She worked to cultivate her voice. She did not find it gay living in the same place where she had always been living. She went to a place where some were cultivating something, voices and other things needing cultivating. She met Georgine Skeene there... Geography and Plays - Page 17by Gertrude Stein - 1922 - 419 pagesFull view - About this book
| Steven Meyer - Literary Criticism - 2001 - 486 pages
...the suggestion of fur and skin from the title of the piece. "They were both gay there," Stein wrote, "they were regularly working there both of them cultivating their voices there, they were both gay there" (GP, p. 17, emphasis added). The cultivation of one's voice is a gaya scienza, a form of knowledge... | |
| Rachel Giora - Philosophy - 2003 - 282 pages
...not find it gay living in the same place where she had always been living. She went to a place w here some were cultivating something. voices and other...not being gay. regular in being a gay one who was not being gay longer than was needed to be one being quite a gay one. They were both gay then there... | |
| Bryony Randall - Literary Criticism - 2007 - 157 pages
...time and the way in which they live through that time. For example, from 'Miss Furr and Miss Skeene': 'They were both gay there, they were regularly working...there both of them cultivating their voices there'; 'She was not lonesome then, she was not at all feeling any need of having Georgine Skeene'; 'she was... | |
| |