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                <title type="esharp_bio"/>
                <author>Amanda Hollander</author>
                <editor>Lorraine Janzen Kooistra</editor>
                <editor>Dennis Denisoff</editor>
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                        <editor>Dennis Denisoff and Lorraine Janzen Kooistra </editor>
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                        <title>Vernon Lee (1856-1935)</title>
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                            <biblScope>Hollander, Amanda. "Evelyn Sharp (1869-1955)," <emph
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            <div type="bio">
                <head> <title level="a">EVELYN SHARP (1869-1955)</title> </head>

                <p>The ninth of Jane Bloyd Sharp and James Sharp’s 11 children, writer and
                    suffragist Evelyn Sharp was born on 4 August 1869. After a year traveling in
                    continental Europe, the Sharp family returned to London and settled in a
                    middle-class neighborhood, later moving to Buckinghamshire. In her
                    autobiography, <emph rend="italic">Unfinished Adventure</emph> (1933), Sharp’s
                    childhood memories reflect a frustration with the gendered restrictions placed
                    on her education and play that would inform her later writings for children. </p>

                <p>Sharp’s most formational childhood experience, in her own estimation, was
                    attending the progressive Strathallan House girls’ boarding school, which she
                    attended as a day boarder. The separation from her family afforded her both new
                    independence and the opportunity to develop her writing skills. She later would
                    credit the instruction at Strathallan for forming the foundation of her militant
                    suffragist beliefs. Her experiences there also provided the groundwork for her
                    girls school novels, <emph rend="italic">The Making of a School Girl</emph>
                    (1897) and <emph rend="italic">The Youngest Girl in the School</emph> (1901).
                    After Strathallan, Sharp’s formal education ended. To her enormous frustration,
                    Sharp did not have familial support to pursue a college education, a regret that
                    would continue throughout her life, accompanied by a bitter notation that only
                    her gender precluded her from the experience afforded her brothers (<emph
                    rend="italic">Unfinished Adventure</emph> 40). Her brother, Cecil Sharp
                    (1859-1924), achieved fame as a folk music and dance expert, and shared his
                    sister’s interest and participation in Fabian socialism.</p>

                <p>Having left Strathallan at 16, Evelyn Sharp returned to her family’s home for a
                    short time before moving in January 1894 to London, where she took up lodging in
                    Bloomsbury and supported herself by tutoring the orphaned child of architect
                    John D. Sedding. Within the year, she submitted a short story to <emph
                    rend="italic"><ref target="#YB_volumes">The Yellow Book</ref></emph> and a novel
                    to The Bodley Head, both of which were accepted. <ref target="#HHA">Henry
                    Harland</ref> (1861-1905), the magazine’s literary editor, and <ref
                    target="#JLA">John Lane</ref> (1854-1925), its publisher, subsequently
                    introduced her to <emph rend="italic">The Yellow Book</emph> writers circle,
                    which would include lifelong friends <ref target="#LHA">Laurence Housman</ref>
                    (1865-1959), <ref target="#NSYR">Netta Syrett</ref> (1865-1943), <ref
                    target="#WWA">William Watson</ref> (1858-1935), and Joseph Clayton (1868-1943).
                    The friendships with Housman and Clayton also had connections, through Christian
                    Socialism, to Sharp’s friend and illustrator, <ref target="#MDE">Mabel
                    Dearmer</ref> (1872-1915). Dearmer illustrated two collections of Sharp’s fairy
                    stories: <emph rend="italic">Wymps and Other Fairy Tales</emph> (1897) and <emph
                    rend="italic">All the Way to Fairyland</emph> (1898). After meeting fellow <emph
                    rend="italic">Yellow Book</emph> contributor and war correspondent <ref
                    target="#HNE">Henry W. Nevinson</ref> (1856-1841), Sharp embarked on a lifelong
                    love affair with him, though he was married and had multiple other partners.
                    Although not conventional by the bourgeois standards of Edwardian society, the
                    relationship was not unusual among the literary and socialist circles in which
                    the two circulated. </p>
            </div>

