Article About "Pen Name" In The English Wikipedia On 24-Jul-2004 Acton Bell, Currer Bell, and Ellis Bell (Anne Bront , Charlotte Bront , Emily Bront ) Boz (Charles Dickens) Anthony Burgess (John Wilson) http://july.fixedreference.org/en/20040724/wikipedia/Pen_name
Extractions: The Pen name reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Jul-2004 (provided by Fixed Reference : snapshots of Wikipedia from wikipedia.org) People like you are child sponsors A pen name or nom de plume is a pseudonym adopted by an author Nom de plume is an English-language expression, a direct translation of pen name ton French . The proper French term is nom de guerre , or "war name". Allonym is another synonym for pseudonym. Some authors take on pen names to conceal their identity: for example the Brontes, who felt they would either not be published at all, or not taken seriously as women authors. Others to segregate different types of work: Lewis Carroll because as Charles Lutwidge Dodgson he wrote mathematics papers; Agatha Christie wrote romantic novels as Mary Westmacott. Pseudonyms are not always secret: Stendahl's real name was known: at least one critic disparaged his pen name as an affectation. Pen names of famous authors include: Guillaume Apollinaire (Guillaume Albert Vladimir Apollinaire de Kostrowitzky) Richard Bachman Stephen King 'BB' (Denys Watkins-Pitchford) Beachcomber (D.B. Wyndham-Lewis and John Bingham Morton)
Pen Name Articles And Information Acton Bell, Currer Bell, and Ellis Bell (Anne Bronte, Charlotte Bronte, Emily Bronte) Boz (Charles Dickens) Anthony Burgess (John Wilson) Lewis Carroll (Charles Lutwidge Dodgson) http://neohumanism.org/p/pe/pen_name.html
Extractions: Current Article A pen name or nom de plume is a pseudonym adopted by an author Nom de plume is an English-language expression, a translation of pen name . The French term is nom de guerre , or "war name". Allonym is another synonym for pseudonym. Some authors take on pen names to conceal their identity: for example the Brontes, who felt they would either not be published at all, or not taken seriously as women authors. Others to segregate different types of work: Lewis Carroll because as Charles Lutwidge Dodgson he wrote mathematics papers; Agatha Christie wrote romantic novels as Mary Westmacott. Pseudonyms are not always secret: Stendahl's real name was known: at least one critic disparaged his pen name as an affectation. Pen names of famous authors include: Guillaume Apollinaire (Guillaume Albert Vladimir Apollinaire de Kostrowitzky) Richard Bachman Stephen King 'BB' (Denys Watkins-Pitchford) Beachcomber (D.B. Wyndham-Lewis and John Bingham Morton) Acton Bell, Currer Bell, and Ellis Bell (
Penname - Definition Acton Bell, Currer Bell, and Ellis Bell (Anne Bront , Charlotte Bront , Emily Bront ) Nicolas Bourbaki (a group of mainly French 20thcentury mathematicians) http://www.wordiq.com/definition/Penname
Extractions: A pen name or nom de plume is a pseudonym adopted by an author Nom de plume is a French-language expression Allonym is another synonym for pseudonym. Some authors take on pen names to conceal their identity: for example the Brontë sisters, who felt they would either not be published at all, or not taken seriously as women authors. Others do so to segregate different types of work: Lewis Carroll because as Charles Lutwidge Dodgson he wrote mathematics papers; Agatha Christie wrote romantic novels as Mary Westmacott. Many writers, particularly in genre fiction , are so prolific that they are forced to take pen names in order to sell their books to different publishers: this is the case, for instance, with John Dickson Carr , who, in the , was publishing two detective stories a year under his own name and another two, through another publisher, under the pen name Carter Dickson . Pseudonyms are not always secret: Stendhal's real name was known: at least one critic disparaged his pen name as an affectation. Contents showTocToggle("show","hide")
Currer Bell Dictionary Definition - Glossary.com Bronte, Emily Bronte, Emily Jane Bronte, Currer Bell (English novelist; one of three Bronte sisters (18181848)) http://www.glossary.com/dictionary.php?q=Currer Bell
Gynaecology.co.uk - Premenstrual Syndrome writers like the Bront s and Marie Ann Evans had to write their great novels under the male psuedonyms of Acton Bell, Currer Bell http://www.gynaecology.co.uk/premenstrualsyndrome.htm
Extractions: Ovariotomy for larger ovarian cysts was in the mid-19th century being performed by a number of skilled gynaecologists, following the pioneering operation in 1809 by Ephrain McDowell of Nashville, Kentucky who removed a large tumour before the days of anaesthesia from Jane Crawford who famously recited psalms while the surgery was taking place. Ovariotomy became the measure of a surgeon's ability at a time when all advances in abdominal surgery were performed in women with gynaecological disorders. These disorders were both real and imaginary. At least general anaesthesia by ether or chloroform was available from 1846. It was not until 1872 that normal ovariotomy ie. removal of normal ovaries was performed for a disorder or malady which was not gynaecological. The first surgeon to perform this was Alfred Hegar of Freiberg to be followed seven days later by Lawson Tait of Birmingham and Robert Battey of Georgia, U.S.A. At the latter's insistence, it became known as Battey's Operation but in Britain, 'Tait's Operation' was used, particularly by his enemies.
The Bronte Sisters to find a publisher; but at last they succeeded, and in 1846 the slender little volume was issued under the title of Poems, by Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell; Currer Bell http://www.female-ancestors.com/daughters/bronte.htm
Extractions: Home Data Lost Females Queries The Bronte Sisters THE story of the Brontes is one of the saddest in the annals of literature. They were the children of a father who was both cold and violent, and of a gentle, sickly mother, early lost. They were reared amid surroundings the most gloomy and unhealthful, and cursed as they grew older with a brother who brought them shame and sorrow in return for the love they lavished upon him. Their very genius seemed a product of disease, and often their finest pages are marred by a bitter savor of its origin. Their stories deal with suffering, endurance, or rebellion against fate; with violence, with crime and its punishment. In treating such subjects, these three quiet, patient daughters of a country parson found themselves quite at home. Their father was a clergyman of the Church of England, an Irishman by birth, who had had the good sense to change his original name of Prunty to the more pleasing appellation since made famous by his daughters, His father, Hugh Prunty, was a peasant proprietor of Ahaderg, county Down, the owner of a few acres of potato land, and the father of ten children, of whom the handsomest, strongest, and most intelligent was Patrick, afterward the Reverend Patrick Bronte. At the age of six-
Open Site - Arts: Literature: Authors: B Bell, Currer Bell, Ellis Bell, Madison Smartt Bell, Marvin Bell, William Bellairs, John Bellamann, Henry Bellamann, Katherine Jones http://open-site.org/Arts/Literature/Authors/B