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Natalie Clifford Barney

Natalie Clifford Barney (October 31, 1876 – February 2, 1972) was an American writer who hosted a literary salon at her home in Paris that brought together French and international writers. She influenced other authors through her salon and also with her poetry, plays, and epigrams, often thematically tied to her lesbianism and feminism.

Natalie Clifford Barney
Barney in 1898, photograph by Alice Hughes
Born(1876-10-31)October 31, 1876
DiedFebruary 2, 1972(1972-02-02) (aged 95)
Paris, France[1]
Burial placePassy Cemetery
Known for

Barney was born into a wealthy family. She was partly educated in France, and expressed a desire from a young age to live openly as a lesbian. She moved to France with her first romantic partner, Eva Palmer. Inspired by the work of Sappho, Barney began publishing love poems to women under her own name as early as 1900. Writing in both French and English, she supported feminism and pacifism. She opposed monogamy and had many overlapping long and short-term relationships, including on-and-off romances with poet Renée Vivien and courtesan Liane de Pougy and longer relationships with writer Élisabeth de Gramont and painter Romaine Brooks.

Barney hosted a salon at her home in Paris for more than 60 years, bringing together writers and artists from around the world, including many leading figures in French, American, and British literature. Attendees of various sexualities expressed themselves and mingled comfortably at the weekly gatherings. She worked to promote writing by women and hosted a "Women's Academy" (L'Académie des Femmes) in her salon as a response to the all-male French Academy. The salon closed for the duration of World War II while Barney lived in Italy with Brooks. She initially espoused some pro-fascist views, but supported the Allies by the end of the war. After the war, she returned to Paris, resumed the salon, and continued influencing or inspiring writers such as Truman Capote.

Barney had a wide literary influence. Remy de Gourmont addressed public letters to her using the nickname l'Amazon (the Amazon), and Barney's association with both de Gourmont and the nickname lasted until her death. Her life and love affairs served as inspiration for many novels written by others, ranging from de Pougy's erotic French bestseller Idylle Saphique to Radclyffe Hall's The Well of Loneliness, the most famous lesbian novel of the twentieth century.[2]

Early life edit

 
 
First: Painting by Carolus-Duran of Barney at age ten that hung on the wall of her salon at 20, Rue Jacob.[3] Second: Barney at about age 13, painted by Alice Pike Barney.

Barney was born in 1876 in Dayton, Ohio, to Albert Clifford Barney and Alice Pike Barney.[4] Alice learned to love the arts from her father, who owned Pike's Opera House in Cincinnati, Ohio.[5] Albert Barney partially inherited his family's railroad car manufacturing company, Barney & Smith Car Works.[6]

When Barney was five years old, she encountered Oscar Wilde at a New York hotel. Wilde scooped her up as she ran past him fleeing a group of small boys and held her out of their reach. Then he sat her down on his knee and told her a story.[7] The next day he joined Barney and her mother on the beach, and Wilde inspired Alice to pursue art seriously, which she did despite her husband's disapproval.[8]

Like many girls of her time, Barney had a haphazard education.[9] Her interest in the French language began with a governess who read Jules Verne stories aloud to her, so she would have to learn quickly to understand them.[10] She and her younger sister Laura attended Les Ruches, a French boarding school in Fontainebleau, France, founded by feminist Marie Souvestre.[11] As an adult, she spoke and wrote French fluently.[12]

When she was ten, her family moved from Ohio to the Scott Circle area of Washington D.C., spending summers at their large cottage in Bar Harbor, Maine.[4] As the rebellious and unconventional daughter of one of the wealthiest families in town, she was often mentioned in Washington newspapers. In her early twenties she made headlines by galloping through Bar Harbor while driving a second horse on a lead ahead of her, riding astride instead of sidesaddle.[13]

Barney later said she knew she was a lesbian by age twelve,[14] and she was determined to "live openly, without hiding anything".[15]

Early relationships edit

Eva Palmer edit

 
Eva Palmer

Barney's earliest intimate relationship was with Eva Palmer. They became acquainted during summer vacations in Bar Harbor, Maine, and began a sexual relationship during one such trip in 1893. Barney likened Palmer's appearance to that of a medieval virgin.[16] The two remained close for several years. As young adults in Paris they shared an apartment at 4 rue Chalgrin and eventually took their own residences in Neuilly.[17] Barney frequently solicited Palmer's help in her romantic pursuits of other women, including Pauline Tarn.[18] Palmer ultimately left Barney's side for Greece and eventually married Angelos Sikelianos. Their relationship did not survive this turn of events: Barney took a dim view of Angelos and heated letters were exchanged.[19] Later in their lives the friendship was repaired through correspondence and reunions in New York.[20]

Liane de Pougy edit

In 1899, after seeing the courtesan Liane de Pougy at a dance hall in Paris, Barney presented herself at de Pougy's residence in a page costume and announced she was a "page of love" sent by Sappho.[21] Although de Pougy was one of the most famous women in France, constantly sought after by wealthy and titled men, Barney's audacity charmed her.[22]

 
Liane de Pougy in 1900

Barney stood to inherit some family wealth held in trust if she either married or waited for her father's death.[23] While courting de Pougy, Barney was engaged to Robert Cassat, a member of another wealthy railroad family.[24] Barney was open with Cassat about her love of women and relationship with de Pougy.[23] In the hopes of securing the Barney trust money, the three briefly considered a rushed wedding between Barney and Cassat and an adoption of de Pougy.[25] When Cassat ended the engagement, Barney attempted unsuccessfully to persuade her father to give her the money anyway.[26]

By the end of 1899, the two had broken up after quarreling repeatedly over Barney's desire to "rescue" de Pougy from her life as a courtesan.[27] Despite the breakup, the two continued having liaisons for decades.[28]

Their on-and-off affair became the subject of de Pougy's tell-all roman à clef, Idylle Saphique (Sapphic Idyll). Published in 1901, the book and its sexually suggestive scenes became the talk of Paris, reprinted more than 70 times in its first year.[29] Barney was soon well known as the model for one of the characters.[30]

Barney herself contributed a chapter to Idylle Saphique in which she described reclining at de Pougy's feet in a screened box at the theater, watching Sarah Bernhardt's play Hamlet.[31] During intermission, Barney (as "Flossie") compares Hamlet's plight with that of women: "What is there for women who feel the passion for action when pitiless Destiny holds them in chains? Destiny made us women at a time when the law of men is the only law that is recognized."[32] She also wrote Lettres à une Connue (Letters to a Woman I Have Known), her own epistolary novel about the affair. Although Barney failed to find a publisher for the book and later called it naïve and clumsy, it is notable for its discussion of homosexuality, which Barney regarded as natural and compared to albinism.[33] "My queerness," she said, "is not a vice, is not deliberate, and harms no one."[34]

Renée Vivien edit

In November 1899, Barney met the poet Pauline Tarn, better known by her pen name Renée Vivien. For Vivien it was love at first sight, while Barney became fascinated with Vivien after hearing her recite one of her poems,[35] which Barney described as "haunted by the desire for death".[36] Their romantic relationship was also a creative exchange that inspired both of them to write. Barney provided a feminist theoretical framework which Vivien explored in her poetry. They adapted the imagery of the Symbolist poets along with the conventions of courtly love to describe love between women, also finding examples of heroic women in history and myth.[37] Sappho was an especially important influence and they studied Greek so as to read the surviving fragments of her poetry in the original. Both wrote plays about her life.[38]

 
Renée Vivien (standing) and Barney; posing for a portrait in Directoire-era costume

Vivien saw Barney as a muse and as Barney put it, "she had found new inspiration through me, almost without knowing me". Barney felt Vivien had cast her as a femme fatale and that she wanted "to lose herself ... entirely in suffering" for the sake of her art.[39] Vivien also believed in monogamy, which Barney was unwilling to agree to. While Barney was visiting her family in Washington, D.C. in 1901, Vivien stopped answering her letters. Barney tried to get her back for years, at one point persuading a friend, operatic mezzo-soprano Emma Calvé, to sing under Vivien's window so she could throw a poem (wrapped around a bouquet of flowers) up to Vivien on her balcony. Both flowers and poem were intercepted and returned by a governess.[40]

In 1904 she wrote Je Me Souviens (I Remember), an intensely personal prose poem about their relationship which was presented as a single handwritten copy to Vivien in an attempt to win her back. They reconciled and traveled together to Lesbos, where they lived happily together for a short time and discussed starting a school of poetry for women like the one which Sappho, according to tradition, had founded on Lesbos some 2,500 years before. However, Vivien soon got a letter from her lover Baroness Hélène van Zuylen and went to Constantinople thinking she would break up with her in person. Vivien planned to meet Barney in Paris afterward, but instead stayed with the Baroness. This time, the breakup was permanent.[40]

Vivien's health declined rapidly after this. The author Colette, who herself had an affair with Barney in 1906, was Vivien's friend and neighbor.[41] According to Colette, Vivien ate almost nothing and drank heavily, even rinsing her mouth with perfumed water to hide the smell.[42] Colette's account has led some to call Vivien an anorexic,[43] but this diagnosis did not yet exist at the time. Vivien was also addicted to the sedative chloral hydrate. In 1908 she attempted suicide by overdosing on laudanum[44] and died the following year. In a memoir written fifty years later, Barney said, "She could not be saved. Her life was a long suicide. Everything turned to dust and ashes in her hands."[45]

In 1949, two years after the death of Hélène van Zuylen, Barney restored the Renée Vivien Prize[46][47][48][49] with a financial grant[50] under the authority of the Société des gens de lettres and took on the chairmanship of the jury in 1950.[51][52][53]

Olive Custance edit

Barney purchased and read Opals in 1900, a debut collection of poems by Olive Custance. Responding to the lesbian themes in the poetry, Barney began corresponding with Custance and exchanging poems.[54] The two met in 1901 at Barney and Vivien's home in Paris, and they soon began a short romantic relationship. While Barney's infidelity aggravated Vivien, Custance was also pursuing a relationship with Lord Alfred Douglas, who she would later marry.[55]

Poetry and plays edit

 
Waterlily, by Barney's mother Alice of her cousin Ellen Goin, an illustration in Quelques Portraits-Sonnets de Femmes
 
Quelques Portraits-Sonnets de Femmes, 1900 edition cover

In 1900, Barney published her first book, a collection of poems called Quelques Portraits-Sonnets de Femmes (Some Portrait-Sonnets of Women). The poems were written in traditional French verse and a formal, old-fashioned style since Barney did not care for free verse. Quelques Portraits has been described as "apprentice work", a classifier which betrays its historical significance. According to biographer Suzanne Rodriguez, the collection's publication meant that Barney became the first woman poet to openly write about the love of women since Sappho.[56] Her mother contributed pastel illustrations of the poems' subjects, wholly unaware three of the four women who modelled for her were her daughter's lovers.[57]

Reviews were generally positive and glossed over the lesbian theme of the poems, some even misrepresenting it. The Washington Mirror said Barney "writes odes to men's lips and eyes; not like a novice, either".[58] However, a headline in a society gossip paper cried out "Sappho Sings in Washington" and this alerted her father, who bought and destroyed the publisher's remaining stock and printing plates.[59]

To escape her father's sway Barney published her next book, Cinq Petits Dialogues Grecs (Five Short Greek Dialogues, 1901), under the pseudonym Tryphé. The name came from the works of Pierre Louÿs, who helped edit and revise the manuscript. Barney also dedicated the book to him. The first of the dialogues is set in ancient Greece and contains a long description of Sappho, who is "more faithful in her inconstancy than others in their fidelity". Another argues for paganism over Christianity.[60] After the death of Barney's father in 1902, his approximately $9 million fortune ($317 million in 2018[61]) was left in trust with annual income to be split equally between Barney, her mother, and her sister. His death and the money freed her from any need to conceal the authorship of her books; she never used a pseudonym again.[62] She considered scandal "the best way of getting rid of nuisances" (meaning heterosexual attention from young men).[63]

 
A gathering in Barney's garden, possibly a performance of Équivoque with Barney and Eva Palmer[64]

Je Me Souviens was published in 1910, after Vivien's death.[65] That same year, Barney published Actes et Entr'actes (Acts and Interludes), a collection of short plays and poems. One of the plays was Équivoque (Ambiguity), a revisionist version of the legend of Sappho's death: instead of throwing herself off a cliff for the love of Phaon the sailor, she does so out of grief that Phaon is marrying the woman she loves. The play incorporates quotations from Sappho's fragments, with Barney's own footnotes in Greek, and was performed with ancient Greek-inspired music and dance.[66][67]

Barney did not take her poetry as seriously as Vivien did, saying "if I had one ambition it was to make my life itself into a poem".[68] Her plays were only performed through amateur productions in her garden. According to Karla Jay, most of them lacked coherent plots and "would probably baffle even the most sympathetic audience".[69] After 1910 she mostly wrote the epigrams and memoirs, for which she is better known. Her last book of poetry was called Poems & Poemes: Autres Alliances and came out in 1920, bringing together romantic poetry in both French and English. Barney asked Ezra Pound to edit the poems, but ignored his detailed recommendations.[70]

