Rhys, Jean

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{{epname|Rhys, Jean}}
 
{{epname|Rhys, Jean}}
'''Jean Rhys''' (August 24, 1890 - May 14, 1979), originally '''Ella Gwendolen Rees Williams''', was a [[Caribbean]] [[novel]]ist who wrote in the mid [[20th century]].  Her first four novels were published during the 1920s and 1930s, but it was not until the publication of ''[[Wide Sargasso Sea]]'' in 1966 that she emerged as a significant literary figure. A "[[prequel]]" to [[Charlotte Brontë]]'s ''[[Jane Eyre]]'', ''Wide Sargasso Sea'' won a prestigious [[WH Smith Literary Award]] in 1967.
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'''Jean Rhys,''' [[Commander of the British Empire|CBE]] (August 24, 1890 - May 14, 1979), born '''Ella Gwendolen Rees Williams,''' was a [[Caribbean]] [[novel]]ist who wrote in the mid twentieth century.  Her first four novels were published during the 1920s and 1930s, but it was not until the publication of ''[[Wide Sargasso Sea]]'' in 1966, that she emerged as a significant literary figure. At the age of 76, her "[[prequel]]" to [[Charlotte Brontë]]'s ''[[Jane Eyre]]'' won a prestigious [[WH Smith Literary Award]] in 1967, and the [[Heinemann Award]].
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Rhys's [[Creole]] [[heritage]], her experiences as a white Creole woman, both in the [[Caribbean]] and in [[Great Britain|England]], influenced her life and writing. Her [[fiction]] was autobiographical in nature, often dealing with the theme of a helpless female, an outsider, who is victimized by her dependence on an older man for support and protection.  
  
 
==Personal life==
 
==Personal life==
She was born in [[Roseau, Dominica]], to her father Rhys Williams, a doctor of [[Welsh]] descent, and her mother Minna Lockhart, a third-generation Dominican [[Creole]]. She later adopted her father’s name as her own surname. Growing up in [[Dominica]], an island of the [[Lesser Antilles]], Rhys was heavily influenced by her mother’s Creole cultural background, and would later manifest this in her writing. She was particularly intrigued by black culture and the colonial aspects of life in the islands, though these also resulted in questions about her self-identity.
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Rhys was born in [[Roseau]], [[Dominica]], to her father Rhys Williams, a doctor of [[Welsh]] descent, and her mother, Minna Lockhart, a third-generation Dominican [[Creole]] whose family had owned a plantation that was burned down after the 1830 [[Emancipation Act]]. She later adopted her father’s name as her own surname. Growing up in Dominica, an island of the [[Lesser Antilles]], Rhys was heavily influenced by her mother’s Creole cultural background, and would later manifest this in her writing. She was particularly intrigued by black culture and the colonial aspects of life in the islands. She associated black life with color and vigor, while she characterized whiteness as often hollow and barren.
  
In 1907, Rhys left the islands for [[England]], where she felt suddenly confronted by the foreign culture and quickly identified with blacks there. While living with her aunt, Clarice Rhys Williams, she briefly attended [[Perse School]] in [[Cambridge, England|Cambridge]] before going to the Trees School (now the [[Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts]]), but had to discontinue her studies after one term because her father died. Her mother arrived in England, though she died too, after arriving in poor health.
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In 1907, after completing her schooling at a [[Catholic]] school in Roseau, Rhys left the islands for [[Great Britain|England]]. There she felt suddenly confronted by the foreign culture and quickly identified with blacks there. While living with her aunt, Clarice Rhys Williams, she briefly attended [[Perse School]] in [[Cambridge, England|Cambridge]] before going to the Trees School (now the [[Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts]]), but had to discontinue her studies after one term because her father died.  
  
