Top Banner
JEAN RHYS 24 August 1890 – 14 May 1979
23
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Jean Rhys biography.

JEAN RHYS24 August 1890 – 14 May 1979

Page 2: Jean Rhys biography.

Ella Gwendolyn Rees Williams. She was a mid-20th-century novelist

from the Caribbean island of Dominica.

She is best known for her novel Wide Sargasso Sea (1966), written as a prequel to Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre.

Page 3: Jean Rhys biography.

Early life She was born in Roseau, Dominica, an island

of the British West Indies. She was educated in Dominica until the age of

16, when she was sent to England to live with her aunt.

As a child, she discovered her love for writing (diaries).

Page 4: Jean Rhys biography.

AlcoholismProstitution

AbandonmentAbortion

ContradictionFeminism 

“The little girl who wouldn't grow up, yet whose work depended, ultimately, upon

the maturity of experience.”

Page 5: Jean Rhys biography.

Writing career

Rhys used modified stream of consciousness to voice the experiences.

Rhys's greatest work was about a woman who is rejected by the man she loves and goes on to destroy herself.

"We can't all be happy, we can't all be rich, we can't all be lucky - and it would be so much less fun if we were... Some must cry so that others may be able to laugh the

more heartily.” 

+ =

Page 6: Jean Rhys biography.

"She could give herself up to the written word as naturally as a good dancer to music or a fine swimmer to water. The only difficulty was that after finishing the last sentence she was left with a feeling at once hollow and

uncomfortably full. Exactly like indigestion."

Page 7: Jean Rhys biography.

The Left Bank and Other Stories, 1927

Voyage in the Dark, 1934 Good Morning, Midnight,

1939 The Day They Burned

the Books, 1960 Wide Sargasso Sea, 1966 Penguin Modern Stories

1, 1969 (with others) My Day: Three Pieces,

1975 Sleep It Off Lady, 1976 Smile Please: An

Unfinished Autobiography, 1979

Page 8: Jean Rhys biography.

Rhys's life was profoundly marked by a sense of exile, loss, and alienation-dominant themes in her novels and short

stories. Despite critical acclaim at the end of her life, Rhys died in 1979 still doubting

the merit of her work.

Page 9: Jean Rhys biography.

Later years Characteristically, she remained

unimpressed by her belated ascent to literary fame, commenting, "It has come too late."

She died in Exeter on 14 May 1979, at the age of 88, before completing her autobiography, which she had begun dictating only months earlier.

In 1979, the incomplete text was published posthumously under the title, Smile Please: An Unfinished Autobiography.

“You can pretend for a long time, but one day it all falls away and you are “alone. We are alone in the most

beautiful place in the world.”

Page 10: Jean Rhys biography.

QUESTIONS

I USED TO LIVE HERE ONCE

Page 11: Jean Rhys biography.

1976

Page 12: Jean Rhys biography.
Page 13: Jean Rhys biography.

1.  Tell a short summary of the tale "I used to live here" from the denotative aspect.

Page 14: Jean Rhys biography.

2. Why does the story begin with such a long description of the stones? What do you think each stone refers to, in real life?

Page 15: Jean Rhys biography.

3. What guesses can you make about how the woman feels about this place? What her relationship to the place is like? 

Page 16: Jean Rhys biography.

4. How does the mood of the story change as the woman gets closer to the house?

Page 17: Jean Rhys biography.

5. Why do you think the children ignore the woman in the story?

Page 18: Jean Rhys biography.

6. How do you think the woman feels about the changes she sees in the place she's reaching?  

Page 19: Jean Rhys biography.

7. Do you think the woman is alive or not? Why? Tell examples from the story that support your thoughts.

Page 20: Jean Rhys biography.

8. What do you think the next fragment from the story refers to?

"Very fair children, as Europeans born in the West Indies so often are: as if

the white blood is asserting itself against all the odds."

Page 21: Jean Rhys biography.

9. What do you think she “knows for the first time” at the end of the story?

Page 22: Jean Rhys biography.

10. Is there any relationship between the story and Jean Rhys' life?

Page 23: Jean Rhys biography.