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Edith Wharton (/ˈhwɔːrtən/; born Edith Newbold Jones; January 24, 1862 – August 11, 1937) was an American novelist, short story writer, and interior designer. Wharton drew upon her insider's knowledge of the upper-class New York "aristocracy" to realistically portray the lives and morals of the Gilded Age. In 1921, she became the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize in Literature, for her novel The Age of Innocence. She was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame in 1996.[1] Among her other well known works are The House of Mirth and the novella Ethan Frome.

Edith Wharton
Wharton, c. 1895
BornEdith Newbold Jones
(1862-01-24)January 24, 1862
New York City, U.S.
DiedAugust 11, 1937(1937-08-11) (aged 75)
Saint-Brice-sous-Forêt, France
Resting placeCimetière des Gonards
Occupation
  • Novelist
  • short story writer
  • designer
Notable awards
  • Pulitzer Prize for the Novel (1921) for The Age of Innocence
Spouse
Edward Robbins Wharton
(m. 1885; div. 1913)
Signature

Biography



Early life


Portrait of Wharton as a girl by Edward Harrison May (1870)
Portrait of Wharton as a girl by Edward Harrison May (1870)

Edith Wharton was born Edith Newbold Jones on January 24, 1862 to George Frederic Jones and Lucretia Stevens Rhinelander at their brownstone at 14 West Twenty-third Street in New York City. [2][3] To her friends and family she was known as "Pussy Jones". [4] She had two older brothers, Frederic Rhinelander and Henry Edward. [2] Frederic married Mary Cadwalader Rawle; their daughter was landscape architect Beatrix Farrand. Edith was baptized April 20, 1862, Easter Sunday, at Grace Church.[2]

Wharton's paternal family, the Joneses, were a very wealthy and socially prominent family having made their money in real estate.[5] The saying "keeping up with the Joneses" is said to refer to her father's family.[6][7] She was related to the Rensselaers, the most prestigious of the old patroon families, who had received land grants from the former Dutch government of New York and New Jersey. Her father's first cousin was Caroline Schermerhorn Astor.[8] Fort Stevens in New York was named for Wharton's maternal great-grandfather, Ebenezer Stevens, a Revolutionary War hero and General. [9]

Wharton was born during the Civil War; however, in describing her family life Wharton does not mention the war except that their travels to Europe after the war were due to the depreciation of American currency.[2][10] From 1866 to 1872, the Jones family visited France, Italy, Germany, and Spain.[11] During her travels, the young Edith became fluent in French, German, and Italian. At the age of nine, she suffered from typhoid fever, which nearly killed her, while the family was at a spa in the Black Forest.[2] After the family returned to the United States in 1872, they spent their winters in New York City and their summers in Newport, Rhode Island.[11] While in Europe, she was educated by tutors and governesses. She rejected the standards of fashion and etiquette that were expected of young girls at the time, which were intended to allow women to marry well and to be put on display at balls and parties. She considered these fashions superficial and oppressive. Edith wanted more education than she received, so she read from her father's library and from the libraries of her father's friends.[12] Her mother forbade her to read novels until she was married, and Edith obeyed this command.[13]


Early writing


Edith Wharton by Edward Harrison May
Edith Wharton by Edward Harrison May

Wharton wrote and told stories from an early age.[14] When her family moved to Europe and she was just four or five she started what she called "making up."[14] She invented stories for her family and walked with an open book, turning the pages as if reading while improvising a story.[14] Wharton began writing poetry and fiction as a young girl, and attempted to write her first novel at the age of 11.[15] Her mother's criticism quashed her ambition and she turned to poetry.[15] She was 15 years old her first published work appeared, a translation of a German poem "Was die Steine Erzählen" ("What the Stones Tell") by Heinrich Karl Brugsch, for which she was paid $50. Her family did not want her name to appear in print since writing was not considered a proper occupation for a society woman of her time. Consequently, the poem was published under the name of a friend's father, E. A. Washburn, a cousin of Ralph Waldo Emerson who supported women's education.[16] In 1877, at the age of 15, she secretly wrote a novella, Fast and Loose. In 1878, her father arranged for a collection of two dozen original poems and five translations, Verses, to be privately published.[17] Wharton published a poem under a pseudonym in the New York World in 1879.[18] In 1880, she had five poems published anonymously in the Atlantic Monthly, an important literary magazine.[19] Despite these early successes, she was not encouraged by her family or her social circle, and though she continued to write, she did not publish anything more until her poem "The Last Giustiniani" was published in Scribner's Magazine in October 1889.[20]