After attending the Trees School, she toured with a musical-chorus troupe; her experiences later were adapted in her novel ''Voyage in the Dark'' (1934). She went on to work in theatre, acting as a chorus girl in a few productions. During this period, Rhys lived in near poverty, while familiarizing herself with [[modernism (art)|modern art]] and [[modernism|literature]], and acquiring the [[alcoholism]] that would persist through the rest of her life. Her experience of a [[patriarchal]] society and feelings of displacement during this period would form some of the most important themes in her work. Working among the many similarly young, poor, passive, and uneducated women around her at this time, Rhys adopted the plight of females as her cause, which she would represent in her writing.
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When her father died, Rhys was forced to abandon her studies. Instead of returning to the Caribbean, as her mother wished, she joined a touring musical company as a chorus girl and ghostwrote a book about [[furniture]]. She also received a small allowance from a former lover, [[Lancelot Grey Hugh Smith]]. During [[World War I]], she served as a volunteer worker in soldiers canteen. In 1918, she worked in a pension office.<ref>Kirjasto.sci.fi, [http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/rhys.htm Books and Writers.] Retrieved December 17, 2007.</ref>
  
In 1919, she married Jean Lenglet, a writer whose pen name was Edouard de Nève. Lenglet served in the French Foreign Legion in Africa, fought on the Western Front, served in the Deuxième Bureau, and traveled on secret diplomatic missions for the French. They moved to Paris, but after the war, Lenglet’s work forced the couple to move constantly. In 1919, Rhys gave birth to a son named Owen, though the child died after three weeks. Rhys was devastated by the loss, and in her grief exhibited a dark, wry sense of humor that was often displayed in her later work.  In 1922, she gave birth to a daughter, Maryvonne, and the family returned to Paris shortly afterward.
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Her experiences traveling were adapted in her novel, ''Voyage in the Dark'' (1934). During this period, Rhys lived in near [[poverty]], while familiarizing herself with [[modernism|modern art]] and [[modernism|literature]], and acquiring the [[alcoholism]] that would persist throughout the rest of her life. Her experience of living in a [[Patriarchy|patriarchal]] society and feelings of displacement during this period would form some of the most important themes in her work. Working among the many similarly young, poor, passive, and uneducated women around her at this time, Rhys adopted the plight of females as her cause, which she would represent in her writing.
  
Rhys was able to fashion a literary career after meeting Ford Madox Ford. During the same time, Lenglet’s financial woes led him to make illegal transactions, and he was convicted and sent to prison. Left to support herself and her daughter, Rhys published a collection of stories in The Left Bank (1927), with editorial help from Ford. She followed that with the publication of her first novel Postures, understood to be an account of her affair with Ford. Lenglet was eventually released from prison in the early 1930s, at about the time that the Rhys-Ford affair had ended, though upon Rhys' disclosure to Lenglet of her affair, they separated. Still, they remained close.
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In 1919, she went to [[Holland]], where she met and married [[Jean Lenglet]], a [[France|French]]-[[Netherlands|Dutch]] [[Journalism|journalist]] and [[songwriter]], whose novel, ''Barred,'' Rhys later translated from the French. Lenglet served in the [[French Foreign Legion]] in [[Africa]], fought on the Western Front, served in the ''Deuxième Bureau,'' and traveled on secret diplomatic missions for the French. She lived with him in 1920-22, in [[Vienna]] and [[Budapest]], then in [[Paris]], and after 1927, mainly in England. The couple had two children together—a son that died in its infancy in 1919, and a daughter, Maryvonne, born in 1922. The family returned to Paris shortly after Maryvonne's birth.
  
Rhys became acquainted with Leslie Tilden Smith and soon started a relationship. Smith, a literary agent, was able to introduce Rhys to many figures in literary circles, but because she was shy and somewhat reclusive, she remained on the periphery of these circles. By the mid-1930s, Smith and Rhys were married, following the death of Smith's father. These years were highlighted by the couple's visit to Rhys' native Dominica. Though she had developed such a fondness for her origins, she found that she had idealized her memory of the land and the life of its people. Her efforts to write while there were not fruitful. She returned to London, never to come back to the island. As the war broke out in Europe, Rhys maintained correspondence with her daughter Maryvonne, who lived with her father in the Netherlands.
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Rhys was able to fashion a literary career after meeting [[Ford Madox Ford]] in Paris, an English [[novel]]ist, [[Poetry|poet]], critic, and editor, who was always a champion of new literature and literary experimentation. During the same time, Lenglet’s financial woes led him to make illegal transactions, and he was convicted and sent to [[prison]]. Left to support herself and her daughter, Rhys published a collection of stories in ''The Left Bank'' (1927), with editorial help from Ford, who became her mentor and her lover. Her first novel ''Postures,'' was a fictional account of her affair with Ford. Lenglet was eventually released from prison in the early 1930s, and they were divorced in 1933.
  
