LITERATURE AND THE POLITICS OF POST-VICTORIAN DECADENCE

Similar documents
WRITING THE 1926 GENERAL STRIKE

THE RENAISSANCE OF EMPIRE IN EARLY MODERN EUROPE

New Essays on the History of Autonomy

MODERNISM AND THE LOCATIONS OF LITERARY HERITAGE

This page intentionally left blank

Colonization and the Origins of Humanitarian Governance

palgrave advances in intellectual history

Poetry in the Museums of Modernism

Essays in Anti-Labour History

The Two Cultures Controversy

POST-COLONIAL ENGLISH DRAMA

FAQ: The Complete Prose of T. S. Eliot

SALLY BROOKE CAMERON Department of English Queen's University Kingston, ON K7L 3N6 Canada

Alexandra Owen. History Department and Gender & Sexuality Studies Program. University of Sussex: B. A. in Modern History, First Class Honours (1971)

African American Women And The Vote, READ ONLINE

Class Inequality in Austerity Britain

STUDIES IN GENDER HISTORY

ROBERT J. SAVAGE. Boston College Department of History 140 Commonwealth Avenue Chestnut Hill MA

Joanna L. Dyl. Department of History, University of South Florida 4202 East Fowler Avenue SOC 107 Tampa, FL (813)

The Sociology of Norbert Elias

THE MERCHANT OF VENICE. Cambridge University Press The Merchant of Venice Edited by M. M. Mahood Frontmatter More information

Race and Imperial Defence in the British World,

WOMEN-HEADED HOUSEHOLDS

This page intentionally left blank

Pevsner: The Complete Broadcast Talks, Architecture and Art on Radio and. Nikolaus Pevsner did more than anyone else in twentieth century Britain to

A Student s Guide to Equity and Trusts

Also by Deborah Philips

Sarah Bilston. Office tel: Education

Bloomsbury Bliss September 22 30, 2018

Associate Professor of English and American Studies, Yale University, Preceptor, Expository Writing Program, Harvard University,

Lecture One, titled 'The Kiss' Lecture Two, 'The Burning Child' Joseph Leo Koerner

DURRETT, FRANCES BOWEN PAPERS 1952

The Complete Guide to Buying and Selling Apartment Buildings

ROADMAP to ENGINEERING DESIGN

The Educational Work of Women s Organizations,

The Constant Curator 347 David J. Holmes

Structures and Transformations in Modern British History

Gage C. McWeeny. Education Ph.D. Princeton University, English and American Literature. B.A. Columbia University, 1993

Miriam Bailin. Articles: God Deliver Me From My Friends! : Charlotte Bronte and G.H. Lewes, Bronte Studies, (January 2011).

Copyright is owned by the Author of the thesis. Permission is given for a copy to be downloaded by an individual for the purpose of research and

Fundamentals of Georgia Real Estate Law

JOH N SZ AR KOWSK I A T G E T. he useum of Modern Art, New York

Department of English Denver, CO University of Colorado, Boulder (814)

A Century of Travels in China

Jan Monograph Nation and Citizenship in the Twentieth-Century British Novel (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2015).

The New York Public Library Manuscripts and Archives Division

Loyola University Chicago ~ Archives and Special Collections

Visiting Scholar, Pembroke Center, Brown University present. Founding Associate Director, ; Acting Director, , ,

Emma Cadbury papers. Coll Finding aid prepared by Diane Rofini. Last updated on October 09, 2013.

Habits of Devotion: Catholic Religious Practice in Twentieth Century America (Edited). Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2004.

Pacific Affairs VOL. XXVIII, NO. I MARCH PAGE Bernard B. Fall 3. Indochina Since Geneva

This page intentionally left blank

Maya Lin and Her Impact on the Landscape Architecture Community

The Archaeology of Anxiety

RURAL DEVELOPMENT IN TROPICAL AFRICA

Imperialism, Reform, and the Making of Englishness in Jane Eyre

THE JOURNAL OF THE POLYNESIAN SOCIETY

Making Thatcher s Britain

Giving Is Good. for the Soul. The Life and Legacy of Charles and Shirley Weiss

Lord I'm Coming Home. John Forrest, Deborah Blincoe. Published by Cornell University Press. For additional information about this book

Standard Letters for Building Contractors

Hector Bolitho: An Inventory of His Collection at the Harry Ransom Center

CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN THEATRE

Suffrage Outside Suffragism

NEW THEORIES IN GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT

CAMERON, RONDO E. Rondo E. Cameron papers,

Seth Archer. Department of History Utah State University 0710 Old Main Hill Logan, UT

A Guide to the Thomas Darlington Cope Papers (bulk )

John Elliott Tappan and the Origins of American Express Financial Advisors

2005 Technos International Study Tour Dr. Stanley Mathews, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Geneva, New York, USA.