The "debutante" years


Between 1880 and 1890, Wharton put her writing aside to participate in the social rituals of the New York upper classes. She keenly observed the social changes happening around her, which she used later in her writing.[21] Wharton officially came out as a debutante to society in 1879.[22] She was allowed to bare her shoulders and wear her hair up for the first time at a December dance given by a Society matron, Anna Morton.[22] Wharton began a courtship with Henry Leyden Stevens, the son of Paran Stevens, a wealthy hotelier and real estate investor from rural New Hampshire. His sister Minnie married Arthur Paget.[23] The Jones family did not approve of Stevens.[23]

In the middle of her debutante season, the Jones family returned to Europe in 1881 for her father's health.[24] In spite of this, George Frederic Jones died of a stroke in Cannes in 1882.[25] Stevens was with the Jones family in Europe during this time.[24] After returning to the United States with her mother, Wharton continued her courtship with Stevens, announcing their engagement in August 1882.[24] The month the two were to marry, the engagement abruptly ended.[26]

Wharton's mother, Lucretia Stevens Rhinelander Jones, moved back to Paris in 1883 and lived there until her death in 1901.[10]


1880s–1900s


The Mount, 2006
The Mount, 2006

On April 29, 1885,[27] at the age of 23, Wharton married Edward Robbins (Teddy) Wharton, who was 12 years her senior, at the Trinity Chapel Complex in Manhattan.[28][29] From a well-established Boston family, he was a sportsman and a gentleman of the same social class and shared her love of travel. The Whartons set up house at Pencraig Cottage in Newport.[30] In 1893, they bought a house named Land's End, on the other side of Newport, for $80,000, and moved into it.[30] Wharton decorated Land's End with the help of designer Ogden Codman. In 1897, the Whartons purchased their New York home, 884 Park Avenue.[31] Between 1886 and 1897, they traveled overseas in the period from February to June – mostly visiting Italy, but also Paris and England.[31] From her marriage onwards, three interests came to dominate Wharton's life: American houses, writing, and Italy.[30]

From the late 1880s until 1902, Teddy Wharton suffered from acute depression, and the couple then ceased their extensive travel.[32] At that time, his depression manifested as a more serious disorder, after which they lived almost exclusively at their estate The Mount in Lenox, Massachusetts. During those same years, Wharton herself was said to suffer from health problems with asthma and also from periods of depression.[33]

In 1908, Teddy Wharton's mental condition was determined to be incurable. In that year, Wharton began an affair with Morton Fullerton, an author and foreign correspondent for The Times of London, in whom she found an intellectual partner.[34] She divorced Edward Wharton in 1913, after 28 years of marriage.[32] Around the same time, she was beset with harsh criticisms leveled by the naturalist writers.

Edith Wharton as a young woman, ca. 1889
Edith Wharton as a young woman, ca. 1889

In addition to novels, Wharton wrote at least 85 short stories.[12] She was also a garden designer, an interior designer, and a taste-maker of her time. She wrote several design books, including her first major published work, The Decoration of Houses (1897), co-authored by Ogden Codman. Another of her "home and garden" books is the generously illustrated Italian Villas and Their Gardens of 1904, illustrated by Maxfield Parrish.


Travels and life abroad


She eventually crossed the Atlantic 60 times.[35] In Europe, her primary destinations were Italy, France, and England. She also went to Morocco in North Africa. She wrote many books about her travels, including Italian Backgrounds and A Motor-Flight through France.

