Disgust disgusts, and its obscenities rub off on the investigator. Think of the hellfire sermon in Joyce’s A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, a diatribe that glories in disgust as well as in the jouissance of terrorising schoolboys.
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both writers show a queasy, even anorexic attitude to eating, their nausea exacerbated by the sight and sound of other masticating jaws.1
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Mansfield’s In a German Pension (1911), which contains some of her most disgusted and disgusting stories, is generally dismissed as juvenilia.
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While Mansfield and Woolf have often been applauded or disparaged for their lyricism, depending on literary fashion, their fascination with the loathsome has received less critical attention
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the one hand Mansfield is too distant – ‘someone apart, entirely self-centred’, feline, alien, ‘inscrutable’ (VWD2, p. 44; 1, p. 257) – but on the other hand too close for comfort, with a stink that gets up her rival’s nose.
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Woolf admitted: ‘I was jealous of [Mansfield’s] writing – the only writing I have ever been jealous of’ (VWD2, p. 227).
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‘We could both wish that ones first impression of K.M. was not that she stinks like a – well civet cat that had taken to street walking’ (VWD1, p. 58).
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Mansfield and Woolf depict characters who look up from the book to misread their surrounding worlds, misapply allusions or draw wrong, sometimes damaging parallels.
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I close with Mansfield’s posthumous influence on The Waves through her Journal and her afterimage in Woolf’s – and perhaps Bell’s – dreams and creative imagination.
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My essay, ‘Katherine’s Secrets’, explores things Mansfield knew that Woolf evidently didn’t, notwithstanding Mansfield’s offer of ‘the keys to the city’ and Woolf’s joy in their conversation: Mansfield’s November 1919 letters attacking Bloomsbury and expounding the ‘secret’ of her art;