Cedar Paul Explained

Cedar Paul, née Gertrude Mary Davenport (1880  - 18 March 1972) was a singer, author, translator and journalist.[1]

Biography

Gertrude Davenport came from a musical family: she was the granddaughter of the composer George Alexander Macfarren and the daughter of the composer Francis William Davenport (1847–1925).[1] She was educated at convent schools in Belgium, France, Italy and England, and studied music in Germany.

She was a member of the Independent Labour Party from 1912 to 1919, and Secretary of the British Section of the Women's International Council of Socialist and Labour Organizations from 1917 to 1919. She married Eden Paul, and from 1915 onwards was active - under the name of Cedar Paul - as a translator and writer in collaboration with her husband. The pair became members of the Communist Party of Great Britain,[2] and Cedar served on the executive committee of the Plebs League in the 1920s.[3] Together with Lyster Jameson, the Pauls made "strenuous attempts [...] to develop psychology" as a component of working-class education in the Plebs League.[4] However, some working-class League members resented them:

Cedar and Eden Paul were extraordinarily prolific translators in the interwar years, translating a range of socialist and psychotherapy works, as well as novels, particularly historical novels. They were the official translators for Stefan Zweig and Emil Ludwig, and their translations from German also included works by Karl Marx, Rudolf Hilferding, Karl Jaspers, Rudolf Brunngraber, and Heinrich von Treitschke. However, they also translated work from French, Italian (including a work by Robert Michels) and Russian (including works by Joseph Stalin, and Georgi Plekhanov, and Mikhail Lermontov's A Hero of Our Time).

After Eden Paul's death in 1944, Cedar Paul published only a small number of translations under her own name. She found herself in serious debt and experienced dire poverty, living in a caravan.[5]

Works

Translations undertaken with Eden Paul

Other works

External links

Notes and References

  1. Who Was Who
  2. The Labour Who's Who, 1927
  3. Chris Wrigley, A.J.P. Taylor: radical historian of Europe, I. B. Tauris, 2006, p.37
  4. J. McIlroy, 'Independent working-class education and trade union education and training', in R. Fieldhouse (ed.) A History of Modern British Adult Education (Leicester, 1996), pp.271-3
  5. Carey . Mike . Cedar and Eden Paul's Creative Revolution: The 'new psychology' and the dictatorship of the proletariat, 1917-1926 . Twentieth Century Communism . 2019 . 17 . 17 . 122–165 . Lawrence and Wishart. 10.3898/175864319827751349 .