My Account
| |
Help
My Dashboard
My Dashboard
Get Published
Home
Books
Search
Support
How-To Tutorials
Suggestions
Machine Translation Editions
Noahs Archive Project
About Us
Terms and Conditions
Get Published
Submission Guidelines
Self-Publish Check List
Why Choose Self-publishing?
Home
|
Books
|
Search
|
Support
|
About Us
|
Sign in with your eLibrary Card
close
We appreciate your support of online literacy with your eLibrary Card Membership. Your membership has expired. Please click on the Renew Subscription button in the SUBSCRIPTION AND BILLING section of your Settings tab.
Close
Most Popular
New Releases
Top Picks
Kid 25's
Library Exhibits
Hidden Identities
Pseudonyms
Hidden Identities
Poems by Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell
(by
Charlotte Brontë
)
Behind a Mask : Or, A Woman's Power
(by
Alcott, Louisa May
)
Nouvelles de George Sand
(by
George Sand
)
Théâtre complet de George Sand; Volume: ...
(by
George Sand
)
The Works of George Eliot
(by
George Eliot
)
The Works of George Eliot, Volume 6
(by
George Eliot
)
The Enchanted Woods, And Other Essays on...
(by
Vernon Lee
)
Music and Its Lovers
(by
Vernon Lee
)
Ottilie: An Eighteenth Century Idyl
(by
Vernon Lee
)
Genius Loci : Notes on Places
(by
Vernon Lee
)
Hauntings, Fantastic Stories
(by
Lee, Vernon
)
The Countess of Albany
(by
Vernon Lee
)
Carnival : Entertainments and Posthumous...
(by
Dinesen, Isak
)
It was a truism that a respectable woman’s name was published only three times during her life: upon the occasions of her birth, marriage, and death. Especially for the upper classes, seeing one’s name in print meant scandal and the ruin of a good reputation. Coupled with the prevailing attitude of feminine inferiority and institutional discrimination against women, no scientific or academic organization would consider, much less publish, a scholarly treatise authored by a woman.
Subtly rebelling against this chauvinism and misogyny, and not wanting to solicit ridicule or scandal, many women affected masculine pseudonyms to protect their identities and their families’ names. Their work spans fiction and nonfiction and the trend continues to this day, with women using masculine names for credibility in male-dominated genres. These authors include:
Charlotte, Emily, and Anne Brontë
first published their
first book of poetry
under the pseudonyms of Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell.
Louisa May Alcott
pushed the envelope writing as A. M. Barnard, a secret not discovered until the 1940s. Two titles published under that nom de plume are
A Long Fatal Love Chase
and
Behind a Mask: Or, a Woman’s Power
.
One of the 19th century France’s most prolific writers,
Amantine Lucile Aurore Dupin
published under the name
George Sand
. Assorted works include
Nouvelles de George Sand
,
Oeuvres Complètes de George Sand
, and
Théâtre complet de George Sand
.
Mary Ann Evans
achieved literary fame for her sharp political writing under the nom de plume of
George Eliot
. Books published under that pseudonym include
The Works of George Eliot, Silas Marner: The Weaver of Raveloe
, and
The Mill on the Floss
.
Writing on a variety of topics from travel to music to supernatural fiction, Violet Page published
The Enchanted Woods, And Other Essays on the Genius of Places
,
Music and Its Lovers
,
Ottilie: An Eighteenth Century Idyl
,
Genius Loci
,
Hauntings: Fantastic Stories
,
and
The Countess of Albany
under the pseudonym of
Vernon Lee
.
Karen Blixen
is one of the few female authors publishing under a male name whose books have been picked up by Hollywood. The movie
Out of Africa
is based on her novel
Shadows in the Grass
. That and the following titles were written under her two pseudonyms, Isak Dinesen and Pierre Andrézel:
Carnival: Entertainments and Posthumous Tales
.
The secret identity of Murray Constantine was not discovered until 1989, revealing the author’s true identity as
Katharine Burdekin
. The World Library Foundation has a digital copy of her manuscript for
The Devil, Poor Devil!: A Novel
. She published many works under her actual name, too.
Alice Bradley Sheldon
published science fiction, including the award-winning novella
The Girl Who Was Plugged In
under the name of
James Tiptree, Jr.
June Tarpé Mills
created comic book characters Daredevil Barry Finn, The Purple Zombie, and Miss Fury--the first female superhero--under the name Tarpé Mills.
Joanne K. Rowling
published her wildly successful Harry Potter series using the gender neutral first and middle initials on the advice of her publisher, who felt a young male audience would shun a book written by a woman. She also published
The Cuckoo’s Calling
, the first book of her Detective Cormoran Strike series, under the name Robert Galbraith.
That same thinking led urban fantasy and science fiction author of the Cal Leandros series,
Robyn Thurman
, to publish under a shortened version of her first name: Rob.
Magnus Flyte is the pseudonym for a female duo writing as a team:
Christina Lynch
and
Meg Howrey
. They wrote the 2012 thriller
The City of Dark Magic
set in Prague.
Harper Lee
, whose first name was Nell, also stuck to the safety of androgyny by dropping that first name from her nom de plume. Her book
To Kill a Mockingbird
remains a modern classic.
Prolific and wildly popular romance author
Nora Roberts
also publishes under an androgynous pseudonym,
J. D. Robb
for her suspenseful thrillers, especially the
In Death
series.
Heeding the conventions of the male-dominated genre of true crime,
Anne Rule
published four novels, including her debut
The Stranger Beside Me
, under the masculine pseudonym of Andy Stack. She went on to publish 22 more bestselling books under her own name.
By Karen M. Smith
About Us
Privacy Policy
Contact Us
Copyright © World Library Foundation. All rights reserved. eBooks from Project Gutenberg are sponsored by the
World Library Foundation
,
a 501c(4) Member's Support Non-Profit Organization, and is NOT affiliated with any governmental agency or department.