Her husband Edward Wharton shared her love of travel and for many years they spent at least four months of each year abroad, mainly in Italy. Their friend Egerton Winthrop accompanied them on many journeys there.[36] In 1888, the Whartons and their friend James Van Alen took a cruise through the Aegean islands. Wharton was 26. The trip cost the Whartons $10,000 and lasted four months.[37] She kept a travel journal during this trip that was thought to be lost but was later published as The Cruise of the Vanadis, now considered her earliest known travel writing.[38]

Land's End, Newport, RI
Land's End, Newport, RI

In 1897, Edith Wharton purchased Land's End in Newport, Rhode Island, from Robert Livingston Beeckman, a former U.S. Open Tennis Championship runner-up who became governor of Rhode Island. At the time, Wharton described the main house as "incurably ugly." Wharton agreed to pay $80,000 for the property, and spent thousands more to alter the home's facade, decorate the interior, and landscape the grounds.

Page from original manuscript of The House of Mirth, in Edith Wharton's hand
Page from original manuscript of The House of Mirth, in Edith Wharton's hand

In 1902, Wharton designed The Mount, her estate in Lenox, Massachusetts, which survives today as an example of her design principles. She wrote several of her novels there, including The House of Mirth (1905), the first of many chronicles of life in old New York. At The Mount, she entertained the cream of American literary society, including her close friend, novelist Henry James, who described the estate as "a delicate French chateau mirrored in a Massachusetts pond".[39] Although she spent many months traveling in Europe nearly every year with her friend, Egerton Winthrop (John Winthrop's descendant), The Mount was her primary residence until 1911.[37] When living there and while traveling abroad, Wharton was usually driven to appointments by her longtime chauffeur and friend Charles Cook, a native of nearby South Lee, Massachusetts.[40][41] When her marriage deteriorated, she decided to move permanently to France, living first at 53 Rue de Varenne, Paris, in an apartment that belonged to George Washington Vanderbilt II.

Wharton was preparing to vacation for the summer when World War I broke out. Though many fled Paris, she moved back to her Paris apartment on the Rue de Varenne and for four years was a tireless and ardent supporter of the French war effort.[42] One of the first causes she undertook in August 1914 was the opening of a workroom for unemployed women; here they were fed and paid one franc a day. What began with 30 women soon doubled to 60, and their sewing business began to thrive.[43] When the Germans invaded Belgium in the fall of 1914 and Paris was flooded with Belgian refugees, she helped to set up the American Hostels for Refugees, which managed to get them shelter, meals, and clothes, and eventually created an employment agency to help them find work.[44] She collected more than $100,000 on their behalf.[45] In early 1915, she organized the Children of Flanders Rescue Committee, which gave shelter to nearly 900 Belgian refugees who had fled when their homes were bombed by the Germans.[46]

Aided by her influential connections in the French government, she and her long-time friend Walter Berry (then president of the American Chamber of Commerce in Paris), were among the few foreigners in France allowed to travel to the front lines during World War I. She and Berry made five journeys between February and August 1915, which Wharton described in a series of articles that were first published in Scribner's Magazine and later as Fighting France: From Dunkerque to Belfort, which became an American bestseller.[47][48] Travelling by car, Wharton and Berry drove through the war zone, viewing one decimated French village after another. She visited the trenches, and was within earshot of artillery fire. She wrote, "We woke to a noise of guns closer and more incessant ... and when we went out into the streets it seemed as if, overnight, a new army had sprung out of the ground".[49]

