No Modernism Without Lesbians
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- 8,99 €
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- 8,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
A Sunday Times Book of the Year
Winner of the Polari Prize
'A book about love, identity, acceptance and the freedom to write, paint, compose and wear corduroy breeches with gaiters. To swear, kiss, publish and be damned. It is vastly entertaining and often moving... There isn't a page without an entertaining vignette' The Times.
The extraordinary story of how a singular group of women in a pivotal time and place – Paris, Between the Wars – fostered the birth of the Modernist movement.
Sylvia Beach, Bryher, Natalie Barney, and Gertrude Stein. A trailblazing publisher; a patron of artists; a society hostess; a groundbreaking writer.
They were all women who loved women. They rejected the patriarchy and made lives of their own – forming a community around them in Paris.
Each of these four central women interacted with a myriad of others, some of the most influential, most entertaining, most shocking and most brilliant figures of the age. Diana Souhami weaves their stories into those of the four central women to create a vivid moving tapestry of life among the Modernists in pre-War Paris.
'One of the best books I've read this year.' James Bridle
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Biographer Souhami (Gwendolen) argues in this vivid cultural history that modernism's most notable artistic advances wouldn't have happened without the efforts of an extraordinary community of lesbians in interwar Paris. Souhami narrates the lives of four women who fled the stultifying confines of their American and British upbringings and "painted, wrote, and published what they wanted." Sylvia Beach opened the legendary English-language bookstore Shakespeare and Company and started her own business to publish James Joyce's Ulysses after no one else dared to run afoul of anti-pornography laws. Bryher, who born Winifred Ellerman and was the daughter of the richest man in England, used her fortune to support legions of impoverished artists. Natalie Barney hosted infamous salons, gathering the era's most daring artists while also pursuing a prodigious number of affairs that Souhami delights in recounting. Gertrude Stein championed up-and-coming artists such as Pablo Picasso, who, like herself, challenged the idea that art needed to be comprehensible in order to be great. Souhami never quite teases out precisely her subjects' role in the creation of modernism, or whether, perhaps, they flocked to Paris to take part in an already developing movement. Nonetheless, this often gossipy, always smart romp trains a well-deserved spotlight on lesser-appreciated literary and artistic lives.