Salon edit

 
Barney, c. 1890–1910, photographed by Frances Benjamin Johnston

For over 60 years, Barney hosted a literary salon, first in Neuilly but mostly at her home at 20, Rue Jacob, in Paris.[71][72] Her salon was a weekly, Friday gathering at which people met to socialize and discuss literature, art, music and any other topic of interest. Though she hosted some of the most prominent male writers of her time, Barney strove to shed light on female writers and their work.[73]

In addition to its focus on women, Barney's salon was distinguished by its deliberately international character.[74][75] She brought together expatriate Modernists with members of the French Academy.[76] The salon Biographer Joan Schenkar described Barney's salon as "a place where lesbian assignations and appointments with academics could coexist in a kind of cheerful, cross-pollinating, cognitive dissonance".[77] The range of sexualities welcomed at the salon was also uncommon in Paris, and Barney's openness with her own sexuality made her salon comfortable to homosexual or bisexual attendees.[78]

In the 1900s Barney held early gatherings of the salon at her house in Neuilly. The entertainment included poetry readings and theatricals (in which Colette sometimes performed). Mata Hari performed a dance once, riding into the garden naked as Lady Godiva on a white horse harnessed with turquoise cloisonné.[79] The play Equivoque may have led Barney to leave Neuilly in 1909. According to a contemporary newspaper article, her landlord objected to her holding an outdoor performance of a play about Sappho, which he felt "followed nature too closely".[80] She canceled her lease and rented the pavilion on Rue Jacob in Paris's Latin Quarter, and her salon was held there until the late 1960s. This was a small two-story house, separated on three sides from the main building on the street. Next to the pavilion was a large, overgrown garden with a Doric "Temple of Friendship" tucked into one corner. In this new location, the salon grew a more prim outward face, with poetry readings and conversation, perhaps because Barney had been told the pavilion's floors would not hold up to large dancing parties.[81][82] Frequent guests during this period included poets Pierre Louÿs and Paul Claudel, diplomat Philippe Berthelot and translator J. C. Mardrus.[83]

During World War I, the salon became a haven for those opposed to the war. Henri Barbusse gave a reading from his anti-war novel Under Fire and Barney hosted a Women's Congress for Peace. Other visitors to the salon during the war included Oscar Milosz, Auguste Rodin and poet Alan Seeger, who came while on leave from the French Foreign Legion.[84]

 
Two-story pavilion at 20, Rue Jacob
 
Temple of Friendship

Ezra Pound was a close friend of Barney's and often visited. The two schemed together to subsidize Paul Valéry and T. S. Eliot so they could leave their jobs and focus on writing, but Valéry found other patrons and Eliot refused the grant. Pound introduced Barney to avant-garde composer George Antheil, and, while her own taste in music leaned towards the traditional, she hosted premieres of Antheil's Symphony for Five Instruments and First String Quartet.[85] It was also at Barney's salon that Pound met his longtime mistress, the violinist Olga Rudge.[86]

In 1927 Barney started an Académie des Femmes (Women's Academy) to honor women writers. This was a response to the influential Académie Française (French Academy) which had been founded in the 17th century by Louis XIII and whose 40 members included no women at the time. Unlike the French Academy, Barney's was not a formal organization but rather a series of readings held as part of the regular Friday salons. Honorees included Colette, Gertrude Stein, Anna Wickham, Rachilde, Lucie Delarue-Mardrus, Mina Loy, Djuna Barnes and posthumously, Renée Vivien.[87] The academy's activities wound down after 1927.[88]

 
Cover of Aventures de l'Esprit

Other visitors to the salon during the 1920s included French writers Jeanne Galzy,[89] André Gide, Anatole France, Max Jacob, Louis Aragon and Jean Cocteau. English-language writers also visited, including Ford Madox Ford, W. Somerset Maugham, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Sinclair Lewis, Sherwood Anderson, Thornton Wilder, T. S. Eliot and William Carlos Williams. Barney also hosted German poet Rainer Maria Rilke, Bengali poet Rabindranath Tagore (the first Nobel laureate from Asia), Romanian aesthetician and diplomat Matila Ghyka, journalist Janet Flanner (also known as Genêt, who set the New Yorker style), journalist, activist and publisher Nancy Cunard, publishers Caresse and Harry Crosby, publisher Blanche Knopf,[90] art collector and patron Peggy Guggenheim, Sylvia Beach (the bookstore owner who published James Joyce's Ulysses), painters Tamara de Lempicka and Marie Laurencin and dancer Isadora Duncan.[91]

For her 1929 book Aventures de l'Esprit (Adventures of the Mind) Barney drew a social diagram which crowded the names of over a hundred people who had attended the salon into a rough map of the house, garden and Temple of Friendship. The first half of the book had reminiscences of 13 male writers she had known or met over the years and the second half had a chapter for each member of her Académie des Femmes.[92]

In the late 1920s Radclyffe Hall drew a crowd reading her novel The Well of Loneliness, recently banned in the UK.[93] A reading by poet Edna St. Vincent Millay packed the salon in 1932. At another Friday salon in the 1930s Virgil Thomson sang from Four Saints in Three Acts, an opera based on a libretto by Stein.[94]

Of the famous Modernist writers who spent time in Paris, Ernest Hemingway never made an appearance at the salon. James Joyce came once or twice but did not care for it. Marcel Proust never attended a Friday but did come once to talk with Barney about lesbian culture whilst doing research for In Search of Lost Time, though he ended up too nervous to bring up the subject.[95]

Epigrams and novel edit

Éparpillements (Scatterings, 1910) was Barney's first collection of pensées—literally, thoughts. This literary form had been associated with salon culture in France since the 17th century, when the genre was perfected at the salon of Madame de Sablé.[96] Barney's pensées, like de Sablé's own Maximes, were short, often one-line epigrams or bon mots such as "There are more evil ears than bad mouths" and "To be married is to be neither alone nor together."[97]

 
Remy de Gourmont with Élisabeth de Gramont and Barney in 1913. Drawing by André Rouveyre.

Her literary career got a boost after she sent a copy of Éparpillements to Remy de Gourmont, a French poet, literary critic, and philosopher who had become a recluse after contracting the disfiguring disease lupus vulgaris in his thirties.[98] He was impressed enough to invite her to one of the Sunday gatherings at his home, at which he usually received only a small group of old friends. She was a rejuvenating influence in his life, coaxing him out for evening car rides, dinners at the Rue Jacob, a masked ball, even a short cruise on the Seine. He turned some of their wide-ranging conversations into a series of letters that he published in the Mercure de France, addressing her as l'Amazone, a French word that can mean either horsewoman or Amazon; the letters were later collected in book form. He died in 1915, but the nickname he gave her would stay with her all her life—even her tombstone identifies her as "the Amazon of Remy de Gourmont"—and his Letters to the Amazon left readers wanting to know more about the woman who had inspired them.[99]

Barney obliged in 1920 with Pensées d'une Amazone (Thoughts of an Amazon), her most overtly political work. In the first section, "Sexual Adversity, War, and Feminism", she developed feminist and pacifist themes, describing war as an "involuntary and collective suicide ordained by man".[100] In war, she said, men "father death as women mother life, with courage and without choice".[101] The epigrammatic form makes it difficult to determine the details of Barney's views; ideas are presented only to be dropped, and some pensées seem to contradict others.[102] Some critics interpret her as saying that the aggression that leads to war is visible in all male relationships. Karla Jay, however, argues that her philosophy was not that sweeping, and is better summed up by the epigram "Those who love war lack the love of an adequate sport—the art of living."[103][100][101]

Another section of Pensées d'une Amazone, "Misunderstanding, or Sappho's Lawsuit", gathered historical writings about homosexuality along with her own commentary.[104] She also covered topics such as alcohol, friendship, old age, and literature, writing "Novels are longer than life"[105] and "Romanticism is a childhood ailment; those who had it young are the most robust."[106] A third volume, Nouvelles Pensées de l'Amazone (New Thoughts of the Amazon), appeared in 1939.

The One Who is Legion, or A.D.'s After-Life (1930) was Barney's only book written entirely in English, as well as her only novel. Illustrated by Romaine Brooks, it concerns a person who committed suicide, known only as A.D., who is brought back to life as a genderless, hermaphroditic being and reads the book of their own life. This book-within-a-book, entitled The Love-Lives of A.D., is a collection of hymns, poems and epigrams, much like Barney's own other writings.[107][108]

Major relationships edit

 
Olive Custance in 1902

Despite several of her lovers' objections, Barney practiced, and advocated, non-monogamy. As early as 1901, in Cinq Petits Dialogues Grecs, she argued in favor of multiple relationships and against jealousy;[109] in Éparpillements she wrote "One is unfaithful to those one loves in order that their charm does not become mere habit".[110] While she could be quite jealous herself, she actively encouraged at least some of her lovers to be non-monogamous as well.[111]

Due in part to Jean Chalon's early biography of her, published in English as Portrait of a Seductress, Barney had become more widely known for her many relationships than for her writing or her salon.[112] She once wrote out a list, divided into three categories: liaisons, demi-liaisons, and adventures. Colette was a demi-liaison, while the artist and furniture designer Eyre de Lanux, with whom she had an off-and-on affair for several years, was listed as an adventure. Among the liaisons—the relationships that she considered most important—were Custance, Vivien, Élisabeth de Gramont, Brooks, and Dolly Wilde.[113] Many of her affairs, like those with Colette and Lucie Delarue-Mardrus, evolved into lifelong friendships.[114]

Élisabeth de Gramont edit

 
Élisabeth de Gramont in 1889

Élisabeth de Gramont, the Duchess of Clermont-Tonnerre, was a writer best known for her popular memoirs. A descendant of Henry IV of France, she had grown up among the aristocracy; when she was a child, according to Janet Flanner, "peasants on her farm ... begged her not to clean her shoes before entering their houses".[115] Her father's ancestors had squandered their fortune and he married into the Rothschild family after her birth; she did not have any access to her step-mother's wealth.[116] She looked back on this lost world of wealth and privilege with little regret, and became known as the "red duchess" for her support of socialism. Encouraged by her father to wed into security, she married Philibert de Clermont-Tonnere and had two daughters. He was violent and tyrannical.[117][118]

The poet Lucie Delarue-Mardrus introduced Barney and de Gramont in 1909 or 1910.[119][118][120] The couple shared academic interests and attended Remy de Gourmont's salon together.[121] Barney wrote an unpublished novel inspired by their early relationship, L’Adultère ingénue (The Adulterous Ingénue).[122]

De Gramont accepted Barney's nonmonogamy—perhaps reluctantly at first—and went out of her way to be gracious to her other lovers,[123] always including Brooks when she invited Barney to vacation in the country.[124]

Though the two conducted their affair clandestinely, de Gramont's husband found them out and attempted to stop them from seeing each other.[121] He was unsuccessful, and he divorced de Gramont in 1920 after a period of separation.[125] In 1918 she and Barney wrote up a marriage contract stating: "No one union shall be so strong as this union, nor another joining so tender—nor relationship so lasting".[126] The relationship continued until de Gramont's death in 1954.[127]

Romaine Brooks edit

Barney's longest relationship was with the American painter Romaine Brooks, whom she met around 1915.[128] Brooks specialized in portraiture and was noted for her somber palette of gray, black, and white.[129] During the 1920s she painted portraits of several members of Barney's social circle, including de Gramont and Barney herself.[130]

 
Barney and Romaine Brooks, circa 1915

Brooks tolerated Barney's casual affairs well enough to tease her about them, and had a few of her own over the years, but could become jealous when a new love became serious. Usually she simply left town, but at one point she gave Barney an ultimatum to choose between her and Dolly Wilde—relenting once Barney had given in.[131] At the same time, while Brooks was devoted to Barney, she did not want to live with her as a full-time couple; she disliked Paris, disdained Barney's friends, hated the constant socializing on which Barney thrived, and felt that she was fully herself only when alone.[132][133] To accommodate Brooks's need for solitude they built a summer home consisting of two separate wings joined by a dining room, which they called Villa Trait d'Union, the hyphenated villa. Brooks also spent much of the year in Italy or travelling elsewhere in Europe, away from Barney.[134] Their relationship lasted for over fifty years.[135]

Dolly Wilde edit

Dolly Wilde was the niece of Oscar Wilde and the last of her family to bear the Wilde name. She was renowned for her epigrammatic wit but, unlike her famous uncle, never managed to apply her gifts to any publishable writing; her letters are her only legacy. She did some work as a translator and was often supported by others, including Barney, whom she met in 1927.[136]

 
Dolly Wilde in 1925

Barney's support of Wilde included occasional permission to stay for a few weeks at Rue Jacob. Brooks' disapproval of the relationship increased over the years, aggravated by Wilde's presence in Barney's home. Wilde, the only of Barney's loves to share her enthusiastic rejection of monogamy,[137] strove conscientiously but futilely for Brooks' favor. This culminated in Brooks' ultimatum, delivered in 1931, in which she described Wilde as a rat "gnawing at the very foundation of our friendship".[138] Barney chose Brooks and separated from Wilde; Brooks later allowed Wilde to return and became less critical of Wilde's ways.[139]

