Robin Hyde’s extraordinary but short life
(1906–39) included a precocious early career as poet and parliamentary
reporter. As a journalist, she juggled writing for the social pages with highly
political reporting on unemployment, prison conditions and the alienation of
Maori land.
She also struggled with drug addiction and depression, single
motherhood twice over, and a lengthy period as a voluntary patient in a
residential clinic (the Lodge) attached to Auckland Mental Hospital in
Avondale.
There she produced several novels, and manuscripts of
autobiographical writings. Her life culminated in brilliant reporting on the
Sino/Japanese War following a journey into China in 1938.
Your Unselfish Kindness publishes the autobiographies for the first
time. In 1937, fearing for her life in occupied China, Hyde wrote a letter to
her mother asking that she ‘not let prejudice of any kind stop the publication’
of her work or of anything about her life, ‘if anybody should be interested in
it ...
Don’t tear anything up please’.
In effect, those words give permission for
publication of this personal writing, allowing us at last to see Hyde’s
struggle with conventions and attitudes – the forms of sanity on offer in the
New Zealand of the 1930s – and how the ‘unselfish kindness’ of her doctor
assisted her to recover from a breakdown and become a significant writer.
Virginia Woolf was the first to use the term ‘life-writing’ – and was still
writing in the 1930s that we had yet to learn about women’s lives, and that
there had never been a truthful woman’s autobiography. Hyde’s autobiography is
one Woolf might have imagined. As Mary Edmond-Paul makes clear in her careful
and well-researched introduction, which brings many new insights to the study
of New Zealand literature through her discussion of mental illness and
therapeutic approaches to it in the early decades of the twentieth century,
Hyde’s life writing is important because it gives testament to experiences that
have formed our present world.
About the editor:
Mary Edmond-Paul is the author of
Her Side of the Story: Readings of Mander, Mansfield and Hyde, the editor
of Lighted Windows: Critical essays on Robin Hyde and co-editor of Gothic
New Zealand (with Jennifer Lawn and Misha Kavka). She is a senior
lecturer in English and Media Studies at Massey University Albany, in Auckland.
Otago University Press - RRP $40.00 / £27.50 UK
Thank you for alerting me to this - I am such a Robin Hyde fan and look forward to reading it.
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