Wednesday, March 18, 2015

A Moment With the Author

Hey awesome readers! I found this amazing article on Daphne du Maurier and her life. Give credit where credit is due, therefore I will kindly thank Grade Saver for this article! I think it's a great read!  encourage you to read about her, so here is the website where I found it if you want to go see some of the other things on there about her, and her books! I simply love that she is most famous for Rebecca, (our current book of choice) it is quite an obvious favorite of all her other books! 

Biography of Daphne Du Maurier 

Daphne Du Maurier Headshot

The second of three daughters, Daphne Du Maurier was born into a prominent artistic and literary household in London on May 13, 1907. She was the granddaughter of famed caricaturist George du Maurier, the daughter of actor-manager George du Maurier and actress Muriel Beaumont, and the niece of a magazine editor. J.M. Barrie, author of Peter Pan, and Edgar Wallace were both frequent household visitors.

Given her exposure to literary and artistic accomplishments in childhood, it is no surprise that Du Maurier demonstrated an active imagination and a love of reading from an early age. She was fascinated by imaginary worlds and even invented an alter ego for herself named Eric Avon. Along with her sisters, Angela and Jeanne, Du Maurier was largely educated by a governess before attending schools in London and Paris. While she was still a teenager, Du Maurier wrote a short story that was published in Bystander magazine and resulted in a contract with a literary agent.
In 1931, Du Maurier wrote her first full-length novel, The Loving Spirit, which described three generations of Cornish people. This first novel, written in her early twenties, brought Du Maurier immediate literary success. It also brought her the romantic attention of Lieutenant-Colonel Frederick “Boy” Browning, who sailed to Fowey to meet the author of the book after reading it and then married Du Maurier in 1932.
The couple was married for 33 years (until Browning’s death in 1965) and produced three children: two girls named Tessa and Flavia, and one boy named Christian. However, the relationship suffered difficulties because of Du Maurier’s secret bisexuality. After her death, it was revealed that Du Maurier had an extramarital affair with actress Gertrude Lawrence and professed an attraction to Ellen Doubleday, the wife of her American publisher. According to her biographer, Margaret Forster, Du Maurier viewed herself as two distinct individuals: first, a wife and mother, and second, a lover (comprised of male energy) which inspired her creative process.
Du Maurier’s next novels, The Progress of Julius (1932), Jamaica Inn (1936), and Rebecca (1938) multiplied her success exponentially. Rebecca, in particular, turned Du Maurier into a household name, especially after Alfred Hitchcock directed an Oscar-winning film version of the story starring Laurence Olivier and Joan Fontaine in 1940. Over the course of her career, Du Maurier wrote several more novels, short stories, and plays, including: Frenchman’s Creek (1941), Hungry Hill(1943), “The Years Between” (1945), The Parasites (1949), My Cousin Rachel (1951), Mary Anne(1954), The Scapegoat (1957), The Glass Blowers (1963), The Flight of the Falcon (1965), The House on the Strand (1969), and Rule Britannia (1972).
Later in her life, Du Maurier also became a prolific non-fiction writer and extremely interested in her ancestry. Published non-fiction works include Gerald (1934), The Du Mauriers (1937), The Young George du Maurier (1951), The Infernal World of Branwell Brontë (1960), which focused on the eldest brother of the Brontë family, and Growing Pains (1970). Several more of her works were turned into films, including Frenchman’s CreekHungry HillMy Cousin RachelThe Birds, andJamaica Inn, with Alfred Hitchcock famously directing two of the adaptations.
After her husband’s death in 1965, Du Maurier moved to Kilmarth, which became the setting forThe House on the Strand. In 1969, Du Maurier was honored by the Queen and named a Dame of the British Empire for literary distinction. However, she felt uncomfortable using the honor and never used the title. In 1977, she published an autobiography and received the Grand Master Award from the Mystery Writers of America. Du Maurier died in 1989, at the age of 81, at her home in Cornwall. Her pictorial memoir, Enchanted Cornwall, was published posthumously in 1992. In 2006, a previously unknown work entitled And His Letters Grew Colder was discovered and published.
Du Maurier was often criticized for having a “romantic” writing style, which seemed less intellectual than that of female authors George Eliot and Iris Murdoch. Du Maurier disliked being characterized as a romance novelist, and some literary scholars have suggested that her non-fiction work stemmed from her desire to be taken more seriously as an author. However, few of her fictional works actually correspond to the romance novel stereotype: they rarely feature happy endings and are infused with Gothic and paranormal elements.

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Our First Book Club Read

Welcome Everyone to The New Age Book Club! I am excited to announce our First book of choice!

Rebecca

By Daphne Du Maurier


         I am so excited to read this book with all of you! It is a beautiful piece of classic literature! I have heard many people say that they either loved it, or hated it, I so hope everyone here will fall in love with it! I know that I have in the little I have read! We will have several discussions regarding the author, the psychoanalytical lens, (click here to learn more about what that is.) and the interesting story that is told.  
     
The best thing about all our new techology is different ways to complete tasks! A perfect example of that is all the ways you can read/listen to this book! Here are the links and information below!
      Here is the link to the online PDF Book: Rebecca
      The youtube audio book: Rebecca-audio book  (If you go to the link and sign up for an account you can find the other audio files. AND it is 100% free I have had it for a year with no charges!) 
      The book is also available in most Local Libraries, and on iPhone's ibooks app for less than $5. You can find this book on most any of the book apps out there for different devices. 

Please find the book and have Chapter 1- Chapter 10 read by March 15. This is Page 85 in the PDF file and book. We will have an "Online meeting" on the 16th discussing The author and what everyone thinks about the books so far! Can't wait to hear your thoughts, because I am loving this book! 

Happy Reading to all!! Post below for comments! 

The Psychoanalytical Perspective Lens

WHAT IN THE WORLD IS THIS? 

Don't worry I asked the same question when someone first brought this up. But it is something quite simple and something we use often, just a long phrase for it. This perspective is based off Frued and his theories. Below I have more explanation about Freud, but no worries we won't go that into depth.

We are going to talk more about the reasons of WHY people do things. Why the author wrote the way she did. Why the characters in the story did what they did. And What you would do in that situation and why. I'll explain this more in our discussion questions.

And now....

FREUD'S THEORIES 

So the psychoanalytical perspective is the basic theories of Freud. This man was quite an interesting fellow. He took only two case studies and made up his theories. Basically they explain what we commonly think about and what we tend to do and why.

I found The best explanation of Freud off of Prude Owl. Here is the basic description of his theory.

Freud believed that our unconscious was influenced by childhood events. Freud organized these events into developmental stages involving relationships with parents and drives of desire and pleasure where children focus "...on different parts of the body...starting with the mouth...shifting to the oral, anal, and phallic phases..." (Richter 1015). These stages reflect base levels of desire, but they also involve fear of loss (loss of genitals, loss of affection from parents, loss of life) and repression: "...the expunging from consciousness of these unhappy psychological events" (Tyson 15).

Also with Freud he talks about the unconscious desires and conscious desires. He calls it the ID Ego And super ego. The best way I can explain this is a couple pictures I found on Google (don't you love that thing?)



Here is the Link to Prude Owl and Another website I found that explains him a little more if you are interested.

https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/722/04/
http://public.wsu.edu/~delahoyd/psycho.crit.html