At the onset of the war, Smith enlisted with the air force and was stationed at Norfolk, but Rhys spent most of her time in London. Smith died in October 1945, after the end of the war. It was at Smith's funeral that Rhys met his cousin, Max Hamer. Two years later, Rhys and Hamer married and moved to Beckenham, Kent.  
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Rhys became acquainted with [[Leslie Tilden Smith]] and soon started a relationship. Smith, a literary agent, was able to introduce Rhys to many figures in literary circles, but because she was shy and somewhat reclusive, she remained on the periphery of these circles. In 1934, Smith and Rhys were married. Their years together were highlighted by the couple's visit to Rhys's native [[Dominica]]. Though she had developed such a fondness for her origins, she found that she had idealized her memory of the land and the life of its people. Her efforts to write while there were not fruitful. She returned to [[London]], and never again visited the island. As the war broke out in [[Europe]], Rhys was unable to visit Maryvonne, who lived with her father in the [[Netherlands]], but maintained correspondence with her through friends in [[Portugal]].
  
In later life she befriended [[British jazz]] singer [[George Melly]]. She wrote a sardonic love song for him with [[John Chilton]] called ''Life With You''.
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From 1939 to 1957, Rhys dropped from public attention. At the onset of the war, Smith enlisted with the [[Air Force]] and was stationed at [[Norfolk]], but Rhys spent most of her time in London. Smith died in October 1945, after the end of the war. It was at Smith's funeral that Rhys met his cousin, [[Max Hamer]]. Two years later, Rhys and Hamer married and moved to Beckenham, Kent. Hamer, a solicitor, spent much of their marriage in jail. He died in 1966.
  
 
Rhys died in the Royan Devon and Exeter Hospital on May 14, 1979.
 
Rhys died in the Royan Devon and Exeter Hospital on May 14, 1979.
  
 
==Literary career==
 
==Literary career==
Rhys's writing often centers on the lives of women transplanted from their roots and left to die at the whims of unfamiliar societies—an obvious echo of her own life. Her style is often noted for its distinctive blend of [[modernist]] techniques and [[West Indian]] sensibilities.  Her work was published and promoted by [[Ford Madox Ford]], among others.<ref name= "Stravinsky">{{cite book |last= Modjeska |first= Drusilla  |title= Stravinsky's Lunch |publisher= Picador |date= 1999 |location= Sydney |isbn= 0 330 36259 3}}Retrieved October 14, 2007.</ref> [[Diana Athill]] of [[Andre Deutsch]]'s publishing house helped return Rhys's work to a wider audience after her writing had fallen out of favor and was responsible for choosing to publish ''Wide Sargasso Sea''.<ref name = "BBC">{{cite web |title= The prime of Miss Jean Rhys by Vanessa Thorpe |publisher= The Observer UK, October 1, 2006 |url=http://observer.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,,1884906,00.html|}}Retrieved October 14, 2007.</ref>
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Rhys's writing often centers on the lives of women transplanted from their roots and left to die at the whims of unfamiliar societies—an obvious echo of her own life. Her style is often noted for its distinctive blend of [[modernism|modernist]] techniques and [[West Indian]] sensibilities.<ref>Drusilla Modjeska, ''Stravinsky's Lunch'' (Sydney: Picador, 1999). ISBN 0 330 36259 3</ref>  
  
 +
The publication of ''Postures,'' later published as ''Quartet,'' immediately showcased Rhys' primary thematic concern—that of the socially-trapped woman. Though her writing in ''Postures'' did not demonstrate the polish of her later work, it introduced her ubiquitous heroine—beautiful, thoughtful, and often the subject of oppression. Following ''Postures'' was ''After Leaving Mr. Mackenzie,'' a novel about human relationships. Rhys demonstrated an improvement over ''Postures'' in narrative composition, and additional focus on the male [[consciousness]].
  
