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Films about Queer History

 

John Addington Symonds
(1840 - 1893)

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John Addington Symonds : Culture and the Demon Desire

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Gay Lives : Homosexual Autobiography from John Addington Symonds to Paul MonetteGay Lives : Homosexual Autobiography from John Addington Symonds to Paul Monette by Paul A. Robinson

Paul Robinson's Gay Lives is a comprehensive study of how the gay male memoir evolved over the course of the 20th century. Focusing on writers from Great Britain, France, and the United States, Robinson creates a series of dialogues among his 14 subjects as he examines how each deals with issues such as what it means to be a "man," how to view oneself in relationship to a gay community, and how one deals with having, or claiming, an outsider identity. Quoting at length from writers such as John Addington Symonds (who can be viewed as the father of the modern gay memoir), André Gide, G. Lowes Dickinson (a close friend of E.M. Forster), and contemporary writers including the late Paul Monette and Martin Duberman, Gay Lives is not only a crash course on gay literary history but a meditation on how often gay men (in varying degrees of closetedness) have greatly influenced what we call "mainstream culture." It is perhaps here that Gay Lives is most startling; Robinson both explicitly and implicitly forces us to reexamine how ideas of the personal, the political, and truth shape all writing. Gay Lives is an important--and provocative--addition to the critical literature on life writing. --Michael Bronski

Click here for more info

Other books on John Addington Symonds:

John Addington Symonds : A Biography (Homosexuality) by Phyllis Grosskurth
John Addington Symonds: A Biographical Study by Van W. Brooks

    

The John Addington Symonds Pages

Compiled by Rictor Norton

Excerpt:

John Addington Symonds was in the forefront of the "bourgeois radical" men and women with socialist ideals who were destined to reform public opinion in the 1890s. He was a dynamic member of that remarkable group of men concerned with art who worked towards a revival of culture, often in conjunction with politics: John Ruskin, Walter Pater, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, William Morris, Edward Carpenter, Oscar Wilde. His specific contribution to the regeneration of society was as a pioneer in the field of gay rights; he was the first modern historian of (male) homosexuality, and the first advocate of gay liberation in Britain. When he read Plato's Phaedrus and Symposium in 1858, he realized that the ignoble behaviour of his fellow schoolboys at Harrow had an illustrious past, and when he read Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass in 1865 he became convinced that comradeship had the potential for a no less illustrious future. Most of his writings became part of a great magnum opus on the love of man for man, and much of what he did was devoted to the cause of homosexual liberation...

This is an excellent site for Symonds resources!

  

John Addington Symonds

From The Knitting Circle

Excerpt:

He realised that he was homosexual at a very early age and had vivid dreams of being in a room surrounded by naked sailors. At Harrow school his innate timidity and romanticism caused him to be disgusted by the abundant homosexual activity available to the other boys there. His confusion led him to accuse the Harrow headmaster, Dr Vaughan, of loving one of his pupils, and with the help of his father, achieved the removal of Dr Vaughan from the school. This malicious act was to haunt Symonds later in life...

 

John Addington Symonds

From GayGate.com

Excerpt:

In 1854 he entered the prestigious Harrow School, where he was revolted by the rampant homosexual behavior of the boys around him. As he wrote in his extraordinary Memoirs, which were suppressed by his literary executor and unpublished until 1984, "Every boy of good looks had a female name, and was recognized either as a public prostitute or as some bigger fellow's 'bitch.' Bitch was the word in common usage to indicate a boy who yielded his person to a lover. The talk in the dormitories and the studies was incredibly obscene. Here and there one could not avoid seeing acts of onanism, mutual masturbation, the sports of naked boys in bed together...

  

John Addington Symonds:  The Dantesque and Platonic Ideals of Love (1893)

First appeared in a book of essays, In The Key of Blue.

The sexcentenary of Beatrice Portinari, which was celebrated two years ago at Florence, compelled the student of Dante's life and writings once more to consider the relation of the poet to his lady. Are we to accept as truths of history the facts related by Boccaccio-namely, that Dante's father took him at the age of nine to a May-day feast in the house of Folco Portinari, and that there he beheld Beatrice, the daughter of his host, for the first time: "She was a child of eight then," says Boccaccio, "more fit to be an angel than a girl." Are we to accept the incidents of the "Vita Nuova" literally? In that record of his earliest life experience, Dante says that love on this occasion took possession of his soul, and that henceforth he worshipped Beatrice, till the day of her death, with steadfast silent adoration...  

 

John Addington Symonds

From sonnets.org

This site hosts the following:

The Sonnet (III)
Lux Est Umbra Dei
The Vanishing Point
The Prism of Life
Adventante Deo

   

Click here for Resource Query Click HERE for Sources for the Biographies

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