            <div type="image3">

                <figure>
                    <graphic width="500px"
                        url="http://https://beta.1890s.ca/wp-content/uploads/YBV12icon4_walton_bodley_heads.jpg"/>
                    <figDesc>Bodley Heads No. 6: Portrait of Miss Evelyn Sharp.</figDesc>
                </figure>
                <caption>E. A. Walton. “Bodley Heads No. 6: Portrait of Miss Evelyn Sharp.” <emph rend="italic">The
                    Yellow Book</emph>, vol 12, January 1897, p. 7.</caption>
            </div>
            <div type="bio2">
                <p>A sharp critic of strict attitudes toward gender and sexuality, Sharp repeatedly
                    centred both her adult fiction and her children’s stories on protagonists’
                    struggle with and confrontation of social gender expectations, which Sharp
                    portrayed as cruel and marginalizing. Her early writing for The <emph
                    rend="italic">Yellow Book</emph> included the story “In Dull Brown” (January
                    1896), which draws attention to women’s mobility as an advantage, but
                    additionally shows how heterosexual male desire is constructed around a passive
                    and helpless image of femininity. Sharp’s authorial critique extended profoundly
                    into her fiction for children. She depicted child protagonists negotiating
                    punishing constructions around gender, but allowed her characters to confront
                    and dismantle these constructions, which was groundbreaking in fin-de-siècle
                    children’s fiction. Her acquaintance <ref target="#ECA">Edward Carpenter</ref>
                    (1844-1929) produced critical writing on gender (including transgender, termed
                    “the intermediate sex”), providing an additional framework for Sharp’s own
                    analyses of gender roles and identities. In her story “The Boy Who Looked like a
                    Girl” from her collection <emph rend="italic">Wymps and Other Fairy
                    Tales</emph>, Sharp depicts a boy struggling with repeated misgendering as a
                    result of his nursery smock. Certainly influential for Sharp, too, was
                    Carpenter’s 1894 essay “Marriage in a Free Society,” in which he dismisses the
                    possibility of connubial bliss within Victorian England’s gender
                    stratification.</p>

                <p>Through her affiliation with the Bodley Head, Sharp briefly came into contact
                    with <ref target="#OWI">Oscar Wilde</ref> (1854-1900). Although having met Wilde
                    on only two occasions, she, along with many others of <emph rend="italic">The
                    Yellow Book</emph> circle, watched his trial for “gross indecency” with horror.
                    In her one autobiographical observation of Wilde, she notes how the trial raised
                    national anxiety about masculinity and male sexuality:</p>

                <!-- insert blockquote in Wordpress -->
                <p><emph rend="italic"><emph rend="note">When the Oscar Wilde trial shocked society
                    into an extreme of prudishness never exceeded in the earliest days of the good
                    Queen, one London daily started a shilling cricket fund to which panic-stricken
                    citizens hastened to contribute lest their sexual normality should be
                    doubted—the connection was subtle but felt at the same time to be real—the idea
                    gained ground that the “Yellow Book” had stood in some way or another for
                    everything that was the antithesis of cricket. (Unfinished Adventure
                    57)</emph></emph></p>

                <p>For the rest of her writing career, Sharp’s storytelling drew readers again and
                    again to themes of radical injustice and gender inequality such as she witnessed
                    before, during, and in the wake of Wilde’s trial and incarceration. Her short
                    story “The Little Queen and the Gardener” (1900) begins with Prince Dandytuft
                    being magically punished with field labour in condemnation of his effeminacy.
                    Sharp’s novel <emph rend="italic">The Other Boy</emph> (1902) contains a boy
                    obsessed with renouncing the feminine to buoy his own sense of masculinity.
                    Subsequently, he behaves antagonistically toward the “other boy” of the title
                    who is feminine and wishes to pursue a career in the arts. Also combating
                    reductive gender roles are a child called Charley (née Charlotte) who repeatedly
                    expresses the wish to be identified and treated as a boy, and a New Woman
                    governess who arrives by bicycle. Sharp’s stalwart refusal to romanticize
                    children or their experiences differentiated her from many of her
                    contemporaries. Instead, she insisted that “Childhood, at its worst, is unhappy;
                    at best, it is uncomfortable” (<emph rend="italic">Fairy Tales</emph> 1). </p>