 +
For her next novel, ''Voyage in the Dark,'' Rhys borrowed heavily from her experiences traveling with a musical troupe. The female protagonist, like Rhys, experiences a longing for the [[climate]] and color of the [[Caribbean]]. It introduces in Rhys's work the motif of the [[exotic]] [[island]]s, which play a more prominent role in later work, with ''Wide Sargasso Sea''. While critical reception of ''Voyage in the Dark'' was good, Rhys was often cited for the dark quality of her narratives.
 +
 +
With ''Good Morning, Midnight'' (1939), Rhys continued to present the idea of the interior female consciousness, in contrast with her other contemporary modernist writers, who seemed heavily influenced by the worldly and [[Politics|political]] issues during that time.
 +
 +
After her marriage to Hamer, Rhys became increasingly reclusive, living alone in her primitive Devon cottage at ''Cheriton FitzPaine,'' drinking heavily but still writing. Because of her lengthy absence from publication, her devoted readers believed she may have died. Not until 1949, when actress [[Selma Vaz Dias]] printed an ad in the ''New Statesman'' to try to find Rhys, did she resume her work. When she responded to Dias' ad, she learned that Dias had obtained a dramatic adaptation of her novel ''Good Morning, Midnight''. Dias went on to perform the adaptation at the Anglo-French Center in November 1949, and it was later produced for [[BBC]]'s ''Third Programme'' in 1957. The newfound attention to her novels prompted Rhys to end her hiatus.
 +
 +
In 1957, [[Diana Athill]] of [[Andre Deutsch]]'s publishing house helped return Rhys's work to a wider audience after her writing had fallen out of favor and out of print. Athill was a key player in generating Rhys's resurgence. Two short stories, "Till September Petronella" (1960) and "Let Them Call It Jazz" (1962) were published in ''[[London Magazine]].'' Athill was responsible for choosing to publish ''Wide Sargasso Sea'' as a novel in October 1966, when Rhys was 76.<ref>''The Observer,'' [http://observer.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,,1884906,00.html The prime of Miss Jean Rhys by Vanessa Thorpe.]  Retrieved October 14, 2007.</ref>
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Again, like Rhys's previous novels, ''Wide Sargasso Sea'' goes deep in exploring male-female relationships, but it stands alone as Rhys's most famous work. The novel is imagined as a prelude to [[Charlotte Bronte]]'s ''Jane Eyre,'' exploring the early years of the marriage between Rochester and the madwoman in the attic—here, named Antoinette.
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Rhys published three more books, ''Tigers Are Better-Looking'' (1968), ''Sleep It Off, Lady'' (1976), and the autobiographical ''My Day'' (1975). She died before she could complete her autobiography. The unfinished work was published posthumously as ''Smile Please'' (1979).
  
 
==Legacy==
 
==Legacy==
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The success of ''Wide Sargasso Sea'' brought Rhys an unprecedented level of popularity. After receiving the [[WH Smith Literary Award]] and the [[Heinemann Award]] for ''Wide Sargasso Sea,'' the bulk of her earlier work was republished, giving her greater exposure and critical acclaim.
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In 1978, Rhys was made a [[CBE|Commander of the British Empire]]. 
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Playwright [[Polly Teale]] brought the story of Rhys's life to the stage, in ''After Mrs. Rochester''. The play was first produced at the [[Lyric Theatre]] in Hammersmith, London, in 2003.<ref>Doollee.com, [http://www.doollee.com/PlaywrightsT/teale-polly.html Polly Teale.] Retrieved December 15, 2007.</ref>
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Her collected papers and ephemera are housed in the [[University of Tulsa]]'s McFarlin Library, Department of Special Collections and University Archives.
 
