Abstract

This special issue of Women: A Cultural Review re-evaluates an author who was once a household name, beloved by readers of romance, and whose films were distributed widely in Europe and the Americas. Elinor Glyn (1864–1943) was a British author of romantic fiction who went to Hollywood and became famous for her movies. She was a celebrity figure of the 1920s, and wrote constantly in Hearst's press. She wrote racy stories which were turned into films—most famously, Three Weeks (1924) and It (1927). These were viewed by the judiciary as scandalous, but by others—Hollywood and the Spanish Catholic Church—as acceptably conservative. Glyn has become a peripheral figure in histories of this period, marginalized in accounts of the youth-centred ‘flapper era’. Decades on, the idea of the ‘It Girl’ continues to have great pertinence in the post-feminist discourses of the twenty-first century. The 1910s and 1920s saw the development of intermodal networks between print, sound and screen cultures. This introduction to Glyn's life and legacy reviews the cross-disciplinary debate sparked by renewed interest in Glyn by film scholars and literary and feminist historians, and offers a range of views of Glyn's cultural and historical significance and areas for future research.

Highlights

  • This special issue of Women: A Cultural Review re-evaluates an author who was once a household name, beloved by readers of romance, and whose films were distributed widely in Europe and the Americas

  • Much of the existing scholarship on Elinor Glyn explores her role in defining the elements of sexual attractiveness and extending the vocabulary for articulating women’s sexual desire in magazines, novels and films

  • The two biographies of her by Anthony Glyn, her grandson, and Joan Hardwick moved the public eye away from Glyn as the mistress of a more important man, Lord Curzon, where his biographers and her immediate post-mortem assessment had placed her in the public consciousness, and focus on Elinor Glyn author and guide (Glyn 1955; Hardwick 1944)

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Summary

Alexis Weedon

To cite this article: Alexis Weedon (2018) An Introduction to Elinor Glyn: Her Life and Legacy, Women: A Cultural Review, 29:2, 145-160, DOI: 10.1080/09574042.2018.1447042 To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/09574042.2018.1447042 Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at http://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=rwcr20 w

Elinor Glyn?
Brand and Celebrity
Conservative or Feminist Pioneer?
Works Cited
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