1st Edition

Lytton Strachey and the Search for Modern Sexual Identity The Last Eminent Victorian

By Julie Anne Taddeo Copyright 2002
    204 Pages
    by Routledge

    210 Pages
    by Routledge

    Examine Lytton Strachey’s struggle to create a new homosexual identity and voice through his life and work!

    This study of Lytton Strachey, one of the neglected voices of early twentieth-century England, uses his life and work to re-evaluate early British modernism and the relationship between Strachey’s sexual rebellion and literature.

    A perfect ancillary textbook for courses in history, literature, and women’s studies, Lytton Strachey and the Search for Modern Sexual Identity: The Last Eminent Victorian contributes to the expanding field of queer studies from an historian’s perspective. It looks at homosexuality through the eyes of Lytton Strachey as opposed to the too-often analyzed Oscar Wilde and E.M. Forster. Questioning the idea that homosexuality is a “transgressive rebellion,” as Strachey as well as scholars on Bloomsbury have insisted, this volume focuses on the ongoing conflict between Strachey’s Victorian notions of class, gender, and race, and his desire to be modern.

    Linking Strachey’s life and work to the larger movement of English modernism, Lytton Strachey and the Search for Modern Sexual Identity examines:

    • Strachey’s role at Cambridge before World War I
    • how he created his version of homosexuality out of the Victorian tradition of male romantic friendship
    • his relations with the British Empire as he constructed a rich fantasy life that rested on racial and class differences
    • his friendships and rivalries with the women of Bloomsbury
    • how Strachey’s use of sexuality, androgyny, and history defined (and undermined) his brand of modernism

      This thoughtfully indexed, well-referenced volume looks at Strachey’s life, in the words of author Julie Anne Taddeo, “to illustrate some of the issues concerning his generation of Cambridge and Bloomsbury colleagues and how they battled the Victorian ideology, often without success.” It is an essential read for everyone interested in this fascinating chapter in literary (and queer) history.

    • Preface and Acknowledgments
    • Introduction
    • Chapter 1. Brotherly Love: The Cambridge Apostles and the Pursuit of the Higher Sodomy
    • Chapter 2. Ploughboys, Postboys, and Arabian Nights: Lytton Strachey Explores the Sexual Empire
    • Chapter 3. Mothers, Monarchs, and Monsters; Strachey and the Phenomenal Sex
    • Chapter 4. Modernism and Strachey’s Flight to Patriarchy
    • Conclusion
    • Notes
    • Index

    Biography

    Taddeo, Julie Anne