Her collected papers and ephemera are housed in the [[University of Tulsa]]'s McFarlin Library, Department of Special Collections and University Archives.
 +
 +
The [[University of the West Indies]] held the ''Jean Rhys Conference and Festival'' on Dominica, June 10-13, 2004.
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The American Library Association's Radcliffe Publishing Course Top 100 Novels of the twentieth century lists ''Wide Sargasso Sea'' as number 81.<ref>American Library Association, [http://www.ala.org/ala/pio/piopresskits/bbbwpresskit/bannedchallenged.htm Top 100 Novels of the 20th Century.] Retrieved December 17, 2007.</ref>
  
 
==Bibliography==
 
==Bibliography==
*''[[The Left Bank and Other Stories]]'', 1927
+
*''The Left Bank and Other Stories,'' 1927
*''[[Postures]]'', 1928 (released as ''[[Quartet (Novel)|Quartet]]'' in 1929). ISBN 0393315460.
+
*''Postures,'' 1928 (released as ''[[Quartet (Novel)|Quartet]]'' in 1929). ISBN 0393315460
*''[[After Leaving Mr Mackenzie]]'', 1931. ISBN 0393315479.
+
*''After Leaving Mr Mackenzie,'' 1931. ISBN 0393315479
*''[[Voyage in the Dark]]'', 1934. ISBN 0393311465.
+
*''Voyage in the Dark,'' 1934. ISBN 0393311465
*''[[Good Morning, Midnight]]'', 1939. ISBN 0393303942.
+
*''Good Morning, Midnight,'' 1939. ISBN 0393303942
*''[[Wide Sargasso Sea]]'', 1966. ISBN 0393308804.
+
*''Wide Sargasso Sea,'' 1966. ISBN 0393308804
*''[[Tigers Are Better-Looking]]: With a Selection from 'The Left Bank' '', 1968. ISBN 0140183469.
+
*''Tigers Are Better-Looking: With a Selection from "The Left Bank,"'' 1968. ISBN 0140183469
*''[[Penguin Modern Stories 1]]'', 1969 (with others)
+
*''Penguin Modern Stories 1,'' 1969 (with others)
*''[[My Day: Three Pieces]]'', 1975
+
*''My Day: Three Pieces,'' 1975. ISBN 068564409X
*''[[Sleep It Off Lady]]'', 1976. ISBN 0060135727.
+
*''Sleep It Off Lady,'' 1976. ISBN 0060135727
*''[[Smile Please: An Unfinished Autobiography]]'', 1979. ISBN 0140184058.
+
*''Smile Please: An Unfinished Autobiography,'' 1979. ISBN 0140184058
*''[[Jean Rhys Letters 1931-1966]]'', 1984. ISBN 0233975675.
+
*''Jean Rhys Letters 1931-1966,'' 1984. ISBN 0233975675
*''[[Early Novels]]'', 1984
+
*''Early Novels,'' 1984. ISBN 0233977228
*''[[The Complete Novels]]'', 1985
+
*''The Complete Novels,'' 1985. ISBN 0393022269
*''[[Tales of the Wide Caribbean]]'', 1985. ISBN 0435987496.
+
*''Tales of the Wide Caribbean,'' 1985. ISBN 0435987496
*''[[The Collected Short Stories]]'', 1987. ISBN 0393306259.
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*''The Collected Short Stories,'' 1987. ISBN 0393306259
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
Line 52: Line 77:
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
* {{cite book |last= Modjeska |first= Drusilla  |title= Stravinsky's Lunch  |publisher= Picador |date= 1999 |location= Sydney |isbn= 0 330 36259 3}}
+
*Angier, Carole. 1990. ''Jean Rhys: Life and Work''. Boston: Little, Brown. ISBN 0316042633
* ''Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 36: British Novelists, 1890-1929: Modernists''. A Bruccoli Clark Layman Book. Edited by Thomas F. Staley, University of Tulsa. The Gale Group, 1985. pp. 188-202.
+
*Davidson, Arnold E. 1985. ''Jean Rhys''. New York: F. Ungar Pub. Co. ISBN 0804421439
 +
*Frickey, Pierrette M. 1990. ''Critical Perspectives on Jean Rhys''. Washington, D.C.: Three Continents Press. ISBN 0894100599
 +
*Savory, Elaine. 1998. ''Jean Rhys''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521474345
 +
*Staley, Thomas F., ed. ''Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 36: British Novelists, 1890-1929: Modernists''. The Gale Group, 1985.  
 +
*Sternlicht, Sanford V. 1997. ''Jean Rhys''. New York: Twayne. ISBN 0805746072
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
* [http://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=3758 Literary Encyclopedia biography].Retrieved October 14, 2007.
+
All links retrieved May 1, 2018.
*[http://www.qub.ac.uk/en/imperial/carib/rhysbio.htm Jean Rhys Biography page].Retrieved October 14, 2007.
+
*Hulme, Peter. [http://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=3758 Literary Encyclopedia biography].'' Litencyc.com.''
*[http://www.lennoxhonychurch.com/jeanrhysbio.cfm Jean Rhys bio with particular ref. to her time in Dominica].Retrieved October 14, 2007.
+
*[http://www.eng.fju.edu.tw/worldlit/caribbean/rhys.htm ''Wide Sargasso Sea''] ''Eng.fju.edu.tw.''
* [http://www.lib.utulsa.edu/speccoll/collections/rhysjean/index.htm University of Tulsa McFarlin Library's inventory of the Jean Rhys Archive housed in their Department of Special Collections and University Archives].Retrieved October 14, 2007.
+
*Lewkowicz, Sherry. 2004. [http://www.postcolonialweb.org/caribbean/dominica/rhys/lewkowicz14.html The Experience of Womanhood in Jane Eyre and Wide Sargasso Sea] ''Postcolonialweb.org.''
* [http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/rhys.htm Author's calendar]. Retrieved December 12, 2007.
+
*[http://www.arlindo-correia.com/161002.html Jean Rhys] ''Arlindo-correia.com.''
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*[http://assets.cambridge.org/97805214/74344/sample/9780521474344wsc00.pdf Etext of Jean Rhys by Elaine Savory] ''Assets.cambridge.org.''
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[[Category:History and biography]]
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[[Category:literature]]
[[Category:Biography]]
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[[Category:writers and poets]]
 
