Evocative, engaging and filled with vivid details, Rooms of their Own explores the homes of these three writers linked to the Bloomsbury Group. Bringing together stories of love, desire …
Abstract Examining Beverley Nichols's Merry Hall trilogy, this essay applies the social theory of minority stress and explores the ways in which the author's identity is shaped by his …
“Is all this attention to the body a good thing?” Laurence Goldstein asked in a 1994 anthology on The Male Body (p. viii). Since then, various volumes dealing with the history of …
This essay analyses Beverley Nichols's Merry Hall trilogy—frequently dismissed as 'garden writing'—as an often overlooked form of queer literature. Using Jack Halberstam's theories …
It remains little known that in 1929, when Virginia Woolf first articulated the desire for 'a room of one's own'as a means of resistance to the suffocating strictures of the 'home'(and nuclear …