翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Pauline Neville-Jones, Baroness Neville-Jones
・ Pauline Newman
・ Pauline Newman (labor activist)
・ Pauline Newstone
・ Pauline Ng
・ Pauline Nyiramasuhuko
・ Pauline O'Neill
・ Pauline O'Neill (sister)
・ Pauline O'Neill (suffrage leader)
・ Pauline Oberdorfer Minor
・ Pauline of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus
・ Pauline of Württemberg
・ Pauline Oliveros
・ Pauline Pantsdown
・ Pauline Park
Pauline Parker
・ Pauline Parmentier
・ Pauline Payne Whitney
・ Pauline Perry, Baroness Perry of Southwark
・ Pauline Peters
・ Pauline Pfeiffer
・ Pauline Phillips
・ Pauline Picard
・ Pauline Pirok
・ Pauline Prior-Pitt
・ Pauline privilege
・ Pauline Quirke
・ Pauline Rennie
・ Pauline Revere Thayer
・ Pauline Rhodd-Cummings


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Pauline Parker : ウィキペディア英語版
Pauline Parker



Pauline Yvonne Parker (born 26 May 1938) is a woman from Christchurch, New Zealand, who, together with her friend Juliet Hulme (now known as acclaimed fiction author Anne Perry), murdered her mother, Honorah Rieper, on 22 June 1954. It is believed that the two girls killed Honorah because Hulme and her father were leaving shortly for South Africa and, though Parker wanted to accompany them, her mother forbade it. According to their own accounts, Parker and Hulme were devoted friends who collaborated on a series of adventure novels which they hoped would be bought by a Hollywood studio and made into epic films. The girls' friendship was documented in detail by Parker in a series of diaries during her teenage years.
==Relationship with Juliet Hulme==
The girls met in their early teens, when Hulme's family moved to Christchurch from England. They both attended Christchurch Girls' High School, then located in what became the Cranmer Centre. Both girls had suffered from debilitating illnesses as children – Parker from osteomyelitis, Hulme from tuberculosis – and they initially bonded over it. According to Parker's accounts, she and Hulme both romanticized the idea of being sick. During their friendship, the girls invented their own personal religion, with its own ideas on morality. They rejected Christianity and worshipped their own saints, envisioning a parallel dimension called The Fourth World, essentially their version of Heaven. The Fourth World was a place that they felt they were already able to enter occasionally, during moments of spiritual enlightenment. By Parker's account, they had achieved this spiritual enlightenment due to their friendship. Eventually, the girls formulated a plan to flee to Hollywood.
Shortly prior to this, Hulme had discovered her mother was having an affair and her parents were separating. This devastated Hulme as well as Parker, who, due to having spent so much time with the Hulmes, thought of Hulme's parents as her own. Both girls were unaware of the fact that both sets of parents were collaborating at the time in an effort to separate the girls, viewing their friendship as potentially unhealthy or homosexual (which, at the time, was thought of as a mental illness). The Parkers and the Hulmes' efforts culminated in a plan for Juliet to accompany her father to South Africa, where he planned to move after the divorce, so Juliet would leave Pauline behind in New Zealand. Parker's mother was particularly concerned about the nature of the girls' friendship and was adamant that Pauline not accompany her best friend.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Pauline Parker」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.