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Films about Queer History

 

Natalie Barney  (1876 - 1972)

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Found Meals of the Lost Generation : Recipes and Ancedotes from 1920s Paris

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Ladies Almanack : Showing Their Signs and Their Tides; Their Moons and Their Changes; The Seasons As It Is With Them; Their Eclipses and Equinoxes by Djuna Barnes

Djuna Barnes must have had great fun writing and illustrating this book. It's a lively lampoon of her lesbian chums of Left Bank Paris in the 1920s. The main character, Dame Evangeline Musset, is based on the notorious dyke Natalie Barney. Structured as a month-by-month almanac in a style that owes as much to Shakespeare's comedies as to any literature of the intervening centuries, Barnes's book follows the Dame's amorous, often naughty, adventures. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

"As an 'Almanack,' the book celebrates the uniqueness of women . . . extolling their society with separatist sentiment not violent or radical so much as mirthful and delightful." -- The Daily Helmsman

"[I]f you are able to contain your cackling long enough to consider the truth underlying the jest, you will come away with an understanding of the dilemmas facing lesbians at the opening of the century. You'll find that they are not much different from the questions we grapple with today." -- Lambda Book Report

"Now this be a Tale of as fine a Wench as ever wet Bed. . . . Thus begins this Almanack, which all Ladies should carry about with them, as the Priest his Breviary, as the Cook his Recipes, as the Doctor his Physic, as the Bride her Fears, and as the Lion his Roar!"

Barnes's affectionate lampoon of the expatriate lesbian community in Paris was privately printed in 1928. Arranged by month, it records the life and loves of Dame Evangeline Musset (modeled after salon hostess Natalie Barney) in a robust style taken from Shakespeare and Robert Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy, and is illustrated throughout with Barnes's own drawings.

This new edition is a facsimile of the 1928 edition with the addition of an afterward providing details on the book's origins and a key to its real-life models.

  Click here for more info  

Barney, Natalie (1876-1972)
WRITER

Born in Dayton, Ohio, the eldest daughter of painter Alice Pike and railway-coach heir Albert Clifford Barney, Natalie Barney was known as much, if not more, for her love affairs as her writing. The book Idylle Saphique written by French writer Liane de Pougy was based on Pougy's affair with the young American. Barney would often be the inspiration for characters in other writers' work.

Barney's second major affair was with Renée Vivien with whom she dreamed of founding a colony of women poets on the isle of Lesbos. Although this never came to be, Barney did create a lavish salon in Paris which, over five decades, was visited by such literary luminaries as Djuna Barnes, Truman Capote, Ernest Hemingway and Marcel Proust. James Joyce personally delivered the first copies of Ulysses there in 1922. Non-literary figures including Mata Hari and Greta Garbo were also guests.

Barney was known for her generosity but also her small-mindedness. She was given to voicing anti-Semitic sentiment and was an admirer of Mussolini's facism.

Barney wrote nearly two dozen books but only a small portion of her work is available in English; most of her body of work was written in French.

Related Resources:

Writing & Literature
Click HERE for Sources for the Biographies
Natalie Barney

This is the gateway to the Natalie Clifford Barney Pages, a web site devoted to Natlie Barney, her life and times. She dared to be scandalous--and every  modern woman owes her a debt of gratitude.

 

At the Salon of Natalie Barney

From Found Meals of the Lost Generation
by Suzie Rodriguez

Found Meals of the Lost Generation : Recipes and Ancedotes from 1920s ParisEven by today's standards, Natalie Barney stands out as a brilliantly unconventional figure. For almost one hundred years she shattered tradition and defied societal icons. Her uninhibited and emancipated life made her the thinly-disguised heroine of at least six novels, the subject of two biographies, and a major entrant in scores of memoirs from the belle époque to the present day. To say she lived fully seems somehow inadequate, as she herself admitted: "Having got more out of life, oh having got out of it perhaps more than it contained!"

Barney was born in 1876 to a wealthy Ohio family descended from railroad tycoons, naval heroes, judges, and bank presidents. Her father was highly conventional, but her mother, an accomplished painter who had studied in Paris with Whistler, bordered on the bohemian. The family moved to Washington, D.C., when Natalie was ten, thereafter summering in Bar Harbor and taking frequent jaunts to Europe. Natalie fell in love with Paris and, by her late teens, visited the city often.

By this time Natalie was a beautiful young woman with long, billowing masses of blonde hair, a willowy figure, and amused blue eyes. She loved fashion, favoring white gowns by Poiret. She spoke fluent, beautifully-accented French, as well as German and Italian. She was a proficient violinist, a superb horsewoman (accounting for her lifelong nickname, the Amazon), and a budding poet with a reputation for witty repartee. Needless to say, she was heavily courted by eligible young men.

Natalie, however, preferred to do the courting, and, as her interest in men was only "from the neck up," it was women who received her favors. Attracted to women since childhood, Natalie was quite open about her lesbianism...

 Buy the Book...

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