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Kathleen Freeman (22 June 1897 – 21 February 1959) was a British classical scholar and author of detective novels. Her detective fiction was published under the pseudonym Mary Fitt. Freeman was a lecturer in Greek at the University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire, Cardiff, between 1919 and 1946.[1]

Kathleen Freeman
Kathleen Freeman
Born22 June 1897
Yardley, Birmingham, England
Died21 February 1959(1959-02-21) (aged 61)
St Mellons, Wales
Academic background
Alma materCardiff University (as University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire)
Academic work
DisciplineAncient Greek philosophy
InstitutionsCardiff University (as University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire), Philosophical Society of England

Early life and education


Kathleen Freeman was born in Yardley, Birmingham, and was the daughter of a commercial traveller, Charles H. Freeman, and Catharine Freeman, née Mawdesley. By the 1911 census, the family had moved to an eight-room house at 86 Conway Road, Cardiff.[2]:315 [3] Freeman's mother died in 1919, and her father died in 1932.[2]:315 Freeman attended Canton High School on Market Road in Cardiff, which opened in 1907. Boys and girls were both educated in the school but separately in different subjects: Canton High School offered Latin but not to girls, and Freeman's schooling did not include Greek or Latin.[2]

In a field dominated by men, she was an unlikely candidate to become a classicist of note.[2]:315 No details have been found about when or with whom she started to learn ancient Greek.[2]:316 Freeman knew Latin, French, German, Italian, and ancient and modern Greek. Except for French, which was taught at Canton High School, it remains unclear how she learnt these languages.[2]:316

Freeman won a scholarship to study at the University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire, Cardiff, which began to accept male and female students in 1893.[2]:317 [4] She began her degree in 1915 and studied with Professor Gilbert Norwood.[3]


Academic career


Following her graduation in 1918 when she was awarded a BA, Freeman remained at University College and was appointed Lecturer in Greek in 1919. She went on to earn an MA in 1922 and a DLitt in 1940.[5] A 1922 picture of the faculty at University College shows 41 men and 10 women. Only one of these women, Ida Beata Saxby, had a doctorate (University of London, 1918).[2]:318[6]

Freeman is best known for her works The Pre-Socratic Philosophers: A Companion to Diels, Fragmente Der Vorsokratiker (1946), and Ancilla to the Pre-Socratic Philosophers (1947/48), a translation of and handbook to the fragments of Pre-Socratic philosophers collected by Diels.[7][4]

Girls' entrance, Canton High School, Market Road, Cardiff
Girls' entrance, Canton High School, Market Road, Cardiff

From early in her career, Freeman worked to bring Greek texts to the general public through her work in translating texts and presenting her ideas to general audiences.[2]:333 Freeman featured on BBC radio in 1926 presenting a series on 'Writers of Greece', including Greek authors such as Aristophanes, Thucydides and Empedocles.[8][9][10]

During the Second World War Freeman delivered lectures on Greece for the Ministry of Information and in the National Scheme of Education for HM Forces in South Wales and Monmouthshire.[11][2]:323 She further contributed to the war effort with her selections of translations from Greek authors which featured in The Western Mail, a Cardiff-based newspaper. These were later published as the book, It Has All Happened Before: What the Greeks Thought of their Nazis (1941).[12] Her publications Voices of Freedom (1943), What They Said at the Time: A Survey of the Causes of the Second World War (1945) and her work with the Philosophical Society of England, where she acted as Supervisor of Studies from 1948 to 1952 before becoming the Chairman in 1952, are further testimony to her desire to make Greek ideas accessible through translation. Freeman resigned from the university in 1946 in order to pursue her research and writing.[13]


Fiction-writing career


Freeman enjoyed success as a writer of fiction and wrote under the pseudonyms Mary Fitt (1936–60), Stuart Mary Wick (1948; 1950), Clare St. Donat (1950) and Caroline Cory (1956).[14][15][16]

In 1926, in addition to her study The Work and Life of Solon, Freeman published a collection of short stories The Intruder and Other Stories, and her first novel Martin Hanner. A Comedy.[17] In 1936 she began publishing crime fiction under the pseudonym Mary Fitt, writing 27 books and a number of short stories. In 1950 she became a member of the Detection Club.[18] Her books were critically acclaimed at the time, although since her death many have been out of print.[19][20] She also wrote twelve children's stories and T'other Miss Austen (1956), a study of Jane Austen.

