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Lytton Strachey : l’historien intime de deux reines
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The British writer Lytton Strachey (1880-1932)
wrote biographies of the two most eminent Queens of England : Queen Victoria (1921) and Elizabeth and Essex (1928). The two books made him
a very famous historian. However, he would personally have preferred
to be admired for his poetry or his plays, for he was a very gifted
literary author. Nevertheless many of Strachey’s readers have
appreciated his conception of biography, as a means of personal
confession while studying the destiny of a public figure. Indeed the
Stracheyan way of life, free from Victorian moral standards and guided
by the rules of the Bloomsbury group, inspired his story of Victoria
and Elizabeth. Both Queens at the end of their lives and at the height
of their power carried on strange love affairs : Victoria with her
Scottish gillie and Elizabeth with the Earl of Essex, thirty years her
younger. In fact, both romances subtly reflect Strachey’s own love
affairs. He was himself engaged in a kind of common life with Dora
Carrington – the painter, thirteen years younger than him, with whom
he was not sexually involved – while he engaged in numerous homosexual
love affairs.
Title: Lytton Strachey : l’historien intime de deux reines
Description:
The British writer Lytton Strachey (1880-1932)
wrote biographies of the two most eminent Queens of England : Queen Victoria (1921) and Elizabeth and Essex (1928).
The two books made him
a very famous historian.
However, he would personally have preferred
to be admired for his poetry or his plays, for he was a very gifted
literary author.
Nevertheless many of Strachey’s readers have
appreciated his conception of biography, as a means of personal
confession while studying the destiny of a public figure.
Indeed the
Stracheyan way of life, free from Victorian moral standards and guided
by the rules of the Bloomsbury group, inspired his story of Victoria
and Elizabeth.
Both Queens at the end of their lives and at the height
of their power carried on strange love affairs : Victoria with her
Scottish gillie and Elizabeth with the Earl of Essex, thirty years her
younger.
In fact, both romances subtly reflect Strachey’s own love
affairs.
He was himself engaged in a kind of common life with Dora
Carrington – the painter, thirteen years younger than him, with whom
he was not sexually involved – while he engaged in numerous homosexual
love affairs.
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