where women have been oppressed, snubbed and ignored, friendships provide a vital outlet for discussion and improvement. Due to their friction and conflict, Woolf and Mansfield pushed each other, fostering the creation of gorgeous, flowing modernist works. Hence, conflict is not bad nor inherently negative. Rather conflict combined with support and freethinking is essential to creative expression.
Note: all quotations were found in A Secret Sisterhood: The Literary Friendships of Jane Austen, Charlotte Brontë, George Elliot, and Virginia Woolf by Emily Midorikawa and Emma Claire Sweeny. Give it a read if you’re interested!
Hi everyone,
I hope you liked my final blog post! Unfortunately, I couldn’t write about all the female friendships covered in A Secret Sisterhood. It’s important to remember that the type of relationship Woolf and Mansfield has wasn’t isolated in the literary community or in their time period. If you’re interested in reading some of Mansfield’s and Woolf’s works I would really recommend Mrs Dalloway and A Room of One’s Own (Virginia Woolf) as well as Bliss and At the Bay (Katherine Mansfield. I’ll attach the pdfs for the two short stories 🙂
Good Luck for exams!!
Bliss – http://www.katherinemansfieldsociety.org/assets/KM-Stories/BLISS1918.pdf
At the Bay – https://www.katherinemansfieldsociety.org/assets/KM-Stories/AT-THE-BAY1921.pdf
This is a really interesting read, I love learning about women in history because there’s always so much you don’t cover in school or in everyday life that can actually be so fascinating! It seems like a lot of successful women in the arts over the past few centuries have been Not StraightTM which is exciting and opens up a whole new avenue of analysis that can be explored. Personally, I don’t really like the straight-until-proven-otherwise approach to historical figures, and I hope that this view gets questioned more and more as people like you become amazing, inspirational scholars:)