[[Category:Art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
 
[[Category:Art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
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Latest revision as of 20:47, 1 May 2018

Jean Rhys, CBE (August 24, 1890 - May 14, 1979), born Ella Gwendolen Rees Williams, was a Caribbean novelist who wrote in the mid twentieth century. Her first four novels were published during the 1920s and 1930s, but it was not until the publication of Wide Sargasso Sea in 1966, that she emerged as a significant literary figure. At the age of 76, her "prequel" to Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre won a prestigious WH Smith Literary Award in 1967, and the Heinemann Award.

Rhys's Creole heritage, her experiences as a white Creole woman, both in the Caribbean and in England, influenced her life and writing. Her fiction was autobiographical in nature, often dealing with the theme of a helpless female, an outsider, who is victimized by her dependence on an older man for support and protection.

Personal life

Rhys was born in Roseau, Dominica, to her father Rhys Williams, a doctor of Welsh descent, and her mother, Minna Lockhart, a third-generation Dominican Creole whose family had owned a plantation that was burned down after the 1830 Emancipation Act. She later adopted her father’s name as her own surname. Growing up in Dominica, an island of the Lesser Antilles, Rhys was heavily influenced by her mother’s Creole cultural background, and would later manifest this in her writing. She was particularly intrigued by black culture and the colonial aspects of life in the islands. She associated black life with color and vigor, while she characterized whiteness as often hollow and barren.

In 1907, after completing her schooling at a Catholic school in Roseau, Rhys left the islands for England. There she felt suddenly confronted by the foreign culture and quickly identified with blacks there. While living with her aunt, Clarice Rhys Williams, she briefly attended Perse School in Cambridge before going to the Trees School (now the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts), but had to discontinue her studies after one term because her father died.

