Djuna Barnes

American author
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Quick Facts
Born:
June 12, 1892, Cornwall-on-Hudson, New York, U.S.
Died:
June 18?, 1982, New York, New York
Notable Works:
“Nightwood”

Djuna Barnes (born June 12, 1892, Cornwall-on-Hudson, New York, U.S.—died June 18?, 1982, New York, New York) was an avant-garde American writer who was a well-known figure in the Parisian literary scene of the 1920s and ’30s.

Initially educated privately by her father and grandmother, Barnes attended the Pratt Institute and the Art Students League and worked as an artist and journalist. From 1913 she wrote prolifically for newspapers and popular and literary magazines. She published an eccentric chapbook entitled The Book of Repulsive Women: 8 Rhythms and 5 Drawings in 1915; four years later three of her plays were produced by the Provincetown Players. In 1920 she went to Paris, where she interviewed expatriate writers and artists for several magazines, and soon herself became an established figure. She wrote and illustrated a collection of plays, short stories, and poems titled A Book (1923; expanded as A Night Among the Horses, 1929; revised as Spillway, 1962); Ladies Almanack (1928), a gentle satire of literary lesbians; and the novel Ryder (1928), which Barnes called the story of “a female Tom Jones.” Her second novel, Nightwood (1936), is her masterpiece, about the doomed homosexual and heterosexual loves of five extraordinary, even grotesque, people. Her fluent style in this work imitates Elizabethan and other archaic writing, and the chapters are disjunct in time and place; the net effect is of horror and black humour. Barnes also wrote a verse drama, The Antiphon (1958). After 1940, when she returned to the United States, she wrote little and lived reclusively in Greenwich Village.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.