Read Katherine Anne Porter Online
Authors: Katherine Anne Porter,Darlene Harbour Unrue
983.37
Nous. . . Gasconne!”
] “We are the children of Gascogne!”, a French song of resistance of the Hundred Years War (1337–1453).
988.4
Miss Brenner] Anita Brenner (1905–1974), born in Mexico and raised and educated in the United States, wrote several books and many essays on Mexican art, culture, and history.
988.10–11
Tina. . . Weston] Tina Modotti (1876–1942), Italian actress, political activist, and photographer, met Edward Henry Weston (1886–1958) in 1918 and became his favorite model as well as his lover.
988.30–31
Syndicate. . . Sculptors] Guild of muralists, led by Diego Rivera.
990.9
Siquieros] David Alfaro Siquieros (1896–1974), Mexican muralist.
990.13
Jean Charlot] Charlot (1898–1976), French painter and muralist who spent most of his working life in Mexico.
990.14
Merida] Muralist Carlos Mérida (1891–1984), one of the founders of the Syndicate.
990.15
Dr. Atl] Mexican nature artist Gerardo Murillo (1876–1964) called himself “Dr. Atl” to signify his sympathy with the indigenest movement.
990.30–31
Orozco. . . Abraham Angel] José Clemente Orozco (1883–1949), Mexican muralist; Abraham Ángel, Mexican painter (1905–1924) celebrated for his primitive style.
990.33
Xavier Guerrero] Painter and engraver (1896–1974); co-founder, with Siquieros, of
El Machete
, the official organ of the Syndicate.
993.7
Academy] The Academy of San Carlos, founded in 1785 in Mexico City.
995.23
Preparatoria] Escuela Nacional Preparatoria (National Preparatory School) in Mexico City, where Diego Rivera and other artists were commissioned in 1921 by José Vasconcelos, then minister of education, to decorate the schools; marked the beginning of the Mural movement.
997.19
Carmen] Title character of the opera
Carmen
(1875) by Georges Bizet (1838–1875).
998.4
Mr. Morrow’s town] Dwight W. Morrow (1873–1931), American ambassador to Mexico in 1927–30, built a weekend house in Cuernavaca and filled it with Mexican artifacts.
1000.4
Carleton Beals] Beals (1893–1945), Latin American correspondent for
The Nation
and author of dozens of works on revolution in Mexico and Central America.
1004.26
Archbishop Pascual Diaz] Pascual Díaz y Barreto (1876–1936), Archbishop of Mexico City in 1929–36, was often at odds with anticlerical Mexican administrations.
1007.6
1894] Porter, given to falsifying her age, was born in 1890, not 1894.
1010.1
The Land That Is Nowhere
] See the
Tao Te Ching
by Lao Tzu (sixth century
B.C.
): “The long journey ends at the land that is Nowhere, that is the true home.”
1010.3
a certain critic] Malcolm Cowley (1898–1989).
1010.8–9
newspaper. . . prints] Cowley referred to Porter’s early career as a “writer for several newspapers” in the second edition of his memoir
Exile‘s Return
(1934; revised 1951).
1011.15
Natalie Scott] Natalie Vivian Scott (1890–1957), American journalist, playwright, social worker, and university professor, was part of the artists’ colony in the French Quarter of New Orleans in the 1920s and of the expatriate colony in Mexico in the 1930s.
1011.16–17
William Spratling] American professor and silversmith (1900–1967) who copied pre-Colombian designs.
1011.24
Janice Biala] Polish-born American painter (1903–2000) who lived with Ford in the 1930s in France and the United States.
1013.24–27
E. M. . . . idea’.”] See “Joseph Conrad: A Note” (1920), in
Abinger Harvest
(1936).