                <p>During her early years in London, Sharp became increasingly engaged with
                    political activism. She joined the Fabian Society, which espoused a socialist
                    state achieved through reform of existing law rather than outright revolution.
                    Unlike fellow Fabian and children’s book writer <ref target="#ENE">E.
                    Nesbit</ref> (1858-1924), who expressed concern that suffrage would draw
                    attention away from the broader socialist cause, Sharp made suffrage the
                    keystone of her political agitation. She joined the Women Writers’ Suffrage
                    League. Selling copies of the Women’s Social and Political Union’s <emph
                    rend="italic">Votes for Women</emph> and participating in civic disruption led
                    to friendships with writer Beatrice Harraden (1864-1936) and pioneering
                    mathematician and engineer Hertha Ayrton, (1854-1923) whom Sharp later
                    celebrated in a biography, <emph rend="italic">Hertha Ayrton 1854-1923: A
                    Memoir</emph> (1926). She brought her writing talents to the cause, producing
                    the short story collection <emph rend="italic">Rebel Women</emph> (1910) in
                    order to highlight the diverse lives of suffragettes, rather than the offensive
                    caricatures that dominated the contemporary press.</p>

                <p>Concerned about upsetting her family, Sharp initially limited her suffragist work
                    to activities that would avoid arrest or imprisonment. However, after a 1911
                    letter from her mother acknowledging the need for strident action, Sharp felt at
                    liberty to pursue riskier political demonstrations. Subsequent agitating for the
                    vote led to several imprisonments for Sharp beginning in November 1911, even as
                    she took on an editor position at <emph rend="italic">Votes for Women</emph>. By
                    1915, she directed some of her political resistance to taxes, refusing to pay
                    them on the basis that, without the vote, she was not a citizen and did not
                    believe in taxation without representation. The result was a subsequent period
                    spent in constant movement to avoid arrest and using a network of friends for
                    the purpose of forwarding her mail.</p>

                <p>Although the majority of Sharp’s activism focused on suffrage, she also protested
                    the death penalty and advocated pacifism leading up to and throughout World War
                    I. Her socialist and pacifist beliefs infuse the tales in her short story
                    collection <emph rend="italic">The War of All the Ages</emph> (1915), which
                    depicts a socialist vicar striving to deal with social reality versus idealism
                    (“The Memorial Service”); civilian deaths as a result of war rationing (“The
                    Casualty”); and tenement poverty (“A Million a Day”). One story, “Our Club,”
                    contains a pointed critique of George Gissing’s women characters. The story’s
                    narrator notes, “Then there is the ‘odd’ woman who might have stepped straight
                    out of Gissing’s imagination, except that she carries a high hope and courage in
                    her frail little body that in Gissing’s women were yet unborn” (56). </p>

                <p>By the 1920s, Sharp shifted primarily to producing non-fiction and political
                    pamphlets. She started working in conjunction with Quakers, with whom she shared
                    pacifist principles. Sharp traveled extensively during this time; journeys
                    included trips to Germany, Ireland, and Russia. In addition to her biography of
                    Ayrton, she wrote about humanitarian crises in Russia and Germany and produced
                    work for the Women’s Co-operative Guild. </p>

                <p>Finally, in 1933, she wrote her autobiography, the last major literary output of
                    her career. Concurrently, she wrote a libretto for a comic opera, <emph
                    rend="italic">The Poisoned Kiss</emph> (1933), with composer Ralph Vaughn
                    Williams, with whom, as with her deceased brother Cecil, she shared an interest
                    in traditional English dance and music. The year also witnessed her marriage to
                    Nevinson (whose wife Margaret died in 1932), with whom Sharp remained until his
                    death in 1941. By 1948, Sharp had taken up residence in a nursing home, where
                    she stayed until her death on 17 June 1955.</p>

