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  1. Women Come to the Front Janet Flanner. Perennial columnist for The New Yorker magazine, Janet Flanner (1892-1978) produced trenchant commentary on European politics and culture. In her mid twenties, Flanner left the United States for Paris, quickly becoming part of the group of American writers and artists who lived in the city between the ...

  2. Flanner, Janet (1892–1978) American novelist and journalist who chronicled 50 years of life in Europe for The New Yorker magazine. Name variations: (pen name) Genêt. Born on March 13, 1892, in Indianapolis, Indiana; died on November 7, 1978, in New York City; daughter of William Francis Flanner (a mortician and real-estate developer) and Mary-Ellen (Hockett) Flanner; attended University of ...

  3. 28 de jun. de 2007 · Writing under the pseudonym of Genêt, Janet Flanner sent her "Letters from Paris" over to America via the New Yorker magazine for half a century. They are compiled into three volumes: "Paris Was ...

  4. Spring/23. Janet Flanner, EX 1914, longed to write fiction. An Indiana girl, well brought up, she had abandoned her husband in New York and fled to Europe with her lover, the writer Solita Solano. The couple settled in Paris, where they lived in a modest hotel on the Left Bank (apartments were so scarce that hotels were cheaper, and both women ...

  5. 8 de jan. de 2022 · Janet Flanner (March 13, 1892 – November 7, 1978) was an American writer and journalist who spent much of her career writing as Paris correspondent for The New Yorker. Under the pen name Gênet, she authored the magazine’s “Letter from Paris” for almost fifty years. She was a prominent member of the expatriate community that settled in ...

  6. 3 de mar. de 1972 · By Janet Flanner. March 3, 1972. Janet Flanner and Ernest Hemingway at Deux Magots in Paris, 1945. Photograph by David Scherman / The LIFE Picture Collection / Getty. It is now more than a half ...

  7. Janet Flanner (Indianápolis, 13 de marzo de 1892-Nueva York, 7 de noviembre de 1978) fue una periodista estadounidense, que firmaba con el pseudónimo Genet. Vivió abiertamente como lesbiana. En 1918, el mismo año que se casó con William "Lane" Rehm (un compañero de la Universidad de Chicago), se unió sentimentalmente con Solita Solano (Sarah Wilkinson), a quien conoció en Greenwich ...