Eleanor Hubbard. Department of History Princeton University 129 Dickinson Hall (617)

Early American Theatre from the Revolution to Thomas Jefferson

DeVault 1 Ileen A. DeVault Hanshaw Road 370 Ives Hall. (607) Ithaca, NY (607) address:

The Truth about Fania Fénelon and the Women s Orchestra of Auschwitz-Birkenau

ABRIDGED CURRICULUM VITAE. Name : Vincent Gerlac SIMIYU

UNIVERSITY OF REGINA ARCHIVES AND SPECIAL COLLECTIONS DR JOHN ARCHER LIBRARY MAGGIE SIGGINS INTERVIEWS FOR BITTER EMBRACE

BRITISH AND IRISH DRAMA SINCE 1960

George M. Dennison Papers,

B.A. in Social Anthropology, National School of Anthropology and History, Mexico, 2006

Cole Harris fonds. Compiled by Terra Dickson (2003) Last revised October University of British Columbia Archives

ORDERS AND HIERARCHIES IN LATE MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE EUROPE

Syntax of Landscape The Landscape Architecture of Peter Latz and Partners

Boyle, Kay, Kay Boyle letters to Basil Burwell

address:

Frank A. Biletz BOOK: Historical Dictionary of Ireland (Scarecrow Press, published in November 2013).

INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS IN INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE

Cheri L. Larsen Hoeckley English Department, Westmont College 955 La Paz Road, Santa Barbara, CA (805)

ART AND SOCIETY IN THE VICTORIAN NOVEL

WORKERS HOUSING SAADIYAT ISLAND: GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM SOUVENIR (2013)

NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS

Princeton University

The Association for Preservation Technology International Association pour la presérvation et ses techniques

TRAVEL FELLOWSHIP. John Belle traveling in England between studies at the Architectural Association in London.

in this web service Cambridge University Press

CURRICULUM VITAE JOHN S. LYONS. Ph. D. (Economics), University of California, Berkeley, 1977 A. B. (Physics), Harvard University, 1966

Howard Comfort and Ezra Pound correspondence, MC.833

9th ANNUAL DINNER & AWARDS CEREMONY photo album

OUR FIRST 10 YEARS ( )

Abraham Rogatnick fonds Compiled by Emma Wendel (2010) Revised by Erwin Wodarczak (2011) Last revised September 2013

The APT Bulletin Promotes Preservation of Modern Heritage

Transcription:

LITERATURE AND THE POLITICS OF POST-VICTORIAN DECADENCE In Literature and the Politics of Post-Victorian Decadence, Kristin Mahoney argues that the specters of the fin de siècle exercised a remarkable draw on the British cultural imagination well into the twentieth century. These authors and artists refused to assimilate to the aesthetic and political ethos of the era, representing themselves instead as time travelers from the previous century for whom twentieth-century modernity was both baffling and disappointing. However, they did not turn entirely from the modern moment but rather relied on Decadent strategies to participate in conversations concerning the most highly vexed issues of the period, including war, the rise of the Labour Party, the question of women s sexual freedom, and changing conceptions of sexual and gender identities. kristin mahoney is associate professor of English at Western Washington University. She is the editor of a scholarly edition of Baron Corvo s Hubert s Arthur, and her articles have appeared in such journals as Victorian Studies, Criticism, English Literature in Transition, and Victorian Periodicals Review.