                <div type="image3">
                    <figure>
                        <graphic width="350px"
                            url="http://https://beta.1890s.ca/wp-content/uploads/Evelyn-Jane-Sharp-Mrs-HW-Nevinson.jpg"/>
                        <figDesc>The photograph is in black and white. Evelyn Sharp is shown in a
                            head-and-shoulders pose with her body slightly angled towards the left
                            of the image. Her gaze is straight on the camera, directed at the
                            viewer, and she is slightly smiling. Her hair is grey or white, has a
                            softly waved texture, and is tied back, partially covering her ears. She
                            is wearing a dark dress with a tiny polka dot print. There is a
                            triangular lace cutout at the collar of her shirt, and she is wearing a
                            scarf with a velvety texture. She is wearing two necklaces, one has a
                            pendant with an upside-down teardrop shaped stone inlaid. The other
                            necklace is partially obscured by her scarf, no pendant is
                            visible.</figDesc>
                    </figure>
                    <caption>Elliott &amp; Fry. <emph rend="italic">Evelyn Jane Sharp (Mrs. H.W. Nevinson)</emph>. Bromide
                        print, 1940s, National Portrait Gallery, London.</caption>
                </div>
                <div type="bio2">
                    <p>© 2019 Amanda Hollander</p>

                    <p>Amanda Hollander holds a doctorate in Victorian literature from the
                        University of California, Los Angeles. Her essay on Evelyn Sharp and Oscar
                        Wilde was published in <emph rend="italic">Oscar Wilde and the Cultures of
                        Childhood</emph> (2017). She is an independent scholar and works as an opera
                        librettist and children’s book writer.</p>

                    <listBibl>
                        <head>Selected Publications by Evelyn Sharp</head>

                        <bibl><emph rend="italic">All the Way to Fairyland</emph>. The Bodley Head,
                            1898.</bibl>
                        <bibl><emph rend="italic">At the Relton Arms: A Novel</emph>. The Bodley
                            Head, 1895.</bibl>
                        <bibl>“<ref target="#YBV8_27pr">In Dull Brown</ref>.” <emph rend="italic"
                            >Yellow Book</emph>, vol. 8, January 1896, pp. 180-204.</bibl>
                        <bibl>“<ref target="#YBV4_33pr">The End of an Episode</ref>.” <emph
                            rend="italic">Yellow Book</emph>, vol. 4, January 1895, pp.
                            255-74.</bibl>
                        <bibl><emph rend="italic">Fairy Tales: As They Are, as They Were, and as
                            They Should Be</emph>. D. B. Friend, 1889.</bibl>
                        <bibl><emph rend="italic">Here We Go Round: The Story of the Dance</emph>.
                            Gerald Howe, 1928.</bibl>
                        <bibl>“The Little Queen and the Gardener.” <emph rend="italic">Lippincott’s
                            Monthly Magazine</emph>, vol. 66, 1900, pp. 938-47.</bibl>
                        <bibl><emph rend="italic">The Making of a School Girl</emph>. The Bodley
                            Head, 1897.</bibl>
                        <bibl>“<ref target="#YBV6_16pr">A New Poster</ref>.” <emph rend="italic"
                            >Yellow Book</emph>, vol. 6, July 1895, pp. 123-66.</bibl>
                        <bibl><emph rend="italic">The Other Boy</emph>. Macmillan, 1902.</bibl>
                        <bibl>“<ref target="#YBV13_26pr">The Other Anna</ref>.” <emph rend="italic"
                            >Yellow Book</emph>, vol. 13, April 1897, pp. 170-93.</bibl>
                        <bibl><emph rend="italic">The Other Side of the Sun</emph>. The Bodley Head,
                            1900. </bibl>
                        <bibl><emph rend="italic">Rebel Women</emph>. John Lane, 1910.</bibl>
                        <bibl>“<ref target="#YBV12_18pr">The Restless River</ref>.” <emph
                            rend="italic">Yellow Book</emph>, vol. 12, January 1897, pp.
                            167-90.</bibl>
                        <bibl><emph rend="italic">Unfinished Adventure: Selected Reminiscences from
                            an Englishwoman’s Life</emph>. The Bodley Head, 1933.</bibl>
                        <bibl><emph rend="italic">The Victories of Olivia and Other Stories</emph>.
                            Macmillan, 1912.</bibl>
                        <bibl><emph rend="italic">The War of All the Ages</emph>. Sidgwick &#38;
                            Jackson, 1915.</bibl>
                        <bibl><emph rend="italic">Wymps and Other Fairy Tales</emph>. The Bodley
                            Head, 1897. </bibl>
                        <bibl><emph rend="italic">The Youngest Girl in School</emph>. Macmillan,
                            1901.</bibl>
                    </listBibl>
                    <listBibl>
                        <head>Selected Publications about Evelyn Sharp</head>