Like Vivien, Wilde was intensely self-destructive and struggled deeply with mental illness. She attempted suicide several times, and spent much of her life addicted to alcohol and heroin. Barney, a vocal opponent of drug use and alcoholism, financed drug detoxifications several times; to no avail. Wilde even emerged from one nursing-home stay with a new dependency on the sleeping draught paraldehyde, then available over-the-counter.[140]

In 1939, she was diagnosed with breast cancer and refused surgery, seeking alternative treatments.[141] The following year, World War II separated her from Barney; she fled Paris for England while Barney went to Italy with Brooks.[142] She died in 1941 from causes never fully explained; with one of the most common speculations being a paraldehyde overdose.[143] Her will, written in 1932, named Barney as her only heir.[144]

World War II and after edit

Barney's attitudes during World War II have been controversial. In 1937, Una, Lady Troubridge, complained that Barney "talked a lot of half-baked nonsense about the tyranny of fascism".[145] Barney herself had Jewish heritage,[146] and since she spent the war in Florence with Brooks, was investigated by Italian authorities because of this; she was able to escape their attention after her sister Laura arranged for a notarized document attesting to her confirmation.[147]

Nevertheless, she believed Axis propaganda that portrayed the Allies as the aggressors. Therefore, pro-Fascism seemed to her to be a logical consequence of her pacifism. An unpublished memoir she wrote during the war years is pro-Fascist and anti-Semitic, quoting speeches by Hitler, apparently with approval.[148]

It is possible that the anti-Semitic passages in her memoir were intended to be used as evidence that she was not Jewish;[149] alternatively, she may have been influenced by Ezra Pound's anti-Semitic radio broadcasts.[150] Whatever the case, she did help a Jewish couple escape Italy, providing passage on a ship to the United States.[148] By the end of the war her sympathies had again changed, and she saw the Allies as liberators.[151]

Villa Trait d'Union was destroyed by bombing. After the war, Brooks declined to live with Barney in Paris; she remained in Italy, and they visited each other frequently.[152] Their relationship remained mostly monogamous until the mid-1950s, when Barney met her last new love, Janine Lahovary, the wife of a retired Romanian ambassador. Lahovary made a point of winning Brooks's friendship, Barney reassured Brooks that their relationship still came first, and the triangle appeared to be stable.[153]

 
Barney's grave

The salon resumed in 1949 and continued to attract young writers for whom it was as much a piece of history as a place where literary reputations were made. Truman Capote was an intermittent guest for almost ten years; he described the decor as "totally turn-of-the-century" and remembered that Barney introduced him to the models for several characters in Marcel Proust's In Search of Lost Time.[154]

Alice B. Toklas became a regular after her partner Stein's death in 1946. Fridays in the 1960s honored Mary McCarthy and Marguerite Yourcenar, who in 1980—eight years after Barney's death—became the first female member of the French Academy.[155]

Barney did not return to writing epigrams, but did publish two volumes of memoirs about other writers she had known, Souvenirs Indiscrets (Indiscreet Memories, 1960) and Traits et Portraits (Traits and Portraits, 1963). She also worked to find a publisher for Brooks's memoirs and to place her paintings in galleries.[156]

In the late 1960s Brooks became increasingly reclusive and paranoid; she sank into a depression and refused to see the doctors Barney sent. Bitter at Lahovary's presence during their last years, which she had hoped they would spend exclusively together, she finally broke off contact with Barney. Barney continued to write to her, but received no replies. Brooks died in December 1970, and Barney on February 2, 1972, aged 95, from heart failure.[157] She is buried at Passy Cemetery, Paris, Île-de-France, France.[158] She left some of her writing, including more than 40,000 letters, to the Bibliothèque littéraire Jacques-Doucet in Paris.[159]

Legacy edit

By the end of Natalie Barney's life her work had been largely forgotten. In 1979, Barney was honored with a place setting in Judy Chicago's feminist work of art The Dinner Party. In the 1980s Barney began to be recognized for what Karla Jay calls an "almost uncanny anticipation" of the concerns of later feminist writers.[160] English translations of some of her memoirs, essays, and epigrams appeared in 1992, but most of her plays and poetry are untranslated.

Her indirect influence on literature, through her salon and her many literary friendships, can be seen in the number of writers who have addressed or portrayed her in their works. Claudine s'en va (Claudine and Annie, 1903) by Colette contains a brief appearance by Barney as "Miss Flossie",[161] echoing the nickname she had earlier been given in de Pougy's novel Idylle Saphique. Renée Vivien wrote many poems about her, as well as a Symbolist novel, Une femme m'apparut (A Woman Appeared to Me, 1904), in which Barney is described as having "eyes ... as sharp and blue as a blade ... The charm of peril emanated from her and drew me inexorably."[162] Remy de Gourmont addressed her in his Letters to the Amazon, and Truman Capote mentioned her in his last, unfinished novel Answered Prayers. She also appeared in later novels by writers who never met her. Anna Livia's Minimax (1991) portrays both Barney and Renée Vivien as still-living vampires. Francesco Rapazzini's Un soir chez l'Amazone (2001) is a historical novel about Barney's salon. The English translation by Sally Hamilton and Suzanne Stroh was published as an audiobook read by Suzanne Stroh under the title A Night at the Amazon's (2020).

Barney appears in Hall's The Well of Loneliness as the salon hostess Valérie Seymour, a symbol of self-acceptance in contrast with the protagonist's self hatred.[163][164] Hall wrote: "Valérie, placid and self-assured, created an atmosphere of courage; everyone felt very normal and brave when they gathered together at Valérie Seymour's."[165] According to Lillian Faderman, "There was probably no lesbian in the four decades between 1928 and the late 1960s capable of reading English or any of the eleven languages into which the book was translated who was unfamiliar with The Well of Loneliness."[166]

Lucie Delarue-Mardrus wrote love poems to Barney in the early years of the century, and in 1930 depicted her in a novel, L'Ange et les Pervers (The Angel and the Perverts), in which she said she "analyzed and described Natalie at length as well as the life into which she initiated me". The protagonist of the novel is a hermaphrodite named Marion who lives a double life, frequenting literary salons in female dress, then changing from skirt to trousers to attend gay soirées. Barney is Laurette Wells, a salon hostess who spends much of the novel trying to win back an ex-lover loosely based on Renée Vivien.[167] The book's portrayal of her is, at times, harshly critical, but she is the only person whose company Marion enjoys. Marion tells Wells that she is "perverse ... dissolute, self-centered, unfair, stubborn, sometimes miserly ... [but] a genuine rebel, ever ready to incite others to rebellion .... [Y]ou are capable of loving someone just as they are, even a thief—in that lies your only fidelity. And so you have my respect."[168]

After meeting Barney in the 1930s, the Russian poet Marina Ivanovna Tsvetaeva addressed her in a Letter to the Amazon (1934) in which she expressed her conflicted feelings about love between women. The result, according to Terry Castle, is "an entirely cryptic, paranoid, overwhelming piece of reverie".[169]

 
Historical marker honoring Barney, in Dayton's Cooper Park

Barney and the women in her social circle are the subject of Djuna Barnes's Ladies Almanack (1928), a roman à clef written in an archaic, Rabelaisian style, with Barnes's own illustrations in the style of Elizabethan woodcuts. She has the lead role as Dame Evangeline Musset, "who was in her Heart one Grand Red Cross for the Pursuance, the Relief and the Distraction, of such Girls as in their Hinder Parts, and their Fore Parts, and in whatsoever Parts did suffer them most, lament Cruelly".[170] "[A] Pioneer and a Menace" in her youth, Dame Musset has reached "a witty and learned Fifty";[171] she rescues women in distress, dispenses wisdom, and upon her death is elevated to sainthood. Also appearing pseudonymously are de Gramont, Brooks, Dolly Wilde, Hall and her partner Una, Lady Troubridge, Janet Flanner and Solita Solano, and Mina Loy.[172] The obscure language, inside jokes, and ambiguity of Ladies Almanack have kept critics arguing about whether it is an affectionate satire or a bitter attack, but Barney herself loved the book and reread it throughout her life.[173]

On October 26, 2009, Barney was honored with a historical marker in her home town of Dayton, Ohio. The marker is the first in Ohio to note the sexual orientation of its honoree.[174]

Barney's French novel, Amants féminins ou la troisième, believed to have been written in 1926, was published in 2013. It was translated into English by Chelsea Ray and published in 2016 as Women Lovers or The Third Woman.[175]

Works edit

In French edit

  • Quelques Portraits-Sonnets de Femmes (Paris: Ollendorf, 1900)
  • Cinq Petits Dialogues Grecs (Paris: La Plume, 1901; as "Tryphé")
  • Actes et entr'actes (Paris: Sansot, 1910)
  • Je me souviens (Paris: Sansot, 1910)
  • Eparpillements (Paris: Sansot, 1910)
  • Pensées d'une Amazone (Paris: Emile Paul, 1920)
  • Aventures de l'Esprit (Paris: Emile Paul, 1929)
  • Nouvelles Pensées de l'Amazone (Paris: Mercure de France, 1939)
  • Souvenirs Indiscrets (Paris: Flammarion, 1960)
  • Traits et Portraits (Paris: Mercure de France, 1963)
  • Amants féminins ou la troisième (Paris: ErosOnyx, 2013)

In English edit

  • Poems & Poèmes: Autres Alliances (Paris: Emile Paul, New York: Doran, 1920) – bilingual collection of poetry
  • The One Who Is Legion (London: Eric Partridge, Ltd., 1930; Orono, Maine: National Poetry Foundation, 1987) facsimile reprint with an afterword by Edward Lorusso

English translations edit

  • A Perilous Advantage: The Best of Natalie Clifford Barney (New Victoria Publishers, 1992); edited and translated by Anna Livia
  • Adventures of the Mind (New York University Press, 1992); translated by John Spalding Gatton
  • Women Lovers, or The Third Woman (University of Wisconsin Press, 2016); edited and translated by Chelsea Ray

