A Marriage Below Zero
English
By (author): Alan Dale
A Marriage Below Zero is the first novel in English to explicitly explore the subject of male homosexuality. Written by a British émigré to America, the New York theater critic Alfred J. Cohen, under the pseudonym of Alan Dale, this first-person narrative is told by a young Englishwoman, Elsie Bouverie, who gradually discovers that her new husband, Arthur Ravener, is romantically involved with another man. Denounced on publication (a saturnalia in which the most monstrous forms of human vice exhibit themselves shamelessly wrote one reviewer), the novel was published during the public exposure of a London homosexual brothel frequented by upper-class men and telegraph boys. A Marriage Below Zero reflected late-nineteenth-century fears and anxieties about homosexuality, womens position in marriage, and the threat that seemingly new, illicit forms of desire posed to marriageable women and to the Victorian family.
This Broadview edition includes excerpts from the eras pro-homosexual tracts, scientific and legal documents, contemporary feminist commentary on the new dandyism, and newspaper accounts of late-Victorian same-sex scandals. Highlights of the volume include excerpts from Charles Dickenss 1836 account of his visit to Newgate Prison, where he witnessed the last two men in Britain executed for sodomy, George Bernard Shaws 1889 unpublished letter attacking the social purity movements legislation against homosexual men, and a never-before reprinted 1898 article from Reynolds Magazine, Sex Mania, that warned of an increasing number of homosexual men choosing to enter marriages as a cover for an illicit life. See more
This Broadview edition includes excerpts from the eras pro-homosexual tracts, scientific and legal documents, contemporary feminist commentary on the new dandyism, and newspaper accounts of late-Victorian same-sex scandals. Highlights of the volume include excerpts from Charles Dickenss 1836 account of his visit to Newgate Prison, where he witnessed the last two men in Britain executed for sodomy, George Bernard Shaws 1889 unpublished letter attacking the social purity movements legislation against homosexual men, and a never-before reprinted 1898 article from Reynolds Magazine, Sex Mania, that warned of an increasing number of homosexual men choosing to enter marriages as a cover for an illicit life. See more
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