Jane Ellen Harrison
Jane Ellen Harrison (9 September 1850 – 15 April 1928) was a British
classical scholar and
linguist. With
Karl Kerenyi and
Walter Burkert, Harrison is one of the founders of modern studies in
Ancient Greek religion and
mythology. She applied 19th-century
archaeological discoveries to the interpretation of ancient Greek religion in ways that have become standard. She has also been credited with being the first woman to obtain a post in England as a 'career academic'. Harrison argued for
women's suffrage but thought she would never want to
vote herself.
Ellen Wordsworth Crofts, later second wife of Sir
Francis Darwin, was Jane Harrison's best friend from her student days at Newnham, and during the period from 1898 to Ellen's death in 1903. The depth and influence of Harrison’s friendship with
Eugénie Sellers Strong—ended by a dramatic breech in the 1890s—is explored in a monograph by
Mary Beard: after their breakup Sellers became an influential authority on the material vulture of imperial, while Harrison’s work dug deeper and deeper into the primitive ritual origins of Greek drama. Though moving in different directions chronologically, in terms of their focus, the women appear otherwise as doppelgängers of one another in their concerns, style and characteristic forms of argument deriving from an approach that became known as
classical anthropology. Harrison’s Prolegomena to Greek Religion had a compelling and inspirational impact on the later artworks of
T. S. Eliot,
Virginia Woolf, and
Hilda Doolittle and her scholarly legerdemain was formative to the group of classicists known as the
Cambridge ritualists.
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