                        <bibl>Green, Barbara J. “Mediating Women: Evelyn Sharp and the Feminist
                            Networks of Suffrage Print Culture.” <emph rend="italic">The History of
                            British Women’s Writing, Volume 7, 1880-1920</emph>, edited by Holly
                            Laird, Palgrave Macmillan, 2016, pp. 72-82.</bibl>
                        <bibl>Hollander, Amanda. “Oscar Wilde, Evelyn Sharp, and the Politics of
                            Dress and Decoration in the Fin-de-Siècle Fairy Tale.” <emph
                            rend="italic">Oscar Wilde and the Cultures of Childhood</emph>, edited
                            by Joseph Bristow, Palgrave Macmillan, 2017, pp. 119-44.</bibl>
                        <bibl>John, Angela. <emph rend="italic">Evelyn Sharp: Rebel Woman,
                            1869-1955</emph>. Manchester UP, 2009.</bibl>
                        <bibl>Ledger, Sally. “Wilde Women and <emph rend="italic">The Yellow
                            Book</emph>: The Sexual Politics of Aestheticism and Decadence.” <emph
                            rend="italic">English Literature in Transition, 1880-1920</emph>, vol.
                            50, no. 1, 2007, pp. 5-26.</bibl>
                        <bibl>Liddington, Jill. <emph rend="italic">Vanishing for the Vote:
                            Suffrage, Citizenship and the Battle for the Census</emph>. Manchester
                            UP, 2014.</bibl>
                        <bibl>Liggins, Emma. <emph rend="italic">Odd Women?: Spinsters, Lesbians and
                            Widows in British Women's Fiction, 1850s–1930s</emph>. Manchester UP,
                            2014.</bibl>
                        <bibl>Miller, Jane Eldridge. <emph rend="italic">Rebel Women: Feminism,
                            Modernism and the Educational Novel</emph>. Virago, 1994.</bibl>
                        <bibl>Oakley, Ann. Women, <emph rend="italic">Peace and Welfare: A
                            Suppressed History of Social Reform, 1880-1920</emph>. Bristol UP,
                            2018.</bibl>
                        <bibl>Tosi, Laura. “Children’s Literature in No-Land: Utopian Spaces and
                            Gendered Utopias in Evelyn Sharp’s Fairy Tales.” <emph rend="italic"
                            >Children’s Books and Child Readers: Constructions of Childhood in
                            English Juvenile Fiction</emph>, edited by Christiane Bimberg and Thomas
                            Kullmann, Shaker, 2006, pp. 35-46.</bibl>
                        <bibl>Windholz, Anne M. “The Women Who Would Be Editor: Ella D’Arcy and the
                            <emph rend="italic">Yellow Book</emph>.” <emph rend="italic">Victorian
                            Periodicals Review</emph>, vol. 29, no. 2, Summer 1996, pp.
                            116-30.</bibl>

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