Elizabeth Robins, 1862–1952
Actress, Novelist, Feminist
University of Alabama Press
Robins’s writing on behalf of women’s rights issues in the first quarter of the twentieth century represents an important contribution to feminist politics
From Childhood, Elizabeth Robins dreamed of a successful career on the stage. Her first impulse to visit England, in 1888, stemmed from her desire to secure better opportunities as an actress, and she soon gained celebrity playing Ibsen’s heroines. While buoyed by this success, she began writing fiction that treated the feminist issues of her time: organized prostitution, women’s positions in war-torn England, and the dangers of rearmament. In her acting, writing, and political activism, she consistently challenged existing roles for women. Robins’s work is marked by a number of true-life components, and this first biography to use the vast collection of her private papers demonstrates how Robins transformed her own life into literary and dramatic capital.
Robins published several novels under the pseudonym C. E. Raimond, culminating in the sensational male-female bildungsroman, The Open Question: A Tale of Two Temperaments, which was set in her native Zanesville, Ohio, and publication of which finally disclosed her identity.
Her fiction is compared to that of Henry James, Edith Wharton, and Willa Cather. Many of her heroines share the characteristics of exhibiting force or willed silence, and Gates's analysis of this trait has implications for feminist theorists in a number of fields.
From Childhood, Elizabeth Robins dreamed of a successful career on the stage. Her first impulse to visit England, in 1888, stemmed from her desire to secure better opportunities as an actress, and she soon gained celebrity playing Ibsen’s heroines. While buoyed by this success, she began writing fiction that treated the feminist issues of her time: organized prostitution, women’s positions in war-torn England, and the dangers of rearmament. In her acting, writing, and political activism, she consistently challenged existing roles for women. Robins’s work is marked by a number of true-life components, and this first biography to use the vast collection of her private papers demonstrates how Robins transformed her own life into literary and dramatic capital.
Robins published several novels under the pseudonym C. E. Raimond, culminating in the sensational male-female bildungsroman, The Open Question: A Tale of Two Temperaments, which was set in her native Zanesville, Ohio, and publication of which finally disclosed her identity.
Her fiction is compared to that of Henry James, Edith Wharton, and Willa Cather. Many of her heroines share the characteristics of exhibiting force or willed silence, and Gates's analysis of this trait has implications for feminist theorists in a number of fields.
A model of good research and an excellent scholarly work.’
—Jane Marcus, The University of Texas
An important scholarly achievement… A marvelous work of biographical scholarship, on an important and unjustly neglected figure.’
—Kerry Powell, Miami University
Joanne E. Gates is now professor of English at Jacksonville State University and is the coeditor of Alaska–Klondike Diary of Elizabeth Robins, 1900.
Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. “I Was Born in the Superlative”: Girlhood and American Stage Career, 1862–1888
2. The Coming Woman: Early Years in London, 1888–1892
3. The Power of Anonymity: Free Choices and a Dual Career, 1893–1896
4. Toward the New Century: Further Ambitions, Wider Horizons, 1896–1900
5. The Magnetic North: Raymond, Alaska, Chinsegut, and “My Own Life,” 1900–1906
6. Votes for Women: The Suffrage Campaign in England, 1906–1909
7. Political Crises and a Pilgrimage into the Past, 1909–1916
8. “My Share in Graver Business”: Fiction and Feminism, 1915–1924
Epilogue
Abbreviations
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. “I Was Born in the Superlative”: Girlhood and American Stage Career, 1862–1888
2. The Coming Woman: Early Years in London, 1888–1892
3. The Power of Anonymity: Free Choices and a Dual Career, 1893–1896
4. Toward the New Century: Further Ambitions, Wider Horizons, 1896–1900
5. The Magnetic North: Raymond, Alaska, Chinsegut, and “My Own Life,” 1900–1906
6. Votes for Women: The Suffrage Campaign in England, 1906–1909
7. Political Crises and a Pilgrimage into the Past, 1909–1916
8. “My Share in Graver Business”: Fiction and Feminism, 1915–1924
Epilogue
Abbreviations
Notes
Bibliography
Index