31 research outputs found
'Against the World': Michael Field, female marriage and the aura of amateurism'
This article considers the case of Katherine Bradley and Edith Cooper, an aunt and niece who lived and wrote together as âMichael Fieldâ in the fin-de-siĂšcle Aesthetic movement. Bradleyâs bold statement that she and Cooper were âcloser marriedâ than the Brownings forms the basis for a discussion of their partnership in terms of a âfemale marriageâ, a union that is reflected, as I will argue, in the pages of their writings. However, Michael Fieldâs exclusively collaborative output, though extensive, was no guarantee for success. On the contrary, their case illustrates the notion, valid for most products of co-authorship, that the jointly written work is always surrounded by an aura of amateurism. Since collaboration defied the ingrained notion of the author as the solitary producer of his or her work, critics and readers have time and again attempted to âparseâ the collaboration by dissecting the co-authored work into its constituent halves, a treatment that the Fields too failed to escape
Late style and speaking out: J A Symonds's In the Key of Blue
This article examines In the Key of Blue (1893)âan essay collection by John Addington Symondsâas a case study in queer public utterance during the early 1890s. Viewed through the critical lens of late style, as theorised by Edward Said, the evolution of this project, from compilation through to reader reception, reveals Symonds's determination to âspeak outâ on the subject of homosexuality. Paradoxically, In the Key of Blue was thus a timely and untimely work: it belonged to a brief period of increased visibility and expressiveness when dealing with male same-sex desire, spearheaded by a younger generation of Decadent writers, but it also cut against the grain of nineteenth-century social taboo and legal repression. Symonds's essay collection brought together new and previously unpublished work with examples of his writing for the periodical press. These new combinations, appearing together for the first time, served to facilitate new readings and new inferences, bringing homosexual themes to the fore. This article traces the dialogic structure of In the Key of Blue , its strategies for articulating homosexual desire, and examines the response of reviewers, from the hostile to celebratory
Hotel Theory Reader
"This collection of texts explores the possibilities of theory as an art form. It brings together ideas initially explored in the exhibition Hotel Theory, organized in 2015 at REDCAT | CalArts' Downtown Center for Contemporary Arts." -- Back cove