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Natalie Barney". Brooklyn Museum. Retrieved March 25, 2023.
  2. ^ Barney's roles in Sapphic Idyll and The Well of Loneliness are discussed in Rodriguez 2002, pp. 94–95, 273–275; regarding the fame of The Well, see Lockard 2002
  3. ^ Schenkar 2000, p. 177.
  4. ^ a b Rodriguez 2002, p. 44.
  5. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 1–14.
  6. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 10–14.
  7. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 31. Barney recounted this incident in Adventures of the Mind, p. 31.
  8. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 30–31.
  9. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 62.
  10. ^ Secrest 1974, p. 262.
  11. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 39.
  12. ^ Robinson 2001, p. 38.
  13. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 59–60, 191.
  14. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 52.
  15. ^ Benstock 1986, p. 272.
  16. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 56–58.
  17. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 150.
  18. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 149, 164–165.
  19. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 169–171.
  20. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 308, 330.
  21. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 88–93.
  22. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 87–88, 92.
  23. ^ a b Souhami 2005, p. 18.
  24. ^ Souhami 2005, p. 12.
  25. ^ Souhami 2005, pp. 18–19, 21.
  26. ^ Souhami 2005, p. 21.
  27. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 91, 95–97, 102–103.
  28. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 103, 264–266.
  29. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 91, 93–94.
  30. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 95.
  31. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 97.
  32. ^ As translated in Wickes 1976, p. 40.
  33. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 95, 101.
  34. ^ As translated in Souhami 2005, p. 57.
  35. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 105–106.
  36. ^ Barney 1992, p. 15.
  37. ^ Jay 1988, pp. xii–xiv.
  38. ^ Jay 1988, pp. 63, 67.
  39. ^ Barney 1992, pp. 19, 24–25.
  40. ^ a b Jay 1988, pp. 11–15.
  41. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 131, 186.
  42. ^ Colette 2000, pp. 87, 95.
  43. ^ Jay 1988, p. 19.
  44. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 116, 186–187.
  45. ^ Barney, Souvenirs Indiscrets, quoted in Souhami 2005, p. 52.
  46. ^ Grindea, Miron, ed. (1962). "Combat with the Amazon of letters". ADAM International Review. 29 (299). London, UK: 5–24. Retrieved October 17, 2015. As to the moving tributes by Yanette Deletang-Tardif, Anne-Marie Kegels and Lucienne Desnoues they represent the admiration of three of the more interesting laureates of the Prix Renee Vivien which, since 1949, the Amazon has awarded to women poets writing in French
  47. ^ Klaich, Dolores (1974). Woman+woman: attitudes toward lesbianism. New York (New York), USA: Simon and Schuster. p. 176. ISBN 9780671216955. Retrieved April 27, 2016. In 1949 she would endow a Renée Vivien Prize for women poets
  48. ^ Wickes 1976, p. 198.
  49. ^ Barney 1992a, p. 262.
  50. ^ Tyler-Bennett, Deborah (October 1993). (PDF). 'A foreign language which you understand': The art and life of Djuna Barnes 1892–1982 (Ph.D.). University of Leicester. Docket U058027. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 1, 2018. Retrieved April 10, 2016. The salon, which had altered from the days of the tableaux, still held its own in the literary world, and the Prix Renée Vivien (of 500,000 francs) enable young writers such as Marguerite Yourcenar to establish themselves.
  51. ^ Paul-Margueritte, Eve; Paul-Margueritte, Lucie (July 12, 1951). Deux frères, deux sœurs : deux époques littéraires [Two brothers, two sisters, two literary eras] (in French). Paris, F: Editions J. Peyronnet. p. 233. OCLC 751644475. Retrieved April 10, 2016. En souvenir de son amie, Miss Barney a fondé le " Prix Renée Vivien " que décerne la Société des Gens de Lettres
  52. ^ Lafitte, Jacques; Taylor, Stephen (1969). Qui est qui en France 1969–1970 [Who's who in France 1969–1970]. 9° édition (in French). Paris, F: Editions Jacques Lafitte. p. 197. ISBN 9782857840138. OCLC 465578548. Retrieved April 10, 2016. A rétabli le prix Renée Vivien dont elle est la Présidente (depuis 1950) à la Société des gens de lettres
  53. ^ Lottman, Herbert R. (September 28, 1969). Brown, Francis (ed.). "In Search of Miss Barney". The New York Times Book Review. January–December 1969. Vol. 74. New York (New York), USA: Arno Press. p. 60. ISSN 0028-7806. Retrieved April 10, 2016. As recently as 1950, 41 years after Miss Vivien's death, she endowed a Renee Vivien poetry prize and became chairman of a committee of the French Society of Men of Letters which awards it
  54. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 119.
  55. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 125–127.
  56. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 115.
  57. ^ Kling 1994, p. 137.
  58. ^ Washington Mirror, March 9, 1901. Quoted in Rodriguez 2002, p. 121.
  59. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 123.
  60. ^ Wickes 1976, pp. 50–52.
  61. ^ 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved February 29, 2024.
  62. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 150–151.
  63. ^ Secrest 1974, p. 275.
  64. ^ Dorf 2019, pp. 57–60.
  65. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 203–204.
  66. ^ Benstock 1986, p. 291.
  67. ^ Dorf 2019, pp. 57–64.
  68. ^ Barney 1992, p. 19.
  69. ^ Jay 1988, p. 53.
  70. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 255–256.
  71. ^ Schenkar 2000, p. xiii.
  72. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. xvi, 154, 177.
  73. ^ Schenkar 2000, p. 12.
  74. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 180, 183.
  75. ^ Schenkar 2000, pp. 174–175.
  76. ^ Schenkar 2000, p. 165.
  77. ^ Schenkar 2000, p. 164.
  78. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 183.
  79. ^ Schenkar 2000, p. 144.
  80. ^ Dayton Journal, November 14, 1909. Quoted in Rodriguez 2002, p. 172.
  81. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 177.
  82. ^ Schenkar 2000, p. 195.
  83. ^ Wickes 1976, pp. 108–109.
  84. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 221–223.
  85. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 243–250.
  86. ^ Conover 2001, pp. 2–3.
  87. ^ Wickes 1976, pp. 153, 167.
  88. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 255.
  89. ^ Hawthorne 2000, pp. 69–74.
  90. ^ Claridge 2016, p. 139.
  91. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 246–247.
  92. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 260.
  93. ^ Flanner 1979, p. 48.
  94. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 249–50, 301.
  95. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 250–251.
  96. ^ Conley 2002, p. 20.
  97. ^ Barney 1992, p. 97.
  98. ^ Wickes 1976, p. 120, Rodriguez 2002, p. 190, and Jay 1988, p. 26 all refer to de Gourmont's condition simply as "lupus", but Denkinger 1937, p. 1148 and other French sources such as Gogibu 2005 call it "lupus tuberculeux"—apparently lupus vulgaris, which is a form of tuberculosis of the skin, unrelated to systemic lupus erythematosus, the disease now commonly known as lupus.
  99. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 191–196, 199–201.
  100. ^ a b Benstock 1986, p. 296.
  101. ^ a b Jay 1988, p. 29.
  102. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 257–258.
  103. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 257.
  104. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 259.
  105. ^ Barney 1992, p. 118.
  106. ^ Barney 1992, p. 123.
  107. ^ Benstock 1986, pp. 298–299.
  108. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 303–304.
  109. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 139.
  110. ^ Barney 1992, p. 103.
  111. ^ Schenkar 2000, p. 360.
  112. ^ Livia 1992, p. 181. "I would be asked at dinner parties what I was working on and, replying, 'Natalie Clifford Barney,' I expected the usual post Jean Chalon response, 'What? The lesbian Don Juan?'"
  113. ^ Schenkar 2000, p. 156 and Rodriguez 2002, p. 298 give slightly different accounts of this list.
  114. ^ Wickes 1976, pp. 9, 87.
  115. ^ Flanner 1979, p. 43.
  116. ^ Rapazzini 2005, pp. 7–8.
  117. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 196–199.
  118. ^ a b Rapazzini 2005, pp. 8–10.
  119. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 197–199.
  120. ^ Sources differ on the year of their meeting. Jay, Rodriguez, and Souhami place the meeting in 1910 (Rodriguez says "probably"). Rapazzini says 1909, producing a letter from the Bibliothèque littéraire Jacques-Doucet's collection of Barney material.
  121. ^ a b Rapazzini 2005, p. 11.
  122. ^ Rapazzini 2005, p. 12.
  123. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 227–228.
  124. ^ Secrest 1974, p. 138.
  125. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 198–199.
  126. ^ Rapazzini 2005, pp. 6–7.
  127. ^ Rapazzini 2005, pp. 7, 24.
  128. ^ The exact date of Barney and Brooks' first meeting is uncertain. Jay 1988, p. 29 says "probably... on the eve of war"; Rodriguez 2002, p. 223 puts it "around the start of the war"; Souhami 2005, p. 137 says 1915; Wickes 1976, p. 145 says "probably in 1915"; and Rapazzini 2005, p. 17 says October 1916.
  129. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 224.
  130. ^ Jay 1988, p. 31.
  131. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 295–301.
  132. ^ Souhami 2005, pp. 137–139, 146.
  133. ^ Secrest 1974, p. 277.
  134. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 227, 295.
  135. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 223.
  136. ^ Schenkar 2000, pp. 7–14, 359.
  137. ^ Jay 1988, p. 32.
  138. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 280, 299.
  139. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 300–301.
  140. ^ Schenkar 2000, pp. 280–293.
  141. ^ Schenkar 2000, p. 269.
  142. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 318.
  143. ^ Schenkar 2000, pp. 37–48.
  144. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 323–324.
  145. ^ Souhami 1999, p. 332.
  146. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 311.
  147. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 324.
  148. ^ a b Livia 1992, pp. 192–193.
  149. ^ Livia 1992, p. 191. Rodriguez 2002, p. 315 calls this a plausible theory.
  150. ^ Rodriguez 2002, p. 317.
  151. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 326–327.
  152. ^ Secrest 1974, p. 368.
  153. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 341–344.
  154. ^ Wickes 1976, pp. 255–256.
  155. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 336, 353–354.
  156. ^ Souhami 2005, p. 194.
  157. ^ Rodriguez 2002, pp. 362–365.
  158. ^ Hawthorne 2012, p. 91.
  159. ^ Jay 1988, p. xiii.
  160. ^ Jay 1988, p. xv.
  161. ^ Wickes 1976, p. 98.
  162. ^ Jay 1988, pp. 9, 13.
  163. ^ Stimpson 1981, pp. 369–373.
  164. ^ Love 2000, pp. 115–116.
  165. ^ Hall 1981, p. 352.
  166. ^ Faderman 1981, p. 322.
  167. ^ Livia 1995, pp. 22–23.
  168. ^ Delarue-Mardrus 1995, pp. 80–81.
  169. ^ Castle 2003, p. 658.
  170. ^ Barnes 1992, p. 6.
  171. ^ Barnes 1992, pp. 9, 34.
  172. ^ Weiss 1995, pp. 151–153.
  173. ^ Barnes 1992, pp. xxxii–xxxiv.
  174. ^ The Columbus Dispatch 2009.
  175. ^ Barney 2016.

References edit

Books about Natalie Barney edit

Other references edit

  • Barnes, Djuna (1992). Ladies Almanack. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 0-8147-1180-4.
  • Barney, Natalie Clifford (1992a). Adventures of the Mind. Translated by Gatton, John Spalding. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 0-8147-1178-2.
  • Barney, Natalie Clifford (1992). Anna Livia (ed.). A Perilous Advantage: The Best of Natalie Clifford Barney. Norwich, VT: New Victoria Publishers Inc. ISBN 0-934678-38-3.
  • Barney, Natalie Clifford (2016). Women lovers, or The third woman. Translated by Ray, Chelsea. Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press. pp. xviii. ISBN 978-0-299-30693-9. OCLC 956320847.
  • Benstock, Shari (1986). Women of the Left Bank: Paris, 1900–1940. Texas: University of Texas Press. ISBN 0-292-79040-6.
  • Castle, Terry (2003). The Literature of Lesbianism. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-12510-0. English translations of Tsvetaeva's Letter to the Amazon can be found in Castle's anthology and in Tsvetaeva, Marina; trans. Sonja Franeta (October 31, 1994). "Letter to an Amazon". The Harvard Gay & Lesbian Review. 1 (4): 9.
  • Claridge, Laura P. (April 12, 2016). The lady with the Borzoi : Blanche Knopf, literary tastemaker extraordinaire (First ed.). New York. ISBN 9780374114251. OCLC 908176194.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Colette (2000). The Pure and the Impure. Translated by Herma Briffault. New York: New York Review of Books. ISBN 0-940322-48-X.
  • "Lesbian literary figure honored with Ohio historical marker noting sexual orientation". The Columbus Dispatch. Archived from the original on June 29, 2012. Retrieved October 26, 2009.
  • Conley, John J. (2002). The Suspicion of Virtue: Women Philosophers in Neoclassical France. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-4020-3.
  • Conover, Anne (2001). Olga Rudge and Ezra Pound: "What Thou Lovest Well...". New Haven & London: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-08703-9.
  • Delarue-Mardrus, Lucie (1995). The Angel and the Perverts. Translated by Anna Livia. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 0-8147-5098-2.
  • Denkinger, Marc (December 1937). "Remy de Gourmont Critique". PMLA. 52 (4). Modern Language Association: 1147–1160. doi:10.2307/458509. JSTOR 458509. S2CID 163530219.
  • Dorf, Samuel N. (2019). Performing Antiquity: Ancient Greek Music and Dance from Paris to Delphi, 1890-1930. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780190612092.
  • Faderman, Lillian (1981). Surpassing the Love of Men. New York: William Morrow & Co. ISBN 0-688-00396-6.
  • Flanner, Janet (1979). Paris was Yesterday: 1925–1939. New York: Penguin. ISBN 0-14-005068-X.
  • Gogibu, Vincent (January 2005). "Sur la correspondance inédite Gourmont / Valéry". Bulletin des études valéryennes (in French) (98–99): 235–247. JSTOR 44858430.
  • Hall, Radclyffe (1981). The Well of Loneliness. New York: Avon. ISBN 0-380-54247-1.
  • Hawthorne, Melanie (2000). Contingent loves: Simone de Beauvoir and sexuality. U of Virginia P. pp. 69–74. ISBN 978-0-8139-1974-4.
  • Hawthorne, Melanie (2012). "You are Here". Dix-Neuf. 16: 87–111. doi:10.1179/1478731811Z.0000000009. S2CID 218770922.
  • Kling, Jean L. (1994). Alice Pike Barney: Her Life and Art. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press. p. 24. ISBN 1-56098-344-2.
  • Livia, Anna (1992). "The Trouble with Heroines: Natalie Clifford Barney and Anti-Semitism". A Perilous Advantage. pp. 181–193.
  • Livia, Anna (1995). "Introduction: Lucie Delarue-Mardrus and the Phrenetic Harlequinade". In Delarue-Mardrus (ed.). The Angel and the Perverts. pp. 1–60.
  • Lockard, Ray Anne (2002). . glbtq: An Encyclopedia of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Culture. Archived from the original on March 8, 2007. Retrieved September 21, 2006.
  • Love, Heather (Summer 2000). "Hard Times and Heartaches: Radclyffe Hall's The Well of Loneliness". Journal of Lesbian Studies. 4 (2): 115–128. doi:10.1300/J155v04n02_08. S2CID 147760713.
  • Rapazzini, Francesco (Fall 2005). "Elisabeth de Gramont, Natalie Barney's 'eternal mate'". South Central Review. 22 (3). Johns Hopkins University Press: 6–31. doi:10.1353/scr.2005.0053. S2CID 170974270.
  • Robinson, Christopher (2001). "Barney, Natalie Clifford". In Aldrich, Robert; Wotherspoon, Garry (eds.). Who's who in Gay and Lesbian History: From Antiquity to World War II, Volume 1. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-15982-2.
  • Schenkar, Joan (2000). Truly Wilde: The Unsettling Story of Dolly Wilde, Oscar's Unusual Niece. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 0-465-08772-8.
  • Secrest, Meryle (1974). Between Me and Life: A Biography of Romaine Brooks. Garden City, NY: Doubleday. p. 275. ISBN 0-385-03469-5.
  • Souhami, Diana (1999). The Trials of Radclyffe Hall. New York: Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-48941-2.
  • Stimpson, Catharine R. (Winter 1981). "Zero Degree Deviancy: The Lesbian Novel in English". Critical Inquiry. 8 (2): 363–379. doi:10.1086/448159. JSTOR 1343168. S2CID 162249181.
  • Weiss, Andrea (1995). Paris Was a Woman: Portraits From the Left Bank. San Francisco: Harper San Francisco. ISBN 0-06-251313-3.

