- Elizabeth Janeway
Elizabeth Janeway (
October 7 ,1913 –January 15 ,2005 ) was an Americanauthor andcritic .Born Elizabeth Ames Hall in
Brooklyn, New York , her naval architect father and homemaker mother fell on hard times during the Depression, leading her to end herSwarthmore College education and help support the family by creating bargain basement sale slogans (she graduated fromBarnard College just a few years later, in 1935).Never a supporter of the
Communist Party or even a socialist, she did breathe the progressive air of 1930sNew York City ; she always laughed as she described how she and a Barnard friend met their physical education requirement by improvising a tap-dance version of "The Internationale ". Intent on becoming an author, Janeway took the samecreative writing class again and again to help hone her craft. While working on her first novel, "The Walsh Girls", she met and marriedEliot Janeway , economic adviser to PresidentsFranklin Delano Roosevelt andLyndon B. Johnson (he was known as "Calamity Janeway" for his pessimistic economic forecasts). Elizabeth described Eliot as "the most intelligent man I had ever met."The Janeways mingled with
United States Supreme Court justices and many other luminaries of the day (she recommendedErica Jong 's "Fear of Flying" to JusticeWilliam O. Douglas ).At the behest of labor organizer
Walter Reuther she aided General Motors workers with their mid-1940s strike against the company.Janeway finally finished "Girls" in 1943 while awaiting the birth of her second child; she signed the contract with the publishers while en route to the hospital. A later novel, 1949's "The Question of Gregory," attracted attention due to the eerie similarities between Gregory and
James Forrestal , a Defense Secretary and acquaintance of the Janeways who committedsuicide . Janeway denied any connection between fact and fiction; she said the real theme of the book was "liberals in trouble".All in all Janeway wrote seven novels; one, 1945's "
Daisy Kenyon ", was made into a film starringJoan Crawford . For a time Janeway was a reviewer for the "New York Times ." In that capacity she introduced writerAnthony Powell and served as a champion of controversial works such as "Lolita ". She was also a reviewer for "Ms. magazine ".From 1965-1969 she served as president of the
Authors Guild , addressing lawmakers aboutcopyright protection and other matters.Many of Janeway's early works focused on the family situation, with occasional glimpses at the struggles of women in modern society. In the early 1970s, she began a more explicitly
feminist path with works such as "Man's World, Woman's Place: A Study of Social Mythology." She befriendedBetty Friedan ,Gloria Steinem andKate Millet and was strongly in favor ofabortion rights. Janeway continued to write and go on lecture tours. She learned to speak Russian so that she could visit theSoviet Union .Janeway was a judge for the
National Book Awards in 1955 and for thePulitzer Prize in 1971. She was an executive ofInternational PEN . At its 1981 commencement ceremonies, her "alma mater "Barnard College awarded Janeway its highest honor, the Barnard Medal of Distinction.Elizabeth Hall Janeway died at her
Rye, New York home. She is survived by two sons:Columbia Graduate School of Journalism professor, "Boston Globe " editor and former "Atlantic Monthly " executiveMichael Janeway and William Hall Janeway, until 2006 a Vice Chairman atWarburg Pincus , as well as by three grandchildren and a great-granddaughter."Star Trek Voyager"'s Captain Janeway was originally named Elizabeth. The name was changed to Kathryn to avoid legal disputes when it was discovered that a prominent woman already held the name Elizabeth Janeway.
Quotes
On the time she met President
Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR) and tripped on his leg braces::"Mrs. Roosevelt wanted to greet us, and she turned and said, 'Do come down.' And so I started down to shake her hand, and I fell over FDR's feet, flat on my face. And he leaned down, and he just picked me up like that, you know, very powerful arms, because he had to use the crutches. And he sort of [set] me on my feet."On her age::"I have a problem about being nearly sixty. I keep waking up in the morning and thinking I'm thirty-one."
On liberals: :" [Liberals] are so darned immature. Too many of them have been convinced that power corrupts always. They are well-meaning people afraid to take action."
External links
* [http://www.guardian.co.uk/obituaries/story/0,3604,1394095,00.html Guardian obituary]
* [http://en.thinkexist.com/quotes/elizabeth_janeway/ More Janeway quotes]
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