In recent years Freeman's work has been re-assessed, especially in the light of Welsh women and modernism.[21] [Acknowledgements] Her short stories have also been described as antecedents of the Kate North's queer stories, and, as of 2019, republication of some of her short stories was planned. [22] [p. 442]


Personal life


Formerly Canton High School, now Chapter Arts Centre, Market Road, Cardiff
Formerly Canton High School, now Chapter Arts Centre, Market Road, Cardiff

From some time in the 1930s until her death, she lived with her girlfriend, Dr. Liliane Marie Catherine Clopet (1901–1987), a GP and author, at Lark's Rise, a house on Druidstone Road in St Mellons, now a district of Cardiff.[23][1]

Freeman dedicated all her novels (written as Freeman, rather than Fitt) to Clopet from This Love (1929) onwards. The presentation copy of The Work and Life of Solon has survived, which Freeman dedicated to Clopet, dated to 14 July 1926.[24] Freeman's inscription includes a slight misspelling of Clopet's name, which has been thought by antiquarian bookseller Peter Harrington,[25] to indicate that Freeman and Clopet were in the early stages of their relationship.[24] Freeman died in 1959 in St. Mellons at the age of 61. Clopet considerably outlived Freeman, dying in 1987 in Newport.[23]


Bibliography



Academic publications



Selected fictional publications



Further reading



References


  1. For a brief note on Liliane Clopet, her career and her writings see Biography and bibliography by M. Eleanor Irwin and How to Conceal a Female Scholar; or, the Invisible Classicist of Cardiff by Edith Hall.
  2. Irwin, M. Eleanor (27 October 2016), Wyles, Rosie; Hall, Edith (eds.), "An Unconventional Classicist", Women Classical Scholars, Oxford University Press, pp. 313–334, doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198725206.003.0016, ISBN 978-0-19-872520-6, retrieved 22 February 2022
  3. "Inspirational People: 3. Kathleen Freeman – Classicist and Fiction Writer". Cardiff University. 13 December 2016. Retrieved 22 February 2022.
  4. "Classics & Class » Kathleen Freeman's Ancillary Classicism". Retrieved 9 April 2022.
  5. Irwin, M. E. (2004) 'Freeman, Kathleen (1897–1959)', in Todd, R. B ed. The Dictionary of British Classicists. Volume I, A-F. p. 343.
  6. Saxby, Ida Beata (1918). Some conditions affecting the growth and permanence of desires (Thesis). OCLC 1016050303.
  7. Dain, Alphonse (1951). "Kathleen Freeman, The Pre-Socratic Philosophers. A Companion to Diels Fragmente der Vorsokratiker, 1946 ; Ancilla to the Pre-Socratic Philosophers, A complete translation of the Fragments ..., 1948". Bulletin de l'Association Guillaume Budé. 1 (2): 111–112.
  8. "Issue 162". genome.ch.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 27 June 2018.
  9. "Broadcasting." Times, 29 November 1926, 21. The Times Digital Archive (accessed 23 March 2022). External Link
  10. "Programmes." Times, 19 November 1928, 8. The Times Digital Archive (accessed 23 March 2022). External Link
  11. Freeman, Kathleen (27 October 2016). Greek City-States. Hauraki Publishing. ISBN 978-1-78720-196-5.
  12. William, Charles (25 October 1941). "Ancient Tyrants". The Times Literary Supplement. No. 2073. London, England. p. 531.
  13. Irwin, M. E. (2004) 'Freeman, Kathleen (1897–1959)', in Todd, R. B ed. The Dictionary of British Classicists. Volume I, A-F. pp. 343–4.