Further reading edit

  • Bonnevier, Katarina (2007). Behind Straight Curtains: towards a queer feminist theory of architecture. Stockholm: Axl Books. ISBN 978-91-975901-6-7.
  • Broe, Mary Lynn (1993). Women's writing in exile. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 9780807818497.
  • Chalon, Jean (1979). Portrait of a Seductress: The World of Natalie Barney. New York: Crown Publishers. ISBN 0-517-53264-6.
  • Inness, Sherrie A. (October 20, 2005). . glbtq: An Encyclopedia of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Culture. Archived from the original on September 1, 2006. Retrieved September 19, 2006.
  • Orenstein, Gloria Feman; Cleyrergue, Berthe (1979). "The Salon of Natalie Clifford Barney: An Interview with Berthe Cleyrergue". Signs. 4 (3): 484–496. doi:10.1086/493633. ISSN 0097-9740. JSTOR 3173396. S2CID 144214812.

External links edit

natalie, clifford, barney, october, 1876, february, 1972, american, writer, hosted, literary, salon, home, paris, that, brought, together, french, international, writers, influenced, other, authors, through, salon, also, with, poetry, plays, epigrams, often, t. Natalie Clifford Barney October 31 1876 February 2 1972 was an American writer who hosted a literary salon at her home in Paris that brought together French and international writers She influenced other authors through her salon and also with her poetry plays and epigrams often thematically tied to her lesbianism and feminism Natalie Clifford BarneyBarney in 1898 photograph by Alice HughesBorn 1876 10 31 October 31 1876Dayton Ohio USDiedFebruary 2 1972 1972 02 02 aged 95 Paris France 1 Burial placePassy CemeteryKnown forHosting a literary salon wrote drama literature poetry Barney was born into a wealthy family She was partly educated in France and expressed a desire from a young age to live openly as a lesbian She moved to France with her first romantic partner Eva Palmer Inspired by the work of Sappho Barney began publishing love poems to women under her own name as early as 1900 Writing in both French and English she supported feminism and pacifism She opposed monogamy and had many overlapping long and short term relationships including on and off romances with poet Renee Vivien and courtesan Liane de Pougy and longer relationships with writer Elisabeth de Gramont and painter Romaine Brooks Barney hosted a salon at her home in Paris for more than 60 years bringing together writers and artists from around the world including many leading figures in French American and British literature Attendees of various sexualities expressed themselves and mingled comfortably at the weekly gatherings She worked to promote writing by women and hosted a Women s Academy L Academie des Femmes in her salon as a response to the all male French Academy The salon closed for the duration of World War II while Barney lived in Italy with Brooks She initially espoused some pro fascist views but supported the Allies by the end of the war After the war she returned to Paris resumed the salon and continued influencing or inspiring writers such as Truman Capote Barney had a wide literary influence Remy de Gourmont addressed public letters to her using the nickname l Amazon the Amazon and Barney s association with both de Gourmont and the nickname lasted until her death Her life and love affairs served as inspiration for many novels written by others ranging from de Pougy s erotic French bestseller Idylle Saphique to Radclyffe Hall s The Well of Loneliness the most famous lesbian novel of the twentieth century 2 Contents 1 Early life 2 Early relationships 2 1 Eva Palmer 2 2 Liane de Pougy 2 3 Renee Vivien 2 4 Olive Custance 3 Poetry and plays 4 Salon 5 Epigrams and novel 6 Major relationships 6 1 Elisabeth de Gramont 6 2 Romaine Brooks 6 3 Dolly Wilde 7 World War II and after 8 Legacy 9 Works 9 1 In French 9 2 In English 9 3 English translations 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 12 1 Books about Natalie Barney 12 2 Other references 13 Further reading 14 External linksEarly life edit nbsp nbsp First Painting by Carolus Duran of Barney at age ten that hung on the wall of her salon at 20 Rue Jacob 3 Second Barney at about age 13 painted by Alice Pike Barney Barney was born in 1876 in Dayton Ohio to Albert Clifford Barney and Alice Pike Barney 4 Alice learned to love the arts from her father who owned Pike s Opera House in Cincinnati Ohio 5 Albert Barney partially inherited his family s railroad car manufacturing company Barney amp Smith Car Works 6 When Barney was five years old she encountered Oscar Wilde at a New York hotel Wilde scooped her up as she ran past him fleeing a group of small boys and held her out of their reach Then he sat her down on his knee and told her a story 7 The next day he joined Barney and her mother on the beach and Wilde inspired Alice to pursue art seriously which she did despite her husband s disapproval 8 Like many girls of her time Barney had a haphazard education 9 Her interest in the French language began with a governess who read Jules Verne stories aloud to her so she would have to learn quickly to understand them 10 She and her younger sister Laura attended Les Ruches a French boarding school in Fontainebleau France founded by feminist Marie Souvestre 11 As an adult she spoke and wrote French fluently 12 When she was ten her family moved from Ohio to the Scott Circle area of Washington D C spending summers at their large cottage in Bar Harbor Maine 4 As the rebellious and unconventional daughter of one of the wealthiest families in town she was often mentioned in Washington newspapers In her early twenties she made headlines by galloping through Bar Harbor while driving a second horse on a lead ahead of her riding astride instead of sidesaddle 13 Barney later said she knew she was a lesbian by age twelve 14 and she was determined to live openly without hiding anything 15 Early relationships editEva Palmer edit nbsp Eva Palmer Barney s earliest intimate relationship was with Eva Palmer They became acquainted during summer vacations in Bar Harbor Maine and began a sexual relationship during one such trip in 1893 Barney likened Palmer s appearance to that of a medieval virgin 16 The two remained close for several years As young adults in Paris they shared an apartment at 4 rue Chalgrin and eventually took their own residences in Neuilly 17 Barney frequently solicited Palmer s help in her romantic pursuits of other women including Pauline Tarn 18 Palmer ultimately left Barney s side for Greece and eventually married Angelos Sikelianos Their relationship did not survive this turn of events Barney took a dim view of Angelos and heated letters were exchanged 19 Later in their lives the friendship was repaired through correspondence and reunions in New York 20 Liane de Pougy edit In 1899 after seeing the courtesan Liane de Pougy at a dance hall in Paris Barney presented herself at de Pougy s residence in a page costume and announced she was a page of love sent by Sappho 21 Although de Pougy was one of the most famous women in France constantly sought after by wealthy and titled men Barney s audacity charmed her 22 nbsp Liane de Pougy in 1900 Barney stood to inherit some family wealth held in trust if she either married or waited for her father s death 23 While courting de Pougy Barney was engaged to Robert Cassat a member of another wealthy railroad family 24 Barney was open with Cassat about her love of women and relationship with de Pougy 23 In the hopes of securing the Barney trust money the three briefly considered a rushed wedding between Barney and Cassat and an adoption of de Pougy 25 When Cassat ended the engagement Barney attempted unsuccessfully to persuade her father to give her the money anyway 26 By the end of 1899 the two had broken up after quarreling repeatedly over Barney s desire to rescue de Pougy from her life as a courtesan 27 Despite the breakup the two continued having liaisons for decades 28 Their on and off affair became the subject of de Pougy s tell all roman a clef Idylle Saphique Sapphic Idyll Published in 1901 the book and its sexually suggestive scenes became the talk of Paris reprinted more than 70 times in its first year 29 Barney was soon well known as the model for one of the characters 30 Barney herself contributed a chapter to Idylle Saphique in which she described reclining at de Pougy s feet in a screened box at the theater watching Sarah Bernhardt s play Hamlet 31 During intermission Barney as Flossie compares Hamlet s plight with that of women What is there for women who feel the passion for action when pitiless Destiny holds them in chains Destiny made us women at a time when the law of men is the only law that is recognized 32 She also wrote Lettres a une Connue Letters to a Woman I Have Known her own epistolary novel about the affair Although Barney failed to find a publisher for the book and later called it naive and clumsy it is notable for its discussion of homosexuality which Barney regarded as natural and compared to albinism 33 My queerness she said is not a vice is not deliberate and harms no one 34 Renee Vivien edit In November 1899 Barney met the poet Pauline Tarn better known by her pen name Renee Vivien For Vivien it was love at first sight while Barney became fascinated with Vivien after hearing her recite one of her poems 35 which Barney described as haunted by the desire for death 36 Their romantic relationship was also a creative exchange that inspired both of them to write Barney provided a feminist theoretical framework which Vivien explored in her poetry They adapted the imagery of the Symbolist poets along with the conventions of courtly love to describe love between women also finding examples of heroic women in history and myth 37 Sappho was an especially important influence and they studied Greek so as to read the surviving fragments of her poetry in the original Both wrote plays about her life 38 nbsp Renee Vivien standing and Barney posing for a portrait in Directoire era costume Vivien saw Barney as a muse and as Barney put it she had found new inspiration through me almost without knowing me Barney felt Vivien had cast her as a femme fatale and that she wanted to lose herself entirely in suffering for the sake of her art 39 Vivien also believed in monogamy which Barney was unwilling to agree to While Barney was visiting her family in Washington D C in 1901 Vivien stopped answering her letters Barney tried to get her back for years at one point persuading a friend operatic mezzo soprano Emma Calve to sing under Vivien s window so she could throw a poem wrapped around a bouquet of flowers up to Vivien on her balcony Both flowers and poem were intercepted and returned by a governess 40 In 1904 she wrote Je Me Souviens I Remember an intensely personal prose poem about their relationship which was presented as a single handwritten copy to Vivien in an attempt to win her back They reconciled and traveled together to Lesbos where they lived happily together for a short time and discussed starting a school of poetry for women like the one which Sappho according to tradition had founded on Lesbos some 2 500 years before However Vivien soon got a letter from her lover Baroness Helene van Zuylen and went to Constantinople thinking she would break up with her in person Vivien planned to meet Barney in Paris afterward but instead stayed with the Baroness This time the breakup was permanent 40 Vivien s health declined rapidly after this The author Colette who herself had an affair with Barney in 1906 was Vivien s friend and neighbor 41 According to Colette Vivien ate almost nothing and drank heavily even rinsing her mouth with perfumed water to hide the smell 42 Colette s account has led some to call Vivien an anorexic 43 but this diagnosis did not yet exist at the time Vivien was also addicted to the sedative chloral hydrate In 1908 she attempted suicide by overdosing on laudanum 44 and died the following year In a memoir written fifty years later Barney said She could not be saved Her life was a long suicide Everything turned to dust and ashes in her hands 45 In 1949 two years after the death of Helene van Zuylen Barney restored the Renee Vivien Prize 46 47 48 49 with a financial grant 50 under the authority of the Societe des gens de lettres and took on the chairmanship of the jury in 1950 51 52 53 Olive Custance edit Barney purchased and read Opals in 1900 a debut collection of poems by Olive Custance Responding to the lesbian themes in the poetry Barney began corresponding with Custance and exchanging poems 54 The two met in 1901 at Barney and Vivien s home in Paris and they soon began a short romantic relationship While Barney s infidelity aggravated Vivien Custance was also pursuing a relationship with Lord Alfred Douglas who she would later marry 55 Poetry and plays edit nbsp Waterlily by Barney s mother Alice of her cousin Ellen Goin an illustration in Quelques Portraits Sonnets de Femmes nbsp Quelques Portraits Sonnets de Femmes 1900 edition cover In 1900 Barney published her first book a collection of poems called Quelques Portraits Sonnets de Femmes Some Portrait Sonnets of Women The poems were written in traditional French verse and a formal old fashioned style since Barney did not care for free verse Quelques Portraits has been described as apprentice work a classifier which betrays its historical significance According to biographer Suzanne Rodriguez the collection s publication meant that Barney became the first woman poet to openly write about the love of women since Sappho 56 Her mother contributed pastel illustrations of the poems subjects wholly unaware three of the four women who modelled for her were her daughter s lovers 57 Reviews were generally positive and glossed over the lesbian theme of the poems some even misrepresenting