Throughout the war, she worked tirelessly in charitable efforts for refugees, the injured, the unemployed, and the displaced. She was a "heroic worker on behalf of her adopted country".[50] On April 18, 1916, Raymond Poincaré, the then-President of France appointed her Chevalier of the Legion of Honour, the country's highest award, in recognition of her dedication to the war effort.[45][51] Her relief work included setting up workrooms for unemployed French women, organizing concerts to provide work for musicians, raising tens of thousands of dollars for the war effort, and opening tuberculosis hospitals. In 1915, Wharton edited The Book of the Homeless, which included essays, art, poetry, and musical scores by many major contemporary European and American artists, including Henry James, Joseph Conrad, William Dean Howells, Anna de Noailles, Jean Cocteau, and Walter Gay, among others. Wharton proposed the book to her publisher, Scribner's. She handled all of the business arrangements, lined up contributors, and translated the French entries into English. Theodore Roosevelt wrote a two-page introduction in which he praised Wharton's effort and urged Americans to support the war.[52] She also kept up her own work during the war, continuing to write novels, short stories, and poems, as well as reporting for The New York Times and keeping up her enormous correspondence.[53] Wharton urged Americans to support the war effort and encouraged America to enter the war.[54] She wrote the popular romantic novel Summer in 1916, the war novella, The Marne, in 1918, and A Son at the Front in 1919, (though it was not published until 1923). When the war ended, she watched the Victory Parade from the Champs Elysees' balcony of a friend's apartment. After four years of intense effort, she decided to leave Paris in favor of the peace and quiet of the countryside. Wharton settled 10 mi (16 km) north of Paris in Saint-Brice-sous-Forêt, buying an 18th-century house on seven acres of land which she called Pavillon Colombe. She lived there in summer and autumn for the rest of her life. She spent winters and springs on the French Riviera at Sainte Claire du Vieux Chateau in Hyères.[55]

Wharton was a committed supporter of French imperialism, describing herself as a "rabid imperialist", and the war solidified her political views.[56] After the war, she traveled to Morocco as the guest of Resident General Hubert Lyautey and wrote a book, titled In Morocco, about her experiences. Wharton's writing on her Moroccan travels is full of praise for the French administration and for Lyautey and his wife in particular.

During the post-war years, she divided her time between Hyères and Provence, where she finished The Age of Innocence in 1920. She returned to the United States only once after the war to receive an honorary doctorate from Yale University in 1923.


Later years


The Age of Innocence (1920) won the 1921 Pulitzer Prize for literature,[57] making Wharton the first woman to win the award. The three fiction judges – literary critic Stuart Pratt Sherman, literature professor Robert Morss Lovett, and novelist Hamlin Garland – voted to give the prize to Sinclair Lewis for his satire Main Street, but Columbia University's advisory board, led by conservative university president Nicholas Murray Butler, overturned their decision and awarded the prize to The Age of Innocence.[58] She was also nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1927, 1928, and 1930.[59]

Wharton was friend and confidante to many gifted intellectuals of her time: Henry James, Sinclair Lewis, Jean Cocteau, and André Gide were all her guests at one time or another. Theodore Roosevelt, Bernard Berenson, and Kenneth Clark were valued friends as well. Particularly notable was her meeting with F. Scott Fitzgerald, described by the editors of her letters as "one of the better known failed encounters in the American literary annals". She spoke fluent French, Italian, and German, and many of her books were published in both French and English.

In 1934, Wharton's autobiography A Backward Glance was published. In the view of Judith E. Funston, writing on Edith Wharton in American National Biography,

What is most notable about A Backward Glance, however, is what it does not tell: her criticism of Lucretia Jones [her mother], her difficulties with Teddy, and her affair with Morton Fullerton, which did not come to light until her papers, deposited in Yale's Beinecke Rare Book Room and Manuscript Library, were opened in 1968.[60]


Death


On June 1, 1937, Wharton was at her French country home (shared with Ogden Codman), where she was at work on a revised edition of The Decoration of Houses, when she suffered a heart attack and collapsed.[61]

Wharton's Le Pavilion Colombe, Saint-Brice-sous-Forêt, France
Wharton's Le Pavilion Colombe, Saint-Brice-sous-Forêt, France

She died of a stroke on August 11, 1937, at Le Pavillon Colombe, her 18th-century house on Rue de Montmorency in Saint-Brice-sous-Forêt. She died at 5:30 p.m., but her death was not known in Paris. At her bedside was her friend, Mrs. Royall Tyler.[62] Wharton was buried in the American Protestant section of the Cimetière des Gonards in Versailles, "with all the honors owed a war hero and a chevalier of the Legion of Honor...a group of some one hundred friends sang a verse of the hymn 'O Paradise'..."[63]


Writing



Career


Despite not publishing her first novel until she was forty, Wharton became an extraordinarily productive writer. In addition to her 15 novels, seven novellas, and eighty-five short stories, she published poetry, books on design, travel, literary and cultural criticism, and a memoir.[64]