  14. Irwin, M. E. (2004) 'Freeman, Kathleen (1897–1959)', in Todd, R. B ed. The Dictionary of British Classicists. Volume I, A-F. p. 344.
  15. For a comprehensive list of Freeman's writings see Biography and bibliography by M. Eleanor Irwin.
  16. Carty (2014). A Dictionary of Literary Pseudonyms in the English Language. New York. p. 448. ISBN 978-1-135-95578-6. OCLC 931534831.
  17. "A SEDATE TRIANGLE; MARTIN HANNER. A Comedy. By Kathleen Freeman, 328 pp., New York: Harcourt, Brace & Co. $2.50". The New York Times. 17 October 1926. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 22 February 2022.
  18. "gadetection / Detection Club, The". gadetection.pbworks.com. Retrieved 22 February 2022.
  19. Turner, N. (2019). "Miss Fitt's Misfits: Mary Fitt and the Case of the Vanished Crime Writer". Clues: A Journal of Detection. 37 (2): 105–114. ISSN 0742-4248.
  20. "Mary Fitt". www.litencyc.com. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
  21. Bohata, Kirsti; Morgan, Mihangel; Osborne, Huw (21 October 2021). Queer Square Mile. Parthian Books. ISBN 978-1-913640-25-5.
  22. The Cambridge history of Welsh literature. Geraint Evans, Helen Fulton. Cambridge, United Kingdom. 2019. ISBN 978-1-316-22720-6. OCLC 1099309674.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  23. "Kathleen Freeman". www.utsc.utoronto.ca. Retrieved 15 August 2020.
  24. "The Work and Life of Solon. With a Translation of his Poems. by FREEMAN, Kathleen.: (1926) Signed by Author(s) | Peter Harrington. ABA/ ILAB". www.abebooks.co.uk. Retrieved 15 August 2020.
  25. "Peter Harrington | ABA: The Antiquarian Bookseller Association". dev.aba.org.uk. Retrieved 17 May 2022.
  26. Walker, E. M. (1927). "The Work and Life of Solon - The Work and Life of Solon. With a translation of his Poems. By Kathleen Freeman, M.A., Lecturer in Greek, University of South Wales, Monmouthshire. Pp. 236. Cardiff: The University of Wales Press Board; London: Humphrey Milford, 1926. Cloth, 10s. net". The Classical Review. 41 (1): 17–19. doi:10.1017/S0009840X00031437. ISSN 1464-3561. S2CID 246880212.
  27. "Pre-Socratic Philosophers. A companion to Diels's Fragmente der Vorsokratiker . By Kathleen Freeman. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1946, pp. xiii+486. 25 s ". Greece and Rome. 17 (51): 132–133. 1948. doi:10.1017/S0017383500010196. ISSN 0017-3835.
  28. Morrow, Glenn R. (1949). "Review of Ancilla to the Pre-Socratic Philosophers: A Complete Translation of the Fragments in Diels, Fragmente der Vorsokratiker". The Classical Weekly. 43 (2): 28–29. doi:10.2307/4342608. ISSN 1940-641X. JSTOR 4342608.
  29. K., H.; Freeman, Kathleen (27 October 1949). "Ancilla to the Pre-Socratic Philosophers. A Complete Translation of the Fragments in Diels' Fragmente der Vorsokratiker". The Journal of Philosophy. 46 (22): 717. doi:10.2307/2020243. ISSN 0022-362X. JSTOR 2020243.
  30. Squire, John (9 February 1952). "Greek Views on Five Fundamental Matters. God, Man and State. Greek concepts by Kathleen Freeman". The Illustrated London News. p. 206. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
  31. Women classical scholars : unsealing the fountain from the Renaissance to Jacqueline de Romilly. Wyles, Rosie and Hall, Edith (First ed.). Oxford, United Kingdom. 2016. ISBN 978-0191038297. OCLC 964291395.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)





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