it The Washington Mirror said Barney writes odes to men s lips and eyes not like a novice either 58 However a headline in a society gossip paper cried out Sappho Sings in Washington and this alerted her father who bought and destroyed the publisher s remaining stock and printing plates 59 To escape her father s sway Barney published her next book Cinq Petits Dialogues Grecs Five Short Greek Dialogues 1901 under the pseudonym Tryphe The name came from the works of Pierre Louys who helped edit and revise the manuscript Barney also dedicated the book to him The first of the dialogues is set in ancient Greece and contains a long description of Sappho who is more faithful in her inconstancy than others in their fidelity Another argues for paganism over Christianity 60 After the death of Barney s father in 1902 his approximately 9 million fortune 317 million in 2018 61 was left in trust with annual income to be split equally between Barney her mother and her sister His death and the money freed her from any need to conceal the authorship of her books she never used a pseudonym again 62 She considered scandal the best way of getting rid of nuisances meaning heterosexual attention from young men 63 nbsp A gathering in Barney s garden possibly a performance of Equivoque with Barney and Eva Palmer 64 Je Me Souviens was published in 1910 after Vivien s death 65 That same year Barney published Actes et Entr actes Acts and Interludes a collection of short plays and poems One of the plays was Equivoque Ambiguity a revisionist version of the legend of Sappho s death instead of throwing herself off a cliff for the love of Phaon the sailor she does so out of grief that Phaon is marrying the woman she loves The play incorporates quotations from Sappho s fragments with Barney s own footnotes in Greek and was performed with ancient Greek inspired music and dance 66 67 Barney did not take her poetry as seriously as Vivien did saying if I had one ambition it was to make my life itself into a poem 68 Her plays were only performed through amateur productions in her garden According to Karla Jay most of them lacked coherent plots and would probably baffle even the most sympathetic audience 69 After 1910 she mostly wrote the epigrams and memoirs for which she is better known Her last book of poetry was called Poems amp Poemes Autres Alliances and came out in 1920 bringing together romantic poetry in both French and English Barney asked Ezra Pound to edit the poems but ignored his detailed recommendations 70 Salon edit nbsp Barney c 1890 1910 photographed by Frances Benjamin Johnston For over 60 years Barney hosted a literary salon first in Neuilly but mostly at her home at 20 Rue Jacob in Paris 71 72 Her salon was a weekly Friday gathering at which people met to socialize and discuss literature art music and any other topic of interest Though she hosted some of the most prominent male writers of her time Barney strove to shed light on female writers and their work 73 In addition to its focus on women Barney s salon was distinguished by its deliberately international character 74 75 She brought together expatriate Modernists with members of the French Academy 76 The salon Biographer Joan Schenkar described Barney s salon as a place where lesbian assignations and appointments with academics could coexist in a kind of cheerful cross pollinating cognitive dissonance 77 The range of sexualities welcomed at the salon was also uncommon in Paris and Barney s openness with her own sexuality made her salon comfortable to homosexual or bisexual attendees 78 In the 1900s Barney held early gatherings of the salon at her house in Neuilly The entertainment included poetry readings and theatricals in which Colette sometimes performed Mata Hari performed a dance once riding into the garden naked as Lady Godiva on a white horse harnessed with turquoise cloisonne 79 The play Equivoque may have led Barney to leave Neuilly in 1909 According to a contemporary newspaper article her landlord objected to her holding an outdoor performance of a play about Sappho which he felt followed nature too closely 80 She canceled her lease and rented the pavilion on Rue Jacob in Paris s Latin Quarter and her salon was held there until the late 1960s This was a small two story house separated on three sides from the main building on the street Next to the pavilion was a large overgrown garden with a Doric Temple of Friendship tucked into one corner In this new location the salon grew a more prim outward face with poetry readings and conversation perhaps because Barney had been told the pavilion s floors would not hold up to large dancing parties 81 82 Frequent guests during this period included poets Pierre Louys and Paul Claudel diplomat Philippe Berthelot and translator J C Mardrus 83 During World War I the salon became a haven for those opposed to the war Henri Barbusse gave a reading from his anti war novel Under Fire and Barney hosted a Women s Congress for Peace Other visitors to the salon during the war included Oscar Milosz Auguste Rodin and poet Alan Seeger who came while on leave from the French Foreign Legion 84 nbsp Two story pavilion at 20 Rue Jacob nbsp Temple of Friendship Ezra Pound was a close friend of Barney s and often visited The two schemed together to subsidize Paul Valery and T S Eliot so they could leave their jobs and focus on writing but Valery found other patrons and Eliot refused the grant Pound introduced Barney to avant garde composer George Antheil and while her own taste in music leaned towards the traditional she hosted premieres of Antheil s Symphony for Five Instruments and First String Quartet 85 It was also at Barney s salon that Pound met his longtime mistress the violinist Olga Rudge 86 In 1927 Barney started an Academie des Femmes Women s Academy to honor women writers This was a response to the influential Academie Francaise French Academy which had been founded in the 17th century by Louis XIII and whose 40 members included no women at the time Unlike the French Academy Barney s was not a formal organization but rather a series of readings held as part of the regular Friday salons Honorees included Colette Gertrude Stein Anna Wickham Rachilde Lucie Delarue Mardrus Mina Loy Djuna Barnes and posthumously Renee Vivien 87 The academy s activities wound down after 1927 88 nbsp Cover of Aventures de l Esprit Other visitors to the salon during the 1920s included French writers Jeanne Galzy 89 Andre Gide Anatole France Max Jacob Louis Aragon and Jean Cocteau English language writers also visited including Ford Madox Ford W Somerset Maugham F Scott Fitzgerald Sinclair Lewis Sherwood Anderson Thornton Wilder T S Eliot and William Carlos Williams Barney also hosted German poet Rainer Maria Rilke Bengali poet Rabindranath Tagore the first Nobel laureate from Asia Romanian aesthetician and diplomat Matila Ghyka journalist Janet Flanner also known as Genet who set the New Yorker style journalist activist and publisher Nancy Cunard publishers Caresse and Harry Crosby publisher Blanche Knopf 90 art collector and patron Peggy Guggenheim Sylvia Beach the bookstore owner who published James Joyce s Ulysses painters Tamara de Lempicka and Marie Laurencin and dancer Isadora Duncan 91 For her 1929 book Aventures de l Esprit Adventures of the Mind Barney drew a social diagram which crowded the names of over a hundred people who had attended the salon into a rough map of the house garden and Temple of Friendship The first half of the book had reminiscences of 13 male writers she had known or met over the years and the second half had a chapter for each member of her Academie des Femmes 92 In the late 1920s Radclyffe Hall drew a crowd reading her novel The Well of Loneliness recently banned in the UK 93 A reading by poet Edna St Vincent Millay packed the salon in 1932 At another Friday salon in the 1930s Virgil Thomson sang from Four Saints in Three Acts an opera based on a libretto by Stein 94 Of the famous Modernist writers who spent time in Paris Ernest Hemingway never made an appearance at the salon James Joyce came once or twice but did not care for it Marcel Proust never attended a Friday but did come once to talk with Barney about lesbian culture whilst doing research for In Search of Lost Time though he ended up too nervous to bring up the subject 95 Epigrams and novel editEparpillements Scatterings 1910 was Barney s first collection of pensees literally thoughts This literary form had been associated with salon culture in France since the 17th century when the genre was perfected at the salon of Madame de Sable 96 Barney s pensees like de Sable s own Maximes were short often one line epigrams or bon mots such as There are more evil ears than bad mouths and To be married is to be neither alone nor together 97 nbsp Remy de Gourmont with Elisabeth de Gramont and Barney in 1913 Drawing by Andre Rouveyre Her literary career got a boost after she sent a copy of Eparpillements to Remy de Gourmont a French poet literary critic and philosopher who had become a recluse after contracting the disfiguring disease lupus vulgaris in his thirties 98 He was impressed enough to invite her to one of the Sunday gatherings at his home at which he usually received only a small group of old friends She was a rejuvenating influence in his life coaxing him out for evening car rides dinners at the Rue Jacob a masked ball even a short cruise on the Seine He turned some of their wide ranging conversations into a series of letters that he published in the Mercure de France addressing her as l Amazone a French word that can mean either horsewoman or Amazon the letters were later collected in book form He died in 1915 but the nickname he gave her would stay with her all her life even her tombstone identifies her as the Amazon of Remy de Gourmont and his Letters to the Amazon left readers wanting to know more about the woman who had inspired them 99 Barney obliged in 1920 with Pensees d une Amazone Thoughts of an Amazon her most overtly political work In the first section Sexual Adversity War and Feminism she developed feminist and pacifist themes describing war as an involuntary and collective suicide ordained by man 100 In war she said men father death as women mother life with courage and without choice 101 The epigrammatic form makes it difficult to determine the details of Barney s views ideas are presented only to be dropped and some pensees seem to contradict others 102 Some critics interpret her as saying that the aggression that leads to war is visible in all male relationships Karla Jay however argues that her philosophy was not that sweeping and is better summed up by the epigram Those who love war lack the love of an adequate sport the art of living 103 100 101 Another section of Pensees d une Amazone Misunderstanding or Sappho s Lawsuit gathered historical writings about homosexuality along with her own commentary 104 She also covered topics such as alcohol friendship old age and literature writing Novels are longer than life 105 and Romanticism is a childhood ailment those who had it young are the most robust 106 A third volume Nouvelles Pensees de l Amazone New Thoughts of the Amazon appeared in 1939 The One Who is Legion or A D s After Life 1930 was Barney s only book written entirely in English as well as her only novel Illustrated by Romaine Brooks it concerns a person who committed suicide known only as A D who is brought back to life as a genderless hermaphroditic being and reads the book of their own life This book within a book entitled The Love Lives of A D is a collection of hymns poems and epigrams much like Barney s own other writings 107 108 Major relationships edit nbsp Olive Custance in 1902 Despite several of her lovers objections Barney practiced and advocated non monogamy As early as 1901 in Cinq Petits Dialogues Grecs she argued in favor of multiple relationships and against jealousy 109 in Eparpillements she wrote One is unfaithful to those one loves in order that their charm does not become mere habit 110 While she could be quite jealous herself she actively encouraged at least some of her lovers to be non monogamous as well 111 Due in part to Jean Chalon s early biography of her published in English as Portrait of a Seductress Barney had become more widely known for her many relationships than for her writing or her salon 112 She once wrote out a list divided into three categories liaisons demi liaisons and adventures Colette was a demi liaison while the artist and furniture designer Eyre de Lanux with whom she had an off and on affair for several years was listed as an adventure Among the liaisons the relationships that she considered most important were Custance Vivien Elisabeth de Gramont Brooks and Dolly Wilde 113 Many of her affairs like those with Colette and Lucie Delarue Mardrus evolved into lifelong friendships 114 Elisabeth de Gramont edit nbsp Elisabeth de Gramont in 1889 Elisabeth de Gramont the Duchess of Clermont Tonnerre was a writer best known for her popular memoirs A descendant of Henry IV of France she had grown up among the aristocracy when she was a child according to Janet Flanner peasants on her farm begged her not to clean her shoes before entering their houses 115 Her father s ancestors had squandered their fortune and he married into the Rothschild family after her birth she did not have any access to her step mother s wealth 116 She looked back on this lost world of wealth and privilege with little regret and became known as the red duchess for her support of socialism Encouraged by her father to wed into security she married Philibert de Clermont Tonnere and had two daughters He was violent and tyrannical 117 118 The poet Lucie Delarue Mardrus introduced Barney and de Gramont in 1909 or 1910 119 118 120 The couple shared academic interests