Abélard, Pierre,
1014
Adams, Charles Francis,
689
Adams, Henry,
689
African Americans,
722
,
726
,
736–37
,
750
,
756
,
781
African slaves,
963
Aguilar, Cándido,
899
Albany, N.Y.,
524–26
Aldama, Juan,
947
Aldington, Richard,
576
Alembert, Jean d’,
945
Alexandria, Va.,
781
Allende, Ignacio,
947
American Women’s Club, Paris,
685n
Americans,
554–55
,
557
,
562
,
565
,
573
,
580
,
687–91
,
702–3
,
706–8
,
789
,
870
AMTORG trading corporation,
841
Ángel, Abraham,
990
Arber, Edward,
1014
Argentina,
708
Arizona,
548
Arnold, Benedict,
783
Astor, John Jacob,
524
Atl, Dr. (Gerardo Murillo),
990
Audubon, John James,
743
,
756
,
758–59
,
764
Augustine, Saint,
647
,
813
,
818–19
;
Confessions
,
811
,
1014
Auld, Jessica Cather,
541–42
Austen, Jane,
611–12
,
709
;
Mansfield Park
,
1014
Austin, Texas,
1015
Authors Today and Yesterday
,
1007
Aztecs,
614
,
875
,
884–85
,
887
,
889
,
909
,
924
,
988
Baja California,
905
Balzac, Honoré de,
549
Barcelona, Spain,
965
Baron, Rosa,
831
,
838–39
,
850
,
856
,
863
Bartók, Béla,
544
Barzun, Jacques,
624
Basel, Switzerland,
721
,
725
,
995
,
1008
,
1012
Baton Rouge, La.,
757
Beach, Sylvia,
672–78
Beals, Carleton:
The Stones Awake
,
1000–1
Bean, Roy,
740
Beatty, Bessie,
837
Beethoven, Ludwig van,
549
Benda, Julien,
608
Benedict XIV,
959
Béranger, Pierre-Jean de,
779
Bergen-Belsen concentration camp,
542
Beristain, José Mariano,
956
,
966
Berlin, Germany,
835n
,
1008
,
1012
Bernhardt, Sarah,
1016
Biala, Janice,
1011
Bilignin, France,
572
Blanchard, Abbé,
955
Blasco Ibáñez, Vicente:
Mexico in Revolution
,
974–77
Blood, Benjamin Paul,
539
Blum, Léon,
569
Boehme, Jacob,
555
Bolshevism,
894
Bonaparte, Josephine,
779
Books Abroad
,
707
Boone, Daniel,
1009
Boston, Mass.,
524–26
,
620
,
831
,
835–36
,
840–63
Boswell, James,
576
;
The Life of Samuel Johnson
,
1014
Boulder, Col.,
809
Boxer Rebellion,
836
Boyle, Kay,
997
Brady, Mathew,
529–30
Braque, Georges,
569
Breit, Harvey,
623–24
Brenner, Anita:
Idols behind Altars,
987–92
;
The Wind that Swept Mexico,
1002–4
Breton, André,
569
Brinnin, John Malcolm:
Dylan Thomas in America
,
651–53
Britain,
526
, 528–
29
,
590
,
597
,
601
,
607
,
642
,
708
,
757
,
771–72
,
893
,
904
,
981–82
,
1002
,
1011
Brontë, Emily,
611
,
709
;
Wuthering Heights
,
1014
Brown, E. K.:
Willa Cather
,
551
Browning, Elizabeth Barrett,
797–98
Browning, Robert,
797–98
Bruegel, Pieter: “The Fall of Icarus,”
691–92
Bryher (Annie Winnifred Ellerman),
675
Budapest, Hungary,
709
Bullitt, William,
838
Bustamante, Carlos María,
951–52
Butler, E. M.:
Rainer Maria Rilke
,
666
Byron, George Gordon,
590
Caldwell, Erskine:
Tobacco Road
,
785
California,
624
Calleja, Félix María,
952–53
,
957
Campeche,
893
Canada,
820
Cantú, Esteban,
905
Capmany, Rafael Zubarán,
903
Capone, Al,
830
Cárdenas, Lázaro,
995
Carranza, Venustiano,
872–73
,
898–901
,
903–4
,
906
,
936
,
974–76
,
981
,
983
,
990
Carillo, Felipe,
864
,
873
,
906–7
,
1003
Carlyle, Jane,
576
Carlyle, Thomas,
523
Cather, Willa,
540–52
;
Alexander’s Bridge
,
547–48
;
Death Comes for the Archbishop
,
543
,
549
; “A Death in the Desert,”
551
; “The Diamond Mine,”
547
;
A Lost Lady
,
547
;
My Ántonia,
543
;
O Pioneers
!
543
,
548
;
Obscure Destinies
,
543
; “Paul’s Case,”
547
,
551
;
The Song of the Lark
,
543
;
The Troll Garden
,
547
,
551–52
;
Youth and the Bright Medusa
,
543
Catholics,
579
,
736–37
,
879
,
893–94
,
896–97
,
906
,
941
,
943–44
,
957
,
959–63
,
988
,
1002
Cervantes, Miguel de,
972
Charles X,
779
Chase, Stuart:
Mexico
,
997–99
Chaucer, Geoffrey,
628
Christianity,
579
,
599–601
,
604
,
640
,
723
,
743
,
745
,
766
,
768
,
842
,
847
,
879
,
884
,
909
,
946
,
955
,
959
,
1010
Circe,
799–807
Civil War, U.S.,
566
,
570
,
723
,
745
Clement XII,
959
Cody, William F.,
689
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor: “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner,”
605
Colette, Sidonie-Gabrielle,
661–63
Communism,
570
,
607–8
,
832
,
835–37
,
839–40
,
842
,
852–53
,
856–57
,
894
,
990
,
996
Connolly, Cyril,
611
Constitution, U.S.,
821