Katherine Mansfield was a well-known 19th century modernist writer
@New Zealand Women, Timeline and Personal Life
Katherine Mansfield was a well-known 19th century modernist writer
Katherine Mansfield born at
When she was in England, at the age of nineteen, she fell in love with Garnet Trowell and became pregnant. She then rashly married her singing teacher, George Bowden and then abandoned him—all of which happened within seven months of her arrival.
She then gave birth to her baby in Germany and at the same time, she fell in love with a Polish writer, Floryan. It is believed that a possible ectopic pregnancy around this time resulted in the loss of one of her fallopian tubes and a subsequent, miscarriage.
She had numerous affairs with many men and was also believed to have been in two lesbian relationships with Maata Mahupaku and Edith Kathleen Bendall.
She was born as Kathleen Mansfield Beauchamp into a wealthy family in Wellington, New Zealand. She was the third of the five children born to a financier and the chairman of the Bank of New Zealand, Harold Beauchamp.
She first published her stories in the Wellington Girls’ High School magazine and the High School Reporter.
Disillusioned with her childhood, she began writing stories about her experiences in New Zealand and her views on the treatment of Maori people. She then moved to London in 1903, where she enrolled to Queen’s College.
It was here she played the cello and occasionally started writing articles for the university newspaper. Between 1903 and 1906, she toured Europe and was mainly enamored by Germany and Belgium.
Following her graduation, she returned to New Zealand In 1906 and started writing short stories.
She had several of her stories and articles published in a local Australian publication, ‘Native Companion’. This was not only her first venture as a professional writer, but it was also the first time she used the alias, ‘K Mansfield’.
She returned to London in 1908 and was involved in a tumultuous love affair, which led to a brief halt in her career. Around this time, she got pregnant and had a daughter in Bavaria, Germany, a place which had considerable influence on her works.
She documented her experiences in Germany in a publication titled, ‘In a German Pension’, which was published in 1911.
Around this time, she was inspired by Fauvism and she published a short-story, ‘The Woman at the Store’, which was published in the unconventional magazine, ‘Rhythm’.
Post-marriage, she moved to Paris in 1914, along with her husband in the hope of gaining new inspiration for her works.
‘An Indiscreet Journey’, published in 1920, is considered one of her greatest works because it includes details of her personal experiences related to war and the relationship she shared with her French lover during her trip to France. Written in a typical modernist style, the short story was first published in the ‘Athenaeum’ and was later re-published in another publication entitled, ‘Bliss and Other Stories’.
‘The Garden Party: and Other Stories’ is a collection of her short-stories, published in 1922 which comprises of all her popular short-stories including ‘At the bay’, ‘Mr. And Mrs. Dove’, ‘The Voyage’, ‘Her First Ball’ and ‘The Stranger’. This is considered one of her important works because most of the stories in the publication are set to be free-spirited and of modernist themes; one that was quite rare in her days.