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  1. The Garden Party by Katherine Mansfield. “It’s quite right,” she said calmly. “Yes, I ordered them. Aren’t they lovely?”. She pressed Laura’s arm. “I was passing the shop yesterday, and I saw them in the window. And I suddenly thought for once in my life I shall have enough canna lilies.

  2. 6 de ago. de 2022 · Katherine Mansfield incorporated literary Modernism into the genre of the short story in The Garden-Party and Other Stories, published in 1922. The title story, written in 1921, emphasizes mood, emotion, and relationships of characters rather than plot and reveals the interior world of protagonist Laura, Mansfield’s representative, as she confronts class distinctions and considers the…

  3. 13 de ago. de 2015 · The Garden PartyWritten by Katherine MansfieldNarrated by Caden Vaughn Clegg

    • 32 min
    • 90,8K
    • VonClegg Classics
  4. Work and Leisure. “The Garden Party” emphasizes the stark division between working-class people and economic elites in a deeply unequal society—in this case, early 20th century New Zealand. As she follows the wealthy Sheridan family on the day of their extravagant party, Mansfield critiques this society's division between elites who get ...

  5. Section 1. One lovely summer morning, four laborers are setting up a marquee for the Sheridan family's garden-party. Mrs. Sheridan sends her daughter Laura outside to supervise. Though apprehensive at first, Laura soon finds the workmen friendly and decides class divisions are absurd. Later, Laura takes a call from her friend Kitty Maitland and ...

  6. Summary: “The Garden Party”. Katherine Mansfield’s “The Garden Party” was published in her 1922 short story collection The Garden Party and Other Stories, and many critics consider it the best example of her renowned prose style. Like many Modernists, Mansfield was most interested in rendering not objective realities but characters ...

  7. The Garden Party is a short story by the New Zealand writer Katherine Mansfield. It was first published in 1922 in the “Westminster Gazette” in three parts. Katherine Mansfield is known mostly for her short stories, many of which are quite astute. This one in particular poignantly reveals the vast social divide.