When her father died, Rhys was forced to abandon her studies. Instead of returning to the Caribbean, as her mother wished, she joined a touring musical company as a chorus girl and ghostwrote a book about furniture. She also received a small allowance from a former lover, Lancelot Grey Hugh Smith. During World War I, she served as a volunteer worker in soldiers canteen. In 1918, she worked in a pension office.[1]

Her experiences traveling were adapted in her novel, Voyage in the Dark (1934). During this period, Rhys lived in near poverty, while familiarizing herself with modern art and literature, and acquiring the alcoholism that would persist throughout the rest of her life. Her experience of living in a patriarchal society and feelings of displacement during this period would form some of the most important themes in her work. Working among the many similarly young, poor, passive, and uneducated women around her at this time, Rhys adopted the plight of females as her cause, which she would represent in her writing.

In 1919, she went to Holland, where she met and married Jean Lenglet, a French-Dutch journalist and songwriter, whose novel, Barred, Rhys later translated from the French. Lenglet served in the French Foreign Legion in Africa, fought on the Western Front, served in the Deuxième Bureau, and traveled on secret diplomatic missions for the French. She lived with him in 1920-22, in Vienna and Budapest, then in Paris, and after 1927, mainly in England. The couple had two children together—a son that died in its infancy in 1919, and a daughter, Maryvonne, born in 1922. The family returned to Paris shortly after Maryvonne's birth.

Rhys was able to fashion a literary career after meeting Ford Madox Ford in Paris, an English novelist, poet, critic, and editor, who was always a champion of new literature and literary experimentation. During the same time, Lenglet’s financial woes led him to make illegal transactions, and he was convicted and sent to prison. Left to support herself and her daughter, Rhys published a collection of stories in The Left Bank (1927), with editorial help from Ford, who became her mentor and her lover. Her first novel Postures, was a fictional account of her affair with Ford. Lenglet was eventually released from prison in the early 1930s, and they were divorced in 1933.

Rhys became acquainted with Leslie Tilden Smith and soon started a relationship. Smith, a literary agent, was able to introduce Rhys to many figures in literary circles, but because she was shy and somewhat reclusive, she remained on the periphery of these circles. In 1934, Smith and Rhys were married. Their years together were highlighted by the couple's visit to Rhys's native Dominica. Though she had developed such a fondness for her origins, she found that she had idealized her memory of the land and the life of its people. Her efforts to write while there were not fruitful. She returned to London, and never again visited the island. As the war broke out in Europe, Rhys was unable to visit Maryvonne, who lived with her father in the Netherlands, but maintained correspondence with her through friends in Portugal.

From 1939 to 1957, Rhys dropped from public attention. At the onset of the war, Smith enlisted with the Air Force and was stationed at Norfolk, but Rhys spent most of her time in London. Smith died in October 1945, after the end of the war. It was at Smith's funeral that Rhys met his cousin, Max Hamer. Two years later, Rhys and Hamer married and moved to Beckenham, Kent. Hamer, a solicitor, spent much of their marriage in jail. He died in 1966.

Rhys died in the Royan Devon and Exeter Hospital on May 14, 1979.

Literary career

Rhys's writing often centers on the lives of women transplanted from their roots and left to die at the whims of unfamiliar societies—an obvious echo of her own life. Her style is often noted for its distinctive blend of modernist techniques and West Indian sensibilities.[2]

The publication of Postures, later published as Quartet, immediately showcased Rhys' primary thematic concern—that of the socially-trapped woman. Though her writing in Postures did not demonstrate the polish of her later work, it introduced her ubiquitous heroine—beautiful, thoughtful, and often the subject of oppression. Following Postures was After Leaving Mr. Mackenzie, a novel about human relationships. Rhys demonstrated an improvement over Postures in narrative composition, and additional focus on the male consciousness.

For her next novel, Voyage in the Dark, Rhys borrowed heavily from her experiences traveling with a musical troupe. The female protagonist, like Rhys, experiences a longing for the climate and color of the Caribbean. It introduces in Rhys's work the motif of the exotic islands, which play a more prominent role in later work, with Wide Sargasso Sea. While critical reception of Voyage in the Dark was good, Rhys was often cited for the dark quality of her narratives.