In 1873, Wharton wrote a short story and gave it to her mother to read. Her mother criticized the story, so Wharton decided to write only poetry. While she constantly sought her mother's approval and love, it was rare that she received either. From the start, the relationship with her mother was a troubled one.[65] Before she was 15, she wrote Fast and Loose (1877). In her youth, she wrote about society. Her central themes came from her experiences with her parents. She was very critical of her work and wrote public reviews criticizing it. She also wrote about her own experiences with life. "Intense Love’s Utterance" is a poem written about Henry Stevens.[37]

In 1889, she sent out three poems for publication. They were sent to Scribner's, Harper’s and Century. Edward L. Burlingame published "The Last Giustiniani" for Scribner’s. It was not until Wharton was 29 that her first short story was published. "Mrs. Manstey's View" had very little success, and it took her more than a year to publish another story. She completed "The Fullness of Life" following her annual European trip with Teddy. Burlingame was critical of this story but Wharton did not want to make edits to it. This story, along with many others, speaks about her marriage. She sent Bunner Sisters to Scribner's in 1892. Burlingame wrote back that it was too long for Scribner's to publish. This story is believed to be based on an experience she had as a child. It did not see publication until 1916 and is included in the collection called Xingu. After a visit with her friend, Paul Bourget, she wrote "The Good May Come" and "The Lamp of Psyche". "The Lamp of Psyche" was a comical story with verbal wit and sorrow. After "Something Exquisite" was rejected by Burlingame, she lost confidence in herself. She started travel writing in 1894.[37]

In 1901, Wharton wrote a two-act play called Man of Genius. This play was about an English man who was having an affair with his secretary. The play was rehearsed but was never produced. Another 1901 play, The Shadow of a Doubt, which also came close to being staged but fell through, was thought to be lost, until it was discovered in 2017. Its world premiere was a radio adaptation broadcast on BBC Radio 3 in 2018.[66] She collaborated with Marie Tempest to write another play, but the two only completed four acts before Marie decided she was no longer interested in costume plays. One of her earliest literary endeavors (1902) was the translation of the play Es Lebe das Leben ("The Joy of Living"), by Hermann Sudermann. The Joy of Living was criticized for its title because the heroine swallows poison at the end, and was a short-lived Broadway production. It was, however, a successful book.[37]

Many of Wharton's novels are characterized by subtle use of dramatic irony. Having grown up in upper-class, late-19th-century society, Wharton became one of its most astute critics, in such works as The House of Mirth and The Age of Innocence.


Themes


Versions of her mother, Lucretia Jones, often appeared in Wharton's fiction. Biographer Hermione Lee described it as "one of the most lethal acts of revenge ever taken by a writing daughter."[25] In her memoir, A Backward Glance, Wharton describes her mother as indolent, spendthrift, censorious, disapproving, superficial, icy, dry and ironic.[25]

Wharton's writings often dealt with themes such as "social and individual fulfillment, repressed sexuality, and the manners of old families and the new elite."[67] Maureen Howard, editor of Edith Wharton: Collected Stories, notes several recurring themes in Wharton's short stories, including confinement and attempts at freedom, the morality of the author, critiques of intellectual pretension, and the “unmasking” of the truth.[68] Wharton's writing also explored themes of “social mores and social reform” as they relate to the “extremes and anxieties of the Gilded Age”.[67] These themes were expressed in her ghost stories, in which supernatural specters function as richly costumed variations on a theme of all-too-human cruelty.[69]

A key recurring theme in Wharton's writing is the relationship between the house as a physical space and its relationship to its inhabitant's characteristics and emotions. Maureen Howard argues “Edith Wharton conceived of houses, dwelling places, in extended imagery of shelter and dispossession. Houses – their confinement and their theatrical possibilities…they are never mere settings."[68]