and attended Remy de Gourmont s salon together 121 Barney wrote an unpublished novel inspired by their early relationship L Adultere ingenue The Adulterous Ingenue 122 De Gramont accepted Barney s nonmonogamy perhaps reluctantly at first and went out of her way to be gracious to her other lovers 123 always including Brooks when she invited Barney to vacation in the country 124 Though the two conducted their affair clandestinely de Gramont s husband found them out and attempted to stop them from seeing each other 121 He was unsuccessful and he divorced de Gramont in 1920 after a period of separation 125 In 1918 she and Barney wrote up a marriage contract stating No one union shall be so strong as this union nor another joining so tender nor relationship so lasting 126 The relationship continued until de Gramont s death in 1954 127 Romaine Brooks edit Barney s longest relationship was with the American painter Romaine Brooks whom she met around 1915 128 Brooks specialized in portraiture and was noted for her somber palette of gray black and white 129 During the 1920s she painted portraits of several members of Barney s social circle including de Gramont and Barney herself 130 nbsp Barney and Romaine Brooks circa 1915 Brooks tolerated Barney s casual affairs well enough to tease her about them and had a few of her own over the years but could become jealous when a new love became serious Usually she simply left town but at one point she gave Barney an ultimatum to choose between her and Dolly Wilde relenting once Barney had given in 131 At the same time while Brooks was devoted to Barney she did not want to live with her as a full time couple she disliked Paris disdained Barney s friends hated the constant socializing on which Barney thrived and felt that she was fully herself only when alone 132 133 To accommodate Brooks s need for solitude they built a summer home consisting of two separate wings joined by a dining room which they called Villa Trait d Union the hyphenated villa Brooks also spent much of the year in Italy or travelling elsewhere in Europe away from Barney 134 Their relationship lasted for over fifty years 135 Dolly Wilde edit Dolly Wilde was the niece of Oscar Wilde and the last of her family to bear the Wilde name She was renowned for her epigrammatic wit but unlike her famous uncle never managed to apply her gifts to any publishable writing her letters are her only legacy She did some work as a translator and was often supported by others including Barney whom she met in 1927 136 nbsp Dolly Wilde in 1925 Barney s support of Wilde included occasional permission to stay for a few weeks at Rue Jacob Brooks disapproval of the relationship increased over the years aggravated by Wilde s presence in Barney s home Wilde the only of Barney s loves to share her enthusiastic rejection of monogamy 137 strove conscientiously but futilely for Brooks favor This culminated in Brooks ultimatum delivered in 1931 in which she described Wilde as a rat gnawing at the very foundation of our friendship 138 Barney chose Brooks and separated from Wilde Brooks later allowed Wilde to return and became less critical of Wilde s ways 139 Like Vivien Wilde was intensely self destructive and struggled deeply with mental illness She attempted suicide several times and spent much of her life addicted to alcohol and heroin Barney a vocal opponent of drug use and alcoholism financed drug detoxifications several times to no avail Wilde even emerged from one nursing home stay with a new dependency on the sleeping draught paraldehyde then available over the counter 140 In 1939 she was diagnosed with breast cancer and refused surgery seeking alternative treatments 141 The following year World War II separated her from Barney she fled Paris for England while Barney went to Italy with Brooks 142 She died in 1941 from causes never fully explained with one of the most common speculations being a paraldehyde overdose 143 Her will written in 1932 named Barney as her only heir 144 World War II and after editBarney s attitudes during World War II have been controversial In 1937 Una Lady Troubridge complained that Barney talked a lot of half baked nonsense about the tyranny of fascism 145 Barney herself had Jewish heritage 146 and since she spent the war in Florence with Brooks was investigated by Italian authorities because of this she was able to escape their attention after her sister Laura arranged for a notarized document attesting to her confirmation 147 Nevertheless she believed Axis propaganda that portrayed the Allies as the aggressors Therefore pro Fascism seemed to her to be a logical consequence of her pacifism An unpublished memoir she wrote during the war years is pro Fascist and anti Semitic quoting speeches by Hitler apparently with approval 148 It is possible that the anti Semitic passages in her memoir were intended to be used as evidence that she was not Jewish 149 alternatively she may have been influenced by Ezra Pound s anti Semitic radio broadcasts 150 Whatever the case she did help a Jewish couple escape Italy providing passage on a ship to the United States 148 By the end of the war her sympathies had again changed and she saw the Allies as liberators 151 Villa Trait d Union was destroyed by bombing After the war Brooks declined to live with Barney in Paris she remained in Italy and they visited each other frequently 152 Their relationship remained mostly monogamous until the mid 1950s when Barney met her last new love Janine Lahovary the wife of a retired Romanian ambassador Lahovary made a point of winning Brooks s friendship Barney reassured Brooks that their relationship still came first and the triangle appeared to be stable 153 nbsp Barney s grave The salon resumed in 1949 and continued to attract young writers for whom it was as much a piece of history as a place where literary reputations were made Truman Capote was an intermittent guest for almost ten years he described the decor as totally turn of the century and remembered that Barney introduced him to the models for several characters in Marcel Proust s In Search of Lost Time 154 Alice B Toklas became a regular after her partner Stein s death in 1946 Fridays in the 1960s honored Mary McCarthy and Marguerite Yourcenar who in 1980 eight years after Barney s death became the first female member of the French Academy 155 Barney did not return to writing epigrams but did publish two volumes of memoirs about other writers she had known Souvenirs Indiscrets Indiscreet Memories 1960 and Traits et Portraits Traits and Portraits 1963 She also worked to find a publisher for Brooks s memoirs and to place her paintings in galleries 156 In the late 1960s Brooks became increasingly reclusive and paranoid she sank into a depression and refused to see the doctors Barney sent Bitter at Lahovary s presence during their last years which she had hoped they would spend exclusively together she finally broke off contact with Barney Barney continued to write to her but received no replies Brooks died in December 1970 and Barney on February 2 1972 aged 95 from heart failure 157 She is buried at Passy Cemetery Paris Ile de France France 158 She left some of her writing including more than 40 000 letters to the Bibliotheque litteraire Jacques Doucet in Paris 159 Legacy editBy the end of Natalie Barney s life her work had been largely forgotten In 1979 Barney was honored with a place setting in Judy Chicago s feminist work of art The Dinner Party In the 1980s Barney began to be recognized for what Karla Jay calls an almost uncanny anticipation of the concerns of later feminist writers 160 English translations of some of her memoirs essays and epigrams appeared in 1992 but most of her plays and poetry are untranslated Her indirect influence on literature through her salon and her many literary friendships can be seen in the number of writers who have addressed or portrayed her in their works Claudine s en va Claudine and Annie 1903 by Colette contains a brief appearance by Barney as Miss Flossie 161 echoing the nickname she had earlier been given in de Pougy s novel Idylle Saphique Renee Vivien wrote many poems about her as well as a Symbolist novel Une femme m apparut A Woman Appeared to Me 1904 in which Barney is described as having eyes as sharp and blue as a blade The charm of peril emanated from her and drew me inexorably 162 Remy de Gourmont addressed her in his Letters to the Amazon and Truman Capote mentioned her in his last unfinished novel Answered Prayers She also appeared in later novels by writers who never met her Anna Livia s Minimax 1991 portrays both Barney and Renee Vivien as still living vampires Francesco Rapazzini s Un soir chez l Amazone 2001 is a historical novel about Barney s salon The English translation by Sally Hamilton and Suzanne Stroh was published as an audiobook read by Suzanne Stroh under the title A Night at the Amazon s 2020 Barney appears in Hall s The Well of Loneliness as the salon hostess Valerie Seymour a symbol of self acceptance in contrast with the protagonist s self hatred 163 164 Hall wrote Valerie placid and self assured created an atmosphere of courage everyone felt very normal and brave when they gathered together at Valerie Seymour s 165 According to Lillian Faderman There was probably no lesbian in the four decades between 1928 and the late 1960s capable of reading English or any of the eleven languages into which the book was translated who was unfamiliar with The Well of Loneliness 166 Lucie Delarue Mardrus wrote love poems to Barney in the early years of the century and in 1930 depicted her in a novel L Ange et les Pervers The Angel and the Perverts in which she said she analyzed and described Natalie at length as well as the life into which she initiated me The protagonist of the novel is a hermaphrodite named Marion who lives a double life frequenting literary salons in female dress then changing from skirt to trousers to attend gay soirees Barney is Laurette Wells a salon hostess who spends much of the novel trying to win back an ex lover loosely based on Renee Vivien 167 The book s portrayal of her is at times harshly critical but she is the only person whose company Marion enjoys Marion tells Wells that she is perverse dissolute self centered unfair stubborn sometimes miserly but a genuine rebel ever ready to incite others to rebellion Y ou are capable of loving someone just as they are even a thief in that lies your only fidelity And so you have my respect 168 After meeting Barney in the 1930s the Russian poet Marina Ivanovna Tsvetaeva addressed her in a Letter to the Amazon 1934 in which she expressed her conflicted feelings about love between women The result according to Terry Castle is an entirely cryptic paranoid overwhelming piece of reverie 169 nbsp Historical marker honoring Barney in Dayton s Cooper Park Barney and the women in her social circle are the subject of Djuna Barnes s Ladies Almanack 1928 a roman a clef written in an archaic Rabelaisian style with Barnes s own illustrations in the style of Elizabethan woodcuts She has the lead role as Dame Evangeline Musset who was in her Heart one Grand Red Cross for the Pursuance the Relief and the Distraction of such Girls as in their Hinder Parts and their Fore Parts and in whatsoever Parts did suffer them most lament Cruelly 170 A Pioneer and a Menace in her youth Dame Musset has reached a witty and learned Fifty 171 she rescues women in distress dispenses wisdom and upon her death is elevated to sainthood Also appearing pseudonymously are de Gramont Brooks Dolly Wilde Hall and her partner Una Lady Troubridge Janet Flanner and Solita Solano and Mina Loy 172 The obscure language inside jokes and ambiguity of Ladies Almanack have kept critics arguing about whether it is an affectionate satire or a bitter attack but Barney herself loved the book and reread it throughout her life 173 On October 26 2009 Barney was honored with a historical marker in her home town of Dayton Ohio The marker is the first in Ohio to note the sexual orientation of its honoree 174 Barney s French novel Amants feminins ou la troisieme believed to have been written in 1926 was published in 2013 It was translated into English by Chelsea Ray and published in 2016 as Women Lovers or The Third Woman 175 Works editIn French edit Quelques Portraits Sonnets de Femmes Paris Ollendorf 1900 Cinq Petits Dialogues Grecs Paris La Plume 1901 as Tryphe Actes et entr actes Paris Sansot 1910 Je me souviens Paris Sansot 1910 Eparpillements Paris Sansot 1910 Pensees d une Amazone Paris Emile Paul 1920 Aventures de l Esprit Paris Emile Paul 1929 Nouvelles Pensees de l Amazone Paris Mercure de France 1939 Souvenirs Indiscrets Paris Flammarion 1960 Traits et Portraits Paris Mercure de France 1963 Amants feminins ou la troisieme Paris ErosOnyx 2013 In English edit Poems amp Poemes Autres Alliances Paris Emile Paul New York Doran 1920 bilingual collection of poetry The One Who Is Legion London Eric Partridge Ltd 1930 Orono Maine National Poetry Foundation 1987 facsimile reprint with an afterword by Edward Lorusso English translations edit A Perilous Advantage The Best of Natalie Clifford Barney New Victoria Publishers 1992 edited and translated by Anna Livia Adventures of the Mind New York University Press 1992 translated by John Spalding Gatton Women Lovers or The Third Woman University of Wisconsin Press 2016 edited and translated by Chelsea RaySee also editLGBT culture in Paris Renee Vivien Prize Lesbian PoetryNotes edit Natalie Barney Brooklyn Museum Retrieved March 25 2023 Barney s roles in Sapphic Idyll and The Well of Loneliness are discussed in Rodriguez 2002 pp 94 95 273 275 regarding the fame of The Well see Lockard 2002 Schenkar 2000 p 177 a b Rodriguez 2002 p 44 Rodriguez 2002 pp 1 14 Rodriguez 2002 pp 10 14 Rodriguez 2002 p 31 Barney