With Good Morning, Midnight (1939), Rhys continued to present the idea of the interior female consciousness, in contrast with her other contemporary modernist writers, who seemed heavily influenced by the worldly and political issues during that time.

After her marriage to Hamer, Rhys became increasingly reclusive, living alone in her primitive Devon cottage at Cheriton FitzPaine, drinking heavily but still writing. Because of her lengthy absence from publication, her devoted readers believed she may have died. Not until 1949, when actress Selma Vaz Dias printed an ad in the New Statesman to try to find Rhys, did she resume her work. When she responded to Dias' ad, she learned that Dias had obtained a dramatic adaptation of her novel Good Morning, Midnight. Dias went on to perform the adaptation at the Anglo-French Center in November 1949, and it was later produced for BBC's Third Programme in 1957. The newfound attention to her novels prompted Rhys to end her hiatus.

In 1957, Diana Athill of Andre Deutsch's publishing house helped return Rhys's work to a wider audience after her writing had fallen out of favor and out of print. Athill was a key player in generating Rhys's resurgence. Two short stories, "Till September Petronella" (1960) and "Let Them Call It Jazz" (1962) were published in London Magazine. Athill was responsible for choosing to publish Wide Sargasso Sea as a novel in October 1966, when Rhys was 76.[3]

Again, like Rhys's previous novels, Wide Sargasso Sea goes deep in exploring male-female relationships, but it stands alone as Rhys's most famous work. The novel is imagined as a prelude to Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre, exploring the early years of the marriage between Rochester and the madwoman in the attic—here, named Antoinette.

Rhys published three more books, Tigers Are Better-Looking (1968), Sleep It Off, Lady (1976), and the autobiographical My Day (1975). She died before she could complete her autobiography. The unfinished work was published posthumously as Smile Please (1979).

Legacy

The success of Wide Sargasso Sea brought Rhys an unprecedented level of popularity. After receiving the WH Smith Literary Award and the Heinemann Award for Wide Sargasso Sea, the bulk of her earlier work was republished, giving her greater exposure and critical acclaim.

In 1978, Rhys was made a Commander of the British Empire.

Playwright Polly Teale brought the story of Rhys's life to the stage, in After Mrs. Rochester. The play was first produced at the Lyric Theatre in Hammersmith, London, in 2003.[4]

Her collected papers and ephemera are housed in the University of Tulsa's McFarlin Library, Department of Special Collections and University Archives.

The University of the West Indies held the Jean Rhys Conference and Festival on Dominica, June 10-13, 2004.

The American Library Association's Radcliffe Publishing Course Top 100 Novels of the twentieth century lists Wide Sargasso Sea as number 81.[5]

Bibliography

Notes

  1. Kirjasto.sci.fi, Books and Writers. Retrieved December 17, 2007.
  2. Drusilla Modjeska, Stravinsky's Lunch (Sydney: Picador, 1999). ISBN 0 330 36259 3
  3. The Observer, The prime of Miss Jean Rhys by Vanessa Thorpe. Retrieved October 14, 2007.
  4. Doollee.com, Polly Teale. Retrieved December 15, 2007.
  5. American Library Association, Top 100 Novels of the 20th Century. Retrieved December 17, 2007.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Angier, Carole. 1990. Jean Rhys: Life and Work. Boston: Little, Brown. ISBN 0316042633
  • Davidson, Arnold E. 1985. Jean Rhys. New York: F. Ungar Pub. Co. ISBN 0804421439
  • Frickey, Pierrette M. 1990. Critical Perspectives on Jean Rhys. Washington, D.C.: Three Continents Press. ISBN 0894100599
  • Savory, Elaine. 1998. Jean Rhys. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521474345
  • Staley, Thomas F., ed. Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 36: British Novelists, 1890-1929: Modernists. The Gale Group, 1985.
  • Sternlicht, Sanford V. 1997. Jean Rhys. New York: Twayne. ISBN 0805746072

External links

All links retrieved May 1, 2018.

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