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  1. John Middleton Murry (6 August 1889 – 12 March 1957) was an English writer. He was a prolific author, producing more than 60 books and thousands of essays and reviews on literature, social issues, politics, and religion during his lifetime.

  2. 28 de mar. de 2024 · John Middleton Murry (born August 6, 1889, London, England—died March 13, 1957, Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk) was an English journalist and critic whose romantic and biographical approach to literature ran counter to the leading critical tendencies of his day.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. John Middleton Murry. John Middleton Murry, the son of a clerk in the inland revenue, was born in Peckham on 6th August 1889. As Kate Fulbrook has pointed out, his father: "John Murry was a determined man from an impoverished and illiterate background who taught himself to write. Poor but ambitious, he saw education as the sole means to fulfil ...

  4. John Middleton Murry Jr. (9 May 1926 – 31 March 2002) was an English writer who used the names Colin Murry and Richard Cowper . Early life. Murry was the son of the writer John Middleton Murry and his second wife, Violet Le Maistre. His mother contracted pulmonary tuberculosis when Murry was 8 months old, and died just before his fifth birthday.

  5. John Middleton Murry. (1889—1957) writer and journal editor. Quick Reference. (1889–1957) Editor and critic, born in Peckham of ambitious lower-middle-class parents. He made his mark while still an Oxford undergraduate as editor of the modernist periodical Rhythm (1911–13), through which ...

  6. Dates. Existence: 1889 - 1957. Biography. Writer and reviewer John Middleton Murry was born in Peckham, London, 6 August 1889. In 1901 he won a scholarship to Christ's Hospital, and reached Brasenose College, Oxford, also on a scholarship, and studied Classics. His literary career began in 1911 with the establishment of Rhythm, a quarterly.

  7. John Middleton Murry 1899-1957 Murry, born into a lower-middle class family in the suburbs of London, may have followed in his father’s footsteps and become a civil-servant, but instead re-invented himself as an ardent, if peripheral, figure in the history of modernism. It might be said of him that he is best known for knowing the people that ...