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Joanna Richardson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
English writer, translator and journalist (1925–2008)

Joanna Leah Richardson (8 August 1925 – 7 March 2008) was an Englishwriter,translator and journalist. She wrote 21 biographies of literary writers and poets and was awarded thePrix Goncourt de la Biographie in 1989. Richardson also contributed to various newspapers and magazines.

Biography

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Early life and education

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Richardson was born on 8 August 1925 at 36 West Heath Drive inGolders Green,London NW11.[1] She was the daughter of Charlotte Elsa Benjamin with whom she established a close relationship because of her strong-artistic mind. Her father Frederick Richardson, was aCaptain in theIntelligence Corps during the Second World War and became fluent in Italian by working withprisoners of war in the country.[2][3] Richardson was of Jewish descent.[1] She had one brother, Martin, who was a widely commended architect.[4] Richardson was brought up inHampstead Garden Suburb.[2] She was educated at the Downs School inSeaford, Sussex which was evacuated toSt Ives, Cornwall during the Second World War's early phase.[4]

Richardson was unhappy during her school years at Downs School,[1] but gained a university place to read Modern Languages atSt Anne's College, Oxford. Despite her degree going poorly, she studied for aBachelor of Letters degree and later an unsuccessful doctorate under literary criticDr Enid Starkie.[2] Nevertheless, Starkie's influence possibly helped Richardson gain re-admittance into St. Anne's College as an "advance student" and worked as the critic's research assistant on her biography of the poetCharles Baudelaire which was published in 1957.[4]

Chevalière des Arts et des Letrres

Career and death

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She began her career in 1952 by writing aboutFanny Brawne after discovering "a cache of family photographs in some dusty archive".[4] Richardson published her first French literature biography in 1958 calledTheophile Gautier: His Life & Times. For the biography Richardson spent a large amount of time researching family papers and visiting libraries. Having been active in theRoyal Society of Literature, she was elected as a fellow of the society in 1959, and she guided the council through financial difficulties and change between the early 1960s to the mid 1980s.[2] Richardson wrote biographies onAlfred, Lord Tennyson, Starkie andVictor Hugo in 1962, 1973 and 1976.[4][3] Outside of literary work, she campaigned on issues relating to North London and wrote and broadcast onBBC Radio,[3] where she translated plays from French,[4] as well as conducting plays and presented features onRadio 3 andRadio 4.[2]

Richardson contributed to various magazines and newspapers, includingThe Times,The Times Literary Supplement,Modern Language Review andKeats-Shelley Memorial Bulletin.[3] She did a large amount of work for theKeats House Museum and led an unsuccessful campaign to getCamden London Borough Council to recognise its duty to maintain the museum's condition. In 1987 Richardson was appointedChevalier de I'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres.[4] Richardson earned her thePrix Goncourt de la Biographie in 1989 on her biography ofJudith Gautier,[4] the first time an English writer was awarded the accolade.[3] She was surprised to be selected by theAcadémie Goncourt for thePrix Goncourt and noted in her acceptance speech that the award's creators did not like Britain nor women.[4]

Richardson received aBachelor of Letters (BLitt) degree from theUniversity of Oxford in 2005.[3] She died atRoyal Free Hospital inCamden, London on 7 March 2008[1] at the age of 82 after living the last years of her life with Parkinson's disease.[3][4] In her lifetime she had written 21 biographies,[2] and was working on a biography ofGustave Flaubert at the time of her death. On 19 March, Richardson was cremated atKensal Green Cemetery.[1]

Legacy

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Richardson described abiography's purpose as "a search for truth – you ought to know what sort of marmalade the subject eats for breakfast".[4] Her translations were considered by many to be her greatest work but her biographies were subject to mixed reception in the United Kingdom. She was known to be an outspoken figure and her persistence resulted in her being not universally liked.[4]

List of published works

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References

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  1. ^abcdeMay, Alex (January 2012)."Richardson, Joanna Leah (1925–2008)".Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press.doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/100110. Retrieved27 September 2017. (Subscription orUK public library membership required.)
  2. ^abcdef"Dr Joanna Richardson; Obituary".The Times. 24 March 2008. Retrieved17 April 2017 – via Infotrac Newsstand.
  3. ^abcdefgPlowright, Piers (18 March 2008)."Joanna Richardson: Biographer and literary sleuth more interested in the flaws than the flourish of her subjects".The Independent.Archived from the original on 18 April 2017. Retrieved17 April 2017.
  4. ^abcdefghijkl"Joanna Richardson".The Daily Telegraph. 12 March 2008.Archived from the original on 18 April 2017. Retrieved17 April 2017.

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