recounted this incident in Adventures of the Mind p 31 Rodriguez 2002 pp 30 31 Rodriguez 2002 p 62 Secrest 1974 p 262 Rodriguez 2002 p 39 Robinson 2001 p 38 Rodriguez 2002 pp 59 60 191 Rodriguez 2002 p 52 Benstock 1986 p 272 Rodriguez 2002 pp 56 58 Rodriguez 2002 p 150 Rodriguez 2002 pp 149 164 165 Rodriguez 2002 pp 169 171 Rodriguez 2002 pp 308 330 Rodriguez 2002 pp 88 93 Rodriguez 2002 pp 87 88 92 a b Souhami 2005 p 18 Souhami 2005 p 12 Souhami 2005 pp 18 19 21 Souhami 2005 p 21 Rodriguez 2002 pp 91 95 97 102 103 Rodriguez 2002 pp 103 264 266 Rodriguez 2002 pp 91 93 94 Rodriguez 2002 p 95 Rodriguez 2002 p 97 As translated in Wickes 1976 p 40 Rodriguez 2002 pp 95 101 As translated in Souhami 2005 p 57 Rodriguez 2002 pp 105 106 Barney 1992 p 15 Jay 1988 pp xii xiv Jay 1988 pp 63 67 Barney 1992 pp 19 24 25 a b Jay 1988 pp 11 15 Rodriguez 2002 pp 131 186 Colette 2000 pp 87 95 Jay 1988 p 19 Rodriguez 2002 pp 116 186 187 Barney Souvenirs Indiscrets quoted in Souhami 2005 p 52 Grindea Miron ed 1962 Combat with the Amazon of letters ADAM International Review 29 299 London UK 5 24 Retrieved October 17 2015 As to the moving tributes by Yanette Deletang Tardif Anne Marie Kegels and Lucienne Desnoues they represent the admiration of three of the more interesting laureates of the Prix Renee Vivien which since 1949 the Amazon has awarded to women poets writing in French Klaich Dolores 1974 Woman woman attitudes toward lesbianism New York New York USA Simon and Schuster p 176 ISBN 9780671216955 Retrieved April 27 2016 In 1949 she would endow a Renee Vivien Prize for women poets Wickes 1976 p 198 Barney 1992a p 262 Tyler Bennett Deborah October 1993 4 Barnes Among Women 1920 39 Ladies Almanack and Biography PDF A foreign language which you understand The art and life of Djuna Barnes 1892 1982 Ph D University of Leicester Docket U058027 Archived from the original PDF on November 1 2018 Retrieved April 10 2016 The salon which had altered from the days of the tableaux still held its own in the literary world and the Prix Renee Vivien of 500 000 francs enable young writers such as Marguerite Yourcenar to establish themselves Paul Margueritte Eve Paul Margueritte Lucie July 12 1951 Deux freres deux sœurs deux epoques litteraires Two brothers two sisters two literary eras in French Paris F Editions J Peyronnet p 233 OCLC 751644475 Retrieved April 10 2016 En souvenir de son amie Miss Barney a fonde le Prix Renee Vivien que decerne la Societe des Gens de Lettres Lafitte Jacques Taylor Stephen 1969 Qui est qui en France 1969 1970 Who s who in France 1969 1970 9 edition in French Paris F Editions Jacques Lafitte p 197 ISBN 9782857840138 OCLC 465578548 Retrieved April 10 2016 A retabli le prix Renee Vivien dont elle est la Presidente depuis 1950 a la Societe des gens de lettres Lottman Herbert R September 28 1969 Brown Francis ed In Search of Miss Barney The New York Times Book Review January December 1969 Vol 74 New York New York USA Arno Press p 60 ISSN 0028 7806 Retrieved April 10 2016 As recently as 1950 41 years after Miss Vivien s death she endowed a Renee Vivien poetry prize and became chairman of a committee of the French Society of Men of Letters which awards it Rodriguez 2002 p 119 Rodriguez 2002 pp 125 127 Rodriguez 2002 p 115 Kling 1994 p 137 Washington Mirror March 9 1901 Quoted in Rodriguez 2002 p 121 Rodriguez 2002 p 123 Wickes 1976 pp 50 52 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved February 29 2024 Rodriguez 2002 pp 150 151 Secrest 1974 p 275 Dorf 2019 pp 57 60 Rodriguez 2002 pp 203 204 Benstock 1986 p 291 Dorf 2019 pp 57 64 Barney 1992 p 19 Jay 1988 p 53 Rodriguez 2002 pp 255 256 Schenkar 2000 p xiii Rodriguez 2002 pp xvi 154 177 Schenkar 2000 p 12 Rodriguez 2002 pp 180 183 Schenkar 2000 pp 174 175 Schenkar 2000 p 165 Schenkar 2000 p 164 Rodriguez 2002 p 183 Schenkar 2000 p 144 Dayton Journal November 14 1909 Quoted in Rodriguez 2002 p 172 Rodriguez 2002 p 177 Schenkar 2000 p 195 Wickes 1976 pp 108 109 Rodriguez 2002 pp 221 223 Rodriguez 2002 pp 243 250 Conover 2001 pp 2 3 Wickes 1976 pp 153 167 Rodriguez 2002 pp 255 Hawthorne 2000 pp 69 74 Claridge 2016 p 139 Rodriguez 2002 pp 246 247 Rodriguez 2002 p 260 Flanner 1979 p 48 Rodriguez 2002 pp 249 50 301 Rodriguez 2002 pp 250 251 Conley 2002 p 20 Barney 1992 p 97 Wickes 1976 p 120 Rodriguez 2002 p 190 and Jay 1988 p 26 all refer to de Gourmont s condition simply as lupus but Denkinger 1937 p 1148 and other French sources such as Gogibu 2005 call it lupus tuberculeux apparently lupus vulgaris which is a form of tuberculosis of the skin unrelated to systemic lupus erythematosus the disease now commonly known as lupus Rodriguez 2002 pp 191 196 199 201 a b Benstock 1986 p 296 a b Jay 1988 p 29 Rodriguez 2002 pp 257 258 Rodriguez 2002 p 257 Rodriguez 2002 p 259 Barney 1992 p 118 Barney 1992 p 123 Benstock 1986 pp 298 299 Rodriguez 2002 p 303 304 Rodriguez 2002 p 139 Barney 1992 p 103 Schenkar 2000 p 360 Livia 1992 p 181 I would be asked at dinner parties what I was working on and replying Natalie Clifford Barney I expected the usual post Jean Chalon response What The lesbian Don Juan Schenkar 2000 p 156 and Rodriguez 2002 p 298 give slightly different accounts of this list Wickes 1976 pp 9 87 Flanner 1979 p 43 Rapazzini 2005 pp 7 8 Rodriguez 2002 pp 196 199 a b Rapazzini 2005 pp 8 10 Rodriguez 2002 pp 197 199 Sources differ on the year of their meeting Jay Rodriguez and Souhami place the meeting in 1910 Rodriguez says probably Rapazzini says 1909 producing a letter from the Bibliotheque litteraire Jacques Doucet s collection of Barney material a b Rapazzini 2005 p 11 Rapazzini 2005 p 12 Rodriguez 2002 pp 227 228 Secrest 1974 p 138 Rodriguez 2002 pp 198 199 Rapazzini 2005 pp 6 7 Rapazzini 2005 pp 7 24 The exact date of Barney and Brooks first meeting is uncertain Jay 1988 p 29 says probably on the eve of war Rodriguez 2002 p 223 puts it around the start of the war Souhami 2005 p 137 says 1915 Wickes 1976 p 145 says probably in 1915 and Rapazzini 2005 p 17 says October 1916 Rodriguez 2002 p 224 Jay 1988 p 31 Rodriguez 2002 pp 295 301 Souhami 2005 pp 137 139 146 Secrest 1974 p 277 Rodriguez 2002 pp 227 295 Rodriguez 2002 p 223 Schenkar 2000 pp 7 14 359 Jay 1988 p 32 Rodriguez 2002 pp 280 299 Rodriguez 2002 pp 300 301 Schenkar 2000 pp 280 293 Schenkar 2000 p 269 Rodriguez 2002 p 318 Schenkar 2000 pp 37 48 Rodriguez 2002 pp 323 324 Souhami 1999 p 332 Rodriguez 2002 p 311 Rodriguez 2002 p 324 a b Livia 1992 pp 192 193 Livia 1992 p 191 Rodriguez 2002 p 315 calls this a plausible theory Rodriguez 2002 p 317 Rodriguez 2002 pp 326 327 Secrest 1974 p 368 Rodriguez 2002 pp 341 344 Wickes 1976 pp 255 256 Rodriguez 2002 pp 336 353 354 Souhami 2005 p 194 Rodriguez 2002 pp 362 365 Hawthorne 2012 p 91 Jay 1988 p xiii Jay 1988 p xv Wickes 1976 p 98 Jay 1988 pp 9 13 Stimpson 1981 pp 369 373 Love 2000 pp 115 116 Hall 1981 p 352 Faderman 1981 p 322 Livia 1995 pp 22 23 Delarue Mardrus 1995 pp 80 81 Castle 2003 p 658 Barnes 1992 p 6 Barnes 1992 pp 9 34 Weiss 1995 pp 151 153 Barnes 1992 pp xxxii xxxiv The Columbus Dispatch 2009 Barney 2016 References editBooks about Natalie Barney edit Jay Karla 1988 The Amazon and the Page Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 20476 3 Rodriguez Suzanne 2002 Wild Heart A Life Natalie Clifford Barney and the Decadence of Literary Paris New York HarperCollins ISBN 0 06 093780 7 Souhami Diana 2005 Wild Girls Paris Sappho and Art The Lives and Loves of Natalie Barney and Romaine Brooks New York St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 34324 8 Wickes George 1976 The Amazon of Letters New York Putnam ISBN 0 399 11864 0 Other references edit Barnes Djuna 1992 Ladies Almanack New York New York University Press ISBN 0 8147 1180 4 Barney Natalie Clifford 1992a Adventures of the Mind Translated by Gatton John Spalding New York New York University Press ISBN 0 8147 1178 2 Barney Natalie Clifford 1992 Anna Livia ed A Perilous Advantage The Best of Natalie Clifford Barney Norwich VT New Victoria Publishers Inc ISBN 0 934678 38 3 Barney Natalie Clifford 2016 Women lovers or The third woman Translated by Ray Chelsea Madison Wisconsin University of Wisconsin Press pp xviii ISBN 978 0 299 30693 9 OCLC 956320847 Benstock Shari 1986 Women of the Left Bank Paris 1900 1940 Texas University of Texas Press ISBN 0 292 79040 6 Castle Terry 2003 The Literature of Lesbianism New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 12510 0 English translations of Tsvetaeva s Letter to the Amazon can be found in Castle s anthology and in Tsvetaeva Marina trans Sonja Franeta October 31 1994 Letter to an Amazon The Harvard Gay amp Lesbian Review 1 4 9 Claridge Laura P April 12 2016 The lady with the Borzoi Blanche Knopf literary tastemaker extraordinaire First ed New York ISBN 9780374114251 OCLC 908176194 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Colette 2000 The Pure and the Impure Translated by Herma Briffault New York New York Review of Books ISBN 0 940322 48 X Lesbian literary figure honored with Ohio historical marker noting sexual orientation The Columbus Dispatch Archived from the original on June 29 2012 Retrieved October 26 2009 Conley John J 2002 The Suspicion of Virtue Women Philosophers in Neoclassical France Ithaca Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 4020 3 Conover Anne 2001 Olga Rudge and Ezra Pound What Thou Lovest Well New Haven amp London Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 08703 9 Delarue Mardrus Lucie 1995 The Angel and the Perverts Translated by Anna Livia New York New York University Press ISBN 0 8147 5098 2 Denkinger Marc December 1937 Remy de Gourmont Critique PMLA 52 4 Modern Language Association 1147 1160 doi 10 2307 458509 JSTOR 458509 S2CID 163530219 Dorf Samuel N 2019 Performing Antiquity Ancient Greek Music and Dance from Paris to Delphi 1890 1930 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190612092 Faderman Lillian 1981 Surpassing the Love of Men New York William Morrow amp Co ISBN 0 688 00396 6 Flanner Janet 1979 Paris was Yesterday 1925 1939 New York Penguin ISBN 0 14 005068 X Gogibu Vincent January 2005 Sur la correspondance inedite Gourmont Valery Bulletin des etudes valeryennes in French 98 99 235 247 JSTOR 44858430 Hall Radclyffe 1981 The Well of Loneliness New York Avon ISBN 0 380 54247 1 Hawthorne Melanie 2000 Contingent loves Simone de Beauvoir and sexuality U of Virginia P pp 69 74 ISBN 978 0 8139 1974 4 Hawthorne Melanie 2012 You are Here Dix Neuf 16 87 111 doi 10 1179 1478731811Z 0000000009 S2CID 218770922 Kling Jean L 1994 Alice Pike Barney Her Life and Art Washington DC Smithsonian Institution Press p 24 ISBN 1 56098 344 2 Livia Anna 1992 The Trouble with Heroines Natalie Clifford Barney and Anti Semitism A Perilous Advantage pp 181 193 Livia Anna 1995 Introduction Lucie Delarue Mardrus and the Phrenetic Harlequinade In Delarue Mardrus ed The Angel and the Perverts pp 1 60 Lockard Ray Anne 2002 Brooks Romaine glbtq An Encyclopedia of Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender and Queer Culture Archived from the original on March 8 2007 Retrieved September 21 2006 Love Heather Summer 2000 Hard Times and Heartaches Radclyffe Hall s The Well of Loneliness Journal of Lesbian Studies 4 2 115 128 doi 10 1300 J155v04n02 08 S2CID 147760713 Rapazzini Francesco Fall 2005 Elisabeth de Gramont Natalie Barney s eternal mate South Central Review 22 3 Johns Hopkins University Press 6 31 doi 10 1353 scr 2005 0053 S2CID 170974270 Robinson Christopher 2001 Barney Natalie Clifford In Aldrich Robert Wotherspoon Garry eds Who s who in Gay and Lesbian History From Antiquity to World War II Volume 1 Routledge ISBN 0 415 15982 2 Schenkar Joan 2000 Truly Wilde The Unsettling Story of Dolly Wilde Oscar s Unusual Niece New York Basic Books ISBN 0 465 08772 8 Secrest Meryle 1974 Between Me and Life A Biography of Romaine Brooks Garden City NY Doubleday p 275 ISBN 0 385 03469 5 Souhami Diana 1999 The Trials of Radclyffe Hall New York Doubleday ISBN 0 385 48941 2 Stimpson Catharine R Winter 1981 Zero Degree Deviancy The Lesbian Novel in English Critical Inquiry 8 2 363 379 doi 10 1086 448159 JSTOR 1343168 S2CID 162249181 Weiss Andrea 1995 Paris Was a Woman Portraits From the Left Bank San Francisco Harper San Francisco ISBN 0 06 251313 3 Further reading editBonnevier Katarina 2007 Behind Straight Curtains towards a queer feminist theory of architecture Stockholm Axl Books ISBN 978 91 975901 6 7 Broe Mary Lynn 1993 Women s writing in exile Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 9780807818497 Chalon Jean 1979 Portrait of a Seductress The World of Natalie Barney New York Crown Publishers ISBN 0 517 53264 6 Inness Sherrie A October 20 2005 Novel Lesbian glbtq An Encyclopedia of Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender and Queer Culture Archived from the original on September 1 2006 Retrieved September 19 2006 Orenstein Gloria Feman Cleyrergue Berthe 1979 The Salon of Natalie Clifford Barney An Interview with Berthe Cleyrergue Signs 4 3 484 496 doi 10 1086 493633 ISSN 0097 9740 JSTOR 3173396 S2CID 144214812 External links editNatalie Clifford Barney at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource The Temple of Friendship at ruevisconti com French language dozens of photos Djuna Barnes Papers 102 linear ft are housed at the McKeldin Library at the University of Maryland Romaine Brooks Papers 1940 1968 1 1 linear ft are housed at the Smithsonian Institution Archives of American Art When Natalie Barney met Oscar Wilde Letter from Natalie Clifford Barney to Liane de Pougy in French Works by Natalie Clifford Barney at Project Gutenberg Works by Natalie Clifford Barney at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Natalie Clifford Barney amp oldid 1188811905, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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