LITERATURE AND THE POLITICS OF POST-VICTORIAN DECADENCE KRISTIN MAHONEY Western Washington University

32 Avenue of the Americas, New York, ny 10013-2473, usa Cambridge University Press is part of the University of Cambridge. It furthers the University s mission by disseminating knowledge in the pursuit of education, learning, and research at the highest international levels of excellence. Information on this title: /9781107109742 C 2015 This publication is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University Press. First published 2015 Printed in the United States of America A catalog record for this publication is available from the British Library. Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Mahoney, Kristin. Literature and the Politics of Post-Victorian Decadence /, Western Washington University. pages cm Includes bibliographical references and index. isbn 978-1-107-10974-2 (hardback) 1. English literature 20th century History and criticism. 2. Decadence (Literary movement) Great Britain. 3. Modernism (Aesthetics) Great Britain. 4. Modernism (Literature) Great Britain. 5. Politics and literature Great Britain History 20th century. I. Title. pr478.d43m34 2015 820.9ʹ0091 dc23 2015003343 isbn 978-1-107-10974-2 Hardback Cambridge University Press has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy of urls for external or third-party Internet Web sites referred to in this publication and does not guarantee that any content on such Web sites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate.

Contents List of Illustrations Acknowledgments page vii ix Introduction: The Fighting Nineties: The Age of the Critical Function 1 1 Queer Indifference : Max Beerbohm, Post-Victorian Decadence, and Camp Nostalgia 25 2 Pacifism and Post-Victorian Decadence: Vernon Lee at the Margins of the Twentieth Century 57 3 Towards Aristocracy : Baron Corvo and the Corvine Society 85 4 Irish Decadence, Occultism, and Sacrificial Myth: The Martyrdom of Althea Gyles 118 5 Crusading Decadent: Beresford Egan, Global Dandyism, and Post-Victorian Decadent Feminism 153 Afterword: Notes on Post-Victorian Decadence after the Wars 194 Notes 201 Bibliography 237 Index 253 v

List of Illustrations I.1. Max Beerbohm, Some Persons of the Nineties, from Observations, 1925. page 2 1.1. Max Beerbohm, Rossetti in Childhood, frontispiece for Rossetti and His Circle, 1922. 26 1.2. Max Beerbohm, Mr. Morley of Blackburn, on an Afternoon in the Spring of 69, Introduces Mr. John Stuart Mill,fromRossetti and His Circle, 1922. 35 1.3. Max Beerbohm, A Man from Hymettus,fromRossetti and His Circle, 1922. 37 1.4. Advertising pamphlet for Rossetti and His Circle. 38 1.5. Max Beerbohm, Studies of the Heads of the Pre-Raphaelites, 1917 18. 40 1.6. Max Beerbohm, Mr. Beerbohm Reading Mrs. Woolf, on verso of ALS to Miss Peyton, February 19, 1928. 47 1.7. Vanessa Bell, cover of Mr. Bennett and Mrs. Brown, 1924. 48 4.1. Althea Gyles, cover of The Secret Rose by W. B. Yeats, 1897. 124 4.2. AltheaGyles,The Knight upon the Grave of His Lady, The Dome, 1898. 125 4.3. Althea Gyles, illustration for The Harlot s House by Oscar Wilde, 1904. 137 5.1. Beresford Egan, Safety First, Rand Daily Mail, September 23, 1925. 159 5.2. Beresford Egan, detail from advertisement for South African Tourism Board, Country Life, October 6, 1928. 160 5.3. Beresford Egan, colophon from title page of The Policeman of the Lord, 1929. 163 5.4. Beresford Egan, Similia Similibus,fromThe Sink of Solitude, 1928. 165 5.5. Beresford Egan, Courtesan, 1930. 167 vii

viii List of Illustrations 5.6. Beresford Egan, John Bull and the Muse, 1931. 171 5.7. Beresford Egan, The Pariahs, fromde Sade, 1929. 176 5.8. Beresford Egan, Chrysis and the Flute Girls, from Aphrodite by Pierre Louÿs, 1929. 180 5.9. Aubrey Beardsley, Toilette of Salome, original version, 1894. 181 5.10. Beresford Egan, Megilla,fromCyprian Masques, translated by Pierre Louÿs, 1929. 183

