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・ Kathlene Contres
・ Kathlene Fernström
・ Kathlow
・ Kathlyn
・ Kathlyn Curtis
・ Kathlyn Joy Gilliam Collegiate Academy
・ Kathlyn Kelly
・ Kathleen Ngale
・ Kathleen Ni Houlihan
・ Kathleen Nichols
・ Kathleen Nolan
・ Kathleen Noone
・ Kathleen Nord
・ Kathleen Norris
・ Kathleen Norris (poet)
Kathleen Nott
・ Kathleen Nunneley
・ Kathleen O'Brien
・ Kathleen O'Brien (film director)
・ Kathleen O'Callaghan
・ Kathleen O'Connor
・ Kathleen O'Connor (painter)
・ Kathleen O'Connor Ives
・ Kathleen O'Grady
・ Kathleen O'Kelly-Kennedy
・ Kathleen O'Malley
・ Kathleen O'Meara
・ Kathleen O'Meara (writer)
・ Kathleen O'Neal Gear
・ Kathleen O'Regan


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Kathleen Nott : ウィキペディア英語版
Kathleen Nott
Kathleen Cecilia Nott FRSL (11 February 1905 - 20 February 1999) was a British poet, novelist, critic, philosopher and editor.
==Life==

Kathleen Nott was born in Camberwell, London. Her father, Philip, was a lithographic printer, and her mother, Ellen, ran a boarding house in Brixton; Kathleen was their third daughter. She was educated at Mary Datchelor Girls' School (now closed), London, before attending King's College, London. She soon left King's College on an Open Exhibition scholarship to Somerville College, Oxford. The scholarship was in English Literature, but on arriving at Oxford, Nott switched to Philosophy, Politics and Economics (PPE) in which she took a IVth in 1929.〔''Oxford University Calendar, 1932'', p.283〕
It was at Oxford that she met Christopher Bailey, an electronics and computer engineer, whom she was to marry in 1929. During the 1930s, Nott was a social worker and psychologist in the East End of London, an experience which would inspire her first novel, ''Mile End'' (1938), which is set in the area. Bailey's work took the couple to the Netherlands, from which they escaped when the German army invaded in 1940.
During the war, Nott and Bailey lived in Bournemouth, and afterwards they moved to Sweden. Their marriage was dissolved in the 1950s, They had no children.
It was her book ''The Emperor's Clothes'' (1953), which drew Nott to the attention of a much wider audience. An atheist, Nott attacked what she described as the "neo-scholasticism" of such dominant religious literary figures as T.S. Eliot and C.S. Lewis.
In 1954, Nott began contributing book reviews to ''The Observer''; much of her critical work would appear in that newspaper. Essays and reviews by Nott were also published by ''Encounter'', ''Partisan Review'', ''The Nation'', ''The Listener'', ''New Society'', ''Commentary'', ''The Times'' and ''The Spectator''. Nott's last review for ''The Observer'' was published in 1986. She also wrote extensively for the humanist and rationalist movement, and many of her articles were published in the ''Rationalist Annual'', ''Question'', and ''Humanist''. She also translated books and articles.
In the early 1970s, Nott moved to Horsham, where she lived with a friend. Later in the decade she moved in with one of her sisters in Thornton Heath.
Nott was a member of the University Women's Club and the Society of Authors. In ''Who's Who'' she listed her recreations as playing the piano and gardening.〔http://www.ukwhoswho.com〕 She was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1977.
Nott suffered from deafness and Parkinson's Disease in her later years. When she died, Nott was living at Wemyss Lodge Residential Home Swindon, Wiltshire.

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