No Modernism Without Lesbians | Proud Geek - LGBTQ+ Bookshop
top of page
Product Page: Stores Product Widget
No Modernism Without Lesbians

In the summer of 1945, just after the Nazi occupation, Truman Capote visited Romaine Brooks's abandoned studio in Paris. The portraits there, large and imposing, were of women: Ida Rubinstein, Una Troubridge, Gluck, Elisabeth de Gramont, Renata Borgatti, Bryher. Romaine's lover Natalie Barney said that Paris had been 'the Sapphic Centre of the Western World', and these women defined it. Capote himself called them 'the all-time ultimate gallery of famous dykes'. This book is about that gallery and celebrates the central role they played in the cultural revolution that was Modernism.

Modernism happened in Paris, and these women were Paris. Shocking, free, blatant, they weren't just expats. They'd grouped together to create their own world, far from the restrictions of home. They were talented, often well-off, and lesbian. They answered to no one but themselves. Among them, for example, was Sylvia Beach, the American who set up the legendary Shakespeare & Co in 1919 and published Joyce's Ulysses when nobody else dared to, as well as Radclyffe Hall's The Well of Loneliness which was burned in Britain. The shop became the unofficial meeting place of the Modernists. Gertrude Stein, Beach's friend, bought the work of her friends – Matisse, Cézanne, Picasso, Gauguin – when they were young and unknown. Hemingway, Scott Fitzerald, Paul Bowles and others gravitated to the shop and to the world around these women.

Told in the spirit of Stein's Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas, or Hemingway's A Moveable Feast, this book is as colourful and exuberant as the women themselves.

No Modernism Without Lesbians

£9.99Price
Not Available
  • Product Information

     

    No Modernism Without Lesbians | Paperback
    ISBN: 9781786694874
    Publisher: Head of Zeus
    Publication Date: 4 Feb 2021
    Genre: Queer History - Non-Fiction
    Pages: 464
    Dimensions: 129 x 197 x 38 (mm)
    Language: English

  • Queer Representation

    Queer Women
    Own Voices

Related Products

bottom of page