Acknowledgments This book is a product of the tremendous generosity of the people within the field of Victorian aestheticism and Decadence. It emerges from the thinking I began to do as a graduate student at the University of Notre Dame, and the conversations I have been having with my dissertation director, Kathy Psomiades, for the past fifteen years are present on almost every page of this manuscript. Richard Dellamora took an interest in the project at an early stage, and the thought-provoking discussions I have been having with him for the past decade have consistently led my thinking in new directions. My argument took shape at a National Endowment for the Humanities seminar at the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library organized by Joseph Bristow, and his insights and the community that he fostered at this seminar truly formed the foundation for this project. Every participant in the seminar has informed my thinking in some way, but I am particularly indebted to Diana Maltz, whose thoughtful feedback and friendship have been absolutely invaluable to me; Brooke Cameron, who has similarly provided unflagging enthusiasm and support; and Emily Harrington, Simon Joyce, and So Young Park. Through the seminar, I met Mark Samuels Lasner, whose knowledge informs so much of what I have written. I have also benefited in countless ways from the warmth and kindness of the broader community of scholars interested in aestheticism and Decadence, including Ellen Crowell, Dennis Denisoff, Neil Hultgren, Alex Murray, Andrea Wolk Rager, and Vincent Sherry, and from the wider community of Victorian studies scholars, including Tanya Agathocleous, Genie Babb, Julie Codell, Kristen Guest, Nathan Hensley, Mary Elizabeth Leighton, Sara Maurer, Anne Stiles, Lisa Surridge, Chris Vanden Bossche, and Athena Vrettos. Anna Jones was one of my most challenging and helpful readers. I am also grateful for the feedback I received while presenting chapters from this project at conferences organized by the North American Victorian Studies Association, the Victorian Interdisciplinary Studies ix

x Acknowledgments Association of the Western United States, and the Victorian Studies Association of Western Canada. I would like to thank Ray Ryan and the editorial team at Cambridge University Press, who were patient, efficient, and helpful during every step of the process. Margaret Stetz and an anonymous reader for Cambridge University Press provided incredibly insightful and helpful feedback on the manuscript. It would have been impossible to do this work without the financial support that I received from the Office of the Dean of the College of Humanities and Social Sciences and the Office of Research and Sponsored Programs at my home institution, Western Washington University, and Marc Geisler was instrumental in helping me to secure this funding. The project was also supported by a research grant from the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies of British Art and by a Pre-Raphaelite Studies Fellowship from the University of Delaware and the Delaware Art Museum. I completed the final revisions to the manuscript while being supported by an Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Research Fellowship at the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas. Adrian Woodhouse was kind enough to grant me access to his private collection of materials related to Beresford Egan. His guidance influenced my thinking about Egan in countless ways. I am also grateful to Julia Walworth and the Warden and Fellows of Merton College Oxford; Alyson Price at the British Institute of Florence; and the librarians and staff at the University of Delaware Special Collections, the Mark Samuels Lasner Collection, the Delaware Art Museum, UCLA s William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, the University of Reading Special Collections, the Shakespeare Centre Library and Archive, the National Library of Ireland, Columbia University s Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Pennsylvania State University s Eberly Family Special Collections Library, and the BBC Written Archive. Chapter 2 previously appeared in English Literature in Transition 56, no. 3 (2013): 313 32 and is reprinted with permission. For permission to reproduce artworks, I would like to acknowledge the Estate of Max Beerbohm, the Estate of Beresford Egan, and the Estate of Vanessa Bell. For permission to quote lines of poetry, I would like to thank the Estate of Beresford Egan and the Estate of P. R. Stephensen. For permission to quote unpublished copyrighted material, I would like to thank the Estate of Max Beerbohm and the Estate of Augustus Edwin John/Bridgeman Images. BBC copyrighted material is reproduced courtesy of the British Broadcasting Corporation. All rights reserved. I would also like to thank

Acknowledgments the National Library of Ireland and Pennsylvania State University s Eberly Family Special Collections Library for permission to quote from archival materials. I am so thankful for the support I have received from everyone in the English Department at Western Washington University. Bill Smith has been at once the kindest and most incisive reader. Brenda Miller and Lysa Rivera have been supportive colleagues and wonderful friends. I am grateful to my new colleague Christopher Loar for providing feedback at the eleventh hour. Finally, I would like to thank the wide network of friends and family who gave me the energy to complete this project. My parents and siblings modeled tough and funny responses to difficulty. Brian Whitener modeled an endless inquisitiveness about culture. Niki Bhattacharya, Lee and Ed Gulyas, Tara Samat, Gabe Viles, Marcus Aurin, Max Harless, Allison Whitney, Jessica Spivey, Rich Brown, and Kendall Dodd have been my community. Most of all, this work is about the time I have spent thinking and talking with Kaveh Askari. I thank him for his comradeship and his curiosity. xi