Influences


American children's stories containing slang were forbidden in Wharton's childhood home.[70] This included such popular authors as Mark Twain, Bret Harte, and Joel Chandler Harris. She was allowed to read Louisa May Alcott but Wharton preferred Lewis Carroll’s Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Charles Kingsley’s The Water-Babies, A Fairy Tale for a Land Baby.[70] Wharton's mother forbade her from reading many novels and Wharton said she "read everything else but novels until the day of my marriage." [70] Instead Wharton read the classics, philosophy, history, and poetry in her father's library including Daniel Defoe, John Milton, Thomas Carlyle, Alphonse de Lamartine, Victor Hugo, Jean Racine, Thomas Moore, Lord Byron, William Wordsworth, John Ruskin, and Washington Irving.[71] Biographer Hermione Lee describes Wharton as having read herself "out of Old New York" and her influences included Herbert Spencer, Charles Darwin, Friedrich Nietzsche, T. H. Huxley, George Romanes, James Frazer, and Thorstein Veblen.[72] These influenced her ethnographic style of novelization.[72] Wharton developed a passion for Walt Whitman.[73]


Works


Source: Campbell, Donna M. "Works by Edith Wharton". Washington State University. Retrieved January 22, 2018.


Adaptations


Source: (Marshall 1996, pp. 21–25)


