Bithia Mary Croker

Bithia Mary (or May) Croker (née Sheppard, born c. 1848 in Kilgefin, County Roscommon, Ireland – died in London, 20 October 1920) was an Irish novelist, most of whose work concerns life and society in British India. Her 1917 novel The Road to Mandalay, set in Burma, was the uncredited basis for a 1926 American silent film, of which only excerpts survive. She was also a notable writer of ghost stories.[1][2][3]

Life

The only daughter of Rev. William Sheppard (died 1856), rector of Kilgefin, County Roscommon, Ireland, writer and controversialist, Bithia was educated at Rockferry, Cheshire and in Tours, France. She became famous as a horsewoman with the Kildare Hunt.[1] In 1871, she married John Stokes Croker (1844–1911), an officer in the Royal Scots Fusiliers and later the Royal Munster Fusiliers.

In 1877, Bithia followed her husband to Madras and then to Bengal. She lived in India for 14 years, spending some time in the hill station of Wellington now in Tamil Nadu, where she wrote many of her works. She had begun to write as a distraction in the hot season. After her husband's retirement with the rank of lieutenant-colonel in 1892, the couple went to live in County Wicklow, then in London, and finally in Folkestone, where her husband died in 1911.[4] She had one daughter, Eileen (born 1872), who was also educated at Rockferry. She remained immensely interested in reading, travelling and theatre. She died at 30 Dorset Square, London on 20 October 1920 and was buried in Folkestone.[2]

Writing

Croker's prolific literary career spanned 37 years, from 1882 when she was 33 years old, until 1919. She wrote 44 novels and six volumes of short stories.[1]

Her first novel, Proper Pride (1880), was written secretly in Secunderabad in 1880, then read aloud to other women. The original manuscript was lost, but Croker rewrote it and had it published anonymously in the UK. Thought to be by a man, it received good reviews and had been reprinted 12 times by 1896. William Ewart Gladstone was observed reading it in the House of Commons.[2] The book, according to a present-day account, "shows open sympathy with the male viewpoint and metes out punishing treatment to its spirited, horse-riding heroine, whose distrustful pride separates her from her devoted husband."[1]

Croker's work has been praised in general for "a sensitive ear for speech, for idiom and the diction of different classes, which she reproduces in lively and entertaining dialogue." Tension often derives from threats to conventional order in society. Her second novel, Pretty Miss Neville (1883), was as popular as the first. The burden of social convention for a woman in India unwilling to marry the man for whom she has been sent out is explored in The Cat's Paw (1902), and that of a man who sinks socially in The Company's Servant (1907). Her Village Tales and Jungle Tragedies (1895) reflect a parallel interest in Indian rural life. Altogether 17 of the novels were set in India, one in Burma, and seven in Ireland.[2]

There are intimations of Gothic fiction in some of Croker's work. Her 1905 story "The Little Brass God", for example, involves a statue of Kali, described as a "goddess of destruction", who brings various misfortunes on the Anglo-Indians who possess it. The curse is dispelled when the statue is stolen from them and dropped down a well.[5]

Several of Croker's novels were translated into French, German, Hungarian,[6] and Norwegian. A volume of her ghost stories appeared at the turn of the millennium.[7] Her story "To Let" (c. 1896) was included in The Oxford Book of Victorian Ghost Stories.[8] One of her novels set in Ireland, Terence (1899), was adapted for the stage and ran for two years in the United States.

Croker had a wide literary acquaintance in London. Her novel Angel (1901) was dedicated to another novelist whose work centres on India: Alice Perrin.[2] The author and academic Douglas Sladen went so far as to call her, with her "valued friends" Perrin and Flora Annie Steel, "three who have long divided the Indian Empire with Rudyard Kipling as a realm of fiction. Each in her own department is supreme."[9]

Bibliography

Novels

Short stories

Analysis

An in-depth and detailed study of her novels, with special reference to her depiction of India has been carried out by Dr. S.G. Vaidya under the supervision of Dr B. S. Naikar, former professor and chairman, Department of Studies in English, at Karnatak University. A discussion of the cultural context of Croker's fiction, together with close readings of several of her novels and stories, can be found in John Wilson Foster, Irish Novels 1890–1940: New Bearings in Culture and Fiction (Oxford, UK: OUP, 2008). Some present-day scholars have seen in Croker's work examples of a "conjoining of gender and colonialism".[10]

External links

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 The Feminist Companion to Literature in English, eds Virginia Blain, Patricia Clements and Isobel Grundy (London: Batsford, 1990), p. 248.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Rosemary Cargill Raza: "Croker, Bithia Mary (c. 1848–1920)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, UK: OUP, 2004) Retrieved 30 October 2015. Pay-walled
  3. IMDb Retrieved 30 October 2015
  4. There is a blue plaque recording her residence at 10 Radnor Cliff, Sandgate, Kent, from 1897 to 1908. Retrieved 30 October 2015
  5. Patrick Brantlinger: Rule of Darkness. British Literature and Imperialism, 1830–1914 (Ithaca, NY: Cornell UP, 1988), p. 227 Retrieved 30 October 2015
  6. Several covers of translations: 31 October 2015
  7. Infinity Plus review Retrieved 31 October 2015
  8. Selected and edited by Michael Cox and R. A. Gilbert (Oxford, UK: OUP, 2013 [1991]), p. 346 ff.
  9. Quoted in Melissa Edmundson Makala: Women's Ghost Literature in Nineteenth-Century Britain (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2013), p. 199. Retrieved 31 October 2015
  10. Anindyo Roy: Civility and Empire. Literature and Culture in British India, 1822–1922 (Routledge: Abingdon, UK, 2005), p. 90 Retrieved 31 October 2015 Roy's example is Croker's Angel: A Sketch in Indian Ink (1901).
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