Film



Television



Theater



Ballet





References



Citations


  1. National Women's Hall of Fame, Edith Wharton
  2. Lee 2008, p. 16.
  3. Dwight 1994, pp. 12–13.
  4. Minkel 2012.
  5. Lee 2008, p. 21.
  6. Lee 2008, p. 22.
  7. Benstock 1994, p. 216.
  8. Lee 2008, p. 34.
  9. Lee 2008, p. 18.
  10. Lee 2008, pp. 7–8.
  11. "Chronology". The Mount: Edith Wharton's Home.
  12. Baym, Nina (2013). The Norton Anthology of American Literature (8th ed.). W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-91885-4.
  13. Lee 2008.
  14. Lee 2008, pp. 13–14.
  15. Lee 2008, p. 36.
  16. Benstock 1994, p. 35.
  17. Lee 2008, p. 43.
  18. Lee 2008, p. 44.
  19. Benstock 1994, p. 38.
  20. Benstock 1994, p. 40.
  21. Lee 2008, p. 47.
  22. Lee 2008, p. 58.
  23. Lee 2008, p. 60.
  24. Lee 2008, p. 61.
  25. Lee 2008, p. 35.
  26. Lewis 1975, pp. 44–47.
  27. New York, New York, Marriage Index 1866–1937
  28. Lee 2008, pp. 74–75.
  29. U.S., Newspaper Extractions from the Northeast, 1704–1930
  30. Lee 2008, p. 81.
  31. Lee 2008, p. 82.
  32. Davis 2007
  33. Lee 2008, pp. 78–81.
  34. "Edith Wharton's World, Portrait of People and Places". US: National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved December 23, 2009.
  35. Wright 1995, pp. xvii–xviii.
  36. Wright 1995, p. 3.
  37. Lewis 1975, p. [page needed].
  38. Wright 1995, p. 17.
  39. Benstock 1994, pp. 129–130.
  40. Benstock 1994, p. 143.
  41. Singley, Carol J. (2003). A Historical Guide to Edith Wharton. Oxford University Press. p. 238. ISBN 0-19-513591-1. Photograph of Edith Wharton, Teddy Wharton, Henry James and Chauffeur Charles Cook
  42. Dwight 1994, p. 183.
  43. Dwight 1994, pp. 183–184.
  44. Dwight 1994, pp. 188–189.
  45. Wolff 1995, p. 253.
  46. Dwight 1994, p. 190.
  47. Lee 2008, p. 486.
  48. Edith Wharton p. 486. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 978-0-375-40004-9
  49. "In Argonne", Chapter 2 of Fighting France: From Dunkerque to Belfort, published in Edith Wharton Abroad: Selected Travel Writings, 1888–1920, p. 150. New York: St. Martin's Griffin. ISBN 0-312-16120-4
  50. Lee 2008, p. 454.
  51. Lee 2008, p. 9.
  52. Dwight 1994, pp. 202–203.
  53. Lee 2008, p. 450.
  54. Dwight 1994, p. 201.
  55. Dwight 1994, p. 210.
  56. Wegener, Fredrick (December 2000). ""Rabid Imperialist"': Edith Wharton and the Obligations of Empire in Modern American Fiction". American Literature. 72 (4): 783–812. doi:10.1215/00029831-72-4-783. S2CID 162758720.
  57. Nelson, Randy F. (1981). The Almanac of American Letters. Los Altos, California: William Kaufmann, Inc. p. 9. ISBN 0-86576-008-X.
  58. "Reader's Almanac: A Controversial Pulitzer Prize Brings Edith Wharton and Sinclair Lewis Together." Library of America, June 28, 2011. Web. March 11, 2015.
  59. "Nomination Database – Literature". www.nobelprize.org. Retrieved September 14, 2017.
  60. Judith E. Funston, "Edith Wharton", in American National Biography; New York: Oxford University Press, 1999; Vol. 23, pp. 111–112. ISBN 0-19-512802-8.
  61. Benstock 1994, p. 86.
  62. "Edith Wharton, 75, Is Dead in France". The New York Times, August 13, 1937. Web. March 11, 2015.
  63. Benstock 1994, p. 456.
  64. Benstock 1994.
  65. Armitage, Robert. "Edith Wharton, A Writing Life: Childhood." New York Public Library, May 6, 2013. Web. March 11, 2015.
  66. Drama on 3 The Shadow of a Doubt. BBC Radio 3
  67. Mulalic, Almasa (2012). "Material Details in Edith Wharton's Writings". Epiphany: Journal of Transdisciplinary Studies. 5: 95–107 via ResearchGate.
  68. Howard, Maureen (2001). "Remarks on Edith Wharton's Collected Stories by editor Maureen Howard". Library of America.
  69. "Supernatural Specters, Normal Human Malice: On Edith Wharton's "Ghosts"". Cleveland Review of Books. Retrieved November 15, 2021.
  70. Lee 2008, p. 31.
  71. Lee 2008, pp. 31–34.
  72. Lee 2008, p. 23.
  73. Lee 2008, p. 32.
  74. "Review of The Fruit of the Tree by Edith Wharton". The Athenaeum (4181): 762. December 14, 1907.
  75. Wikipedia english / Joan_Crawford / Move to Warner Bros.
  76. Wharton, Edith; Loney, Glenn; Fitch, Clyde (1981). The house of mirth : the play of the novel / dramatized by Edith Wharton and Clyde Fitch, 1906; edited, with an introd., notes, and appendixes by Glenn Loney. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press; Associated University Presses. ISBN 9780838624166. Retrieved September 14, 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  77. Wharton, Edith (September 14, 1980). "The play of the novel The house of mirth: the play of the novel". Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. Retrieved September 14, 2017 via The Open Library.
  78. Desaulniers, Heather (April 23, 2018). "San Francisco Ballet – Unbound Festival Program B: works by Myles Thatcher, Cathy Marston, David Dawson – San Francisco". DanceTabs.
  79. "15c Edith Wharton single".

Sources



Further reading





Archival materials



Online editions




На других языках


- [en] Edith Wharton

[fr] Edith Wharton

Edith Wharton, née Edith Newbold Jones le 24 janvier 1862 à New York (États-Unis) et morte le 11 août 1937 à Saint-Brice-sous-Forêt (Val-d'Oise, France), est une romancière, nouvelliste, poétesse et essayiste américaine. Première femme à obtenir le Prix Pulitzer du roman, Edith Wharton a laissé au moins trois romans majeurs : Chez les heureux du monde (1905), Les Beaux Mariages (1913) et Le Temps de l'innocence (1920), ainsi que des nouvelles remarquables, et l'inclassable Ethan Frome que certains considèrent comme son chef-d'œuvre[1].

[ru] Уортон, Эдит

Э́дит Уо́ртон (англ. Edith Wharton), урождённая Эдит Ньюболд Джонс (англ. Edith Newbold Jones; 24 января 1862 (1862-01-24) — 11 августа 1937) — американская писательница и дизайнер, лауреат Пулитцеровской премии.



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