- Marc-André Raffalovich
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Marc-André Raffalovich (11 September 1864 – 14 February 1934) was a French poet and writer on homosexuality, best known today for his patronage of the arts and for his lifelong relationship with the poet, John Gray.
Contents
Early life
Raffalovich was born into a wealthy Jewish family, which moved from Odessa in the Ukraine to the French capital, Paris, in 1863. His brother, Arthur, became a noted Parisian financier and economist. André went up to study in Oxford in 1882 before settling down in London and opening a salon in the 1890s. Oscar Wilde attended, calling the event a saloon rather than a salon.[1] This is where Raffalovich met the love and companion of his life, John Gray. In 1890, his sister Sophie married the Irish nationalist politician William O'Brien (1852-1928).
Writings
In 1894, Raffalovich started to contribute on the subject of homosexuality (unisexualité, as he called it) to the Archives de l'Anthropologie Criminelle, a prestigious revue founded in Lyon by Alexandre Lacassagne, a pioneer criminologist and professor of forensic medicine. He soon became recognised as an expert in the field, engaging in correspondence with other researchers throughout Europe.
His magnum opus, Uranisme et unisexualité: étude sur différentes manifestations de l'instinct sexuel was published in 1896. In 1897, he started working on Annales de l'unisexualité, and les Chroniques de l'unisexualité with the aim of cataloging everything published on the subject of homosexuality. These have proved useful to historians up to this day.
Conversion
In 1896, under the influence of John Gray, Raffalovich embraced Catholicism and joined the tertiary order of the Dominicans as Brother Sebastian in honour of Saint Sebastian. At the same time Gray was ordained a priest. In 1905, Gray was appointed to the parish of St Patrick in the working class Cowgate area of Edinburgh. Raffalovich followed and settled down nearby, purchasing No. 9, Whitehouse Terrace. He contributed greatly to the cost of St Peter's Church in Morningside, Edinburgh, of which Gray was appointed the first parish priest. In Whitehouse Terrace, Raffalovich established a successful salon. His guests included Henry James, Lady Margaret Sackville, Compton Mackenzie,[2] Max Beerbohm and Herbert Read.[1]
Theories
There is a close link between Raffalovich's views on homosexuality and his Catholic beliefs. He had moved on from the contemporary vision of homosexuality as a "third sex" to consider it simply as an expression of human sexuality. He made the distinction between the born and the chosen inverts. He believed the former worth considering while the latter he thought to be mired in vice and perversion.
Raffalovich drew, however, a difference with heterosexuality based on the idea of vice and virtue. He regarded a heterosexual's destiny as marriage and starting a family, whereas a homosexual's duty, he believed, was to overcome and transcend his desires with artistic pursuits and spiritual - even mystical - friendships.
These views led him to clash with Magnus Hirschfeld and the members of the Scientific Humanitarian Committee, with Raffalovich accusing them of being propagandists for moral dissolution and of wanting to destroy whole generations. He even supported Germany's Paragraph 175 as a way to prevent total moral chaos.
Raffalovich's attempts to reconcile his homosexuality and his Catholic beliefs pushed him further into his criticism of the early gay liberation movement; in 1910, he finally stopped commenting altogether on the subject which had occupied such a place in his life. Instead, he focused on his Edinburgh salon and his support of young artists.
He died in 1934, the same year as his lifelong companion, John Gray.
Bibliography
Note: Most of Raffalovich's non-fiction writings are available online from the "Archives d'anthropologie criminelle" (AAC) as *.jpg files.
- 1884 Cyril and Lionel, and other poems. A volume of sentimental studies, Kegan Paul & Co., London 1884, 102 pp.
- 1885 Tuberose and meadow-sweet [poems]. D. Boque, London 1885, pp. 120.
- 1886 In fancy dress [poems], Walter Scott, London 1886, pp. 148.
- 1889 It is thyself [poems], Walter Scott, London 1889, pp. 146.
- 1890 A willing exile. A novel, F. V. White & Co., London 1890, 2 voll.
- 1894 Quelques observations sur l'inversion, "AAC", n. 50, IX 1894, pp. 216-218.
- 1894 L'éducation des invertis, "AAC", n. 54, IX 1894, pp. 738-740.
- 1895 The thread and the path [poems], David Nutt, London 1895, pp. 106.
- 1895 L'uranisme. Inversion sexuelle congenitale. Observations at conseils, "AAC", X 1895, pp. 99-127.
- 1895 John Addington Symonds, "AAC", X 1895, pp. 241-244.
- 1895 L'inversion sexuelle, "AAC", X 1895, pp. 325-332.
- 1895 A propos du Roman d'un inverti et de quelques travaux récents sur l'inversion sexuelle, "AAC", X 1895, pp. 333-336.
- 1895 L'affaire Oscar Wilde, "AAC", X 1895, pp. 445-477.
- 1895 Homosexualité et hétérosexualité, trois confessions, "AAC", X 1895, pp. 748-758.
- 1896 Unisexualité anglaise, "AAC", XI 1896, pp. 429-431.
- 1896 Uranisme et unisexualité: étude sur differentes manifestations de l'instinct sexuel, Storck, Lyon & Masson, Paris 1896, 363 pp.
- 1897 Annales de l'unisexualité, "AAC", XII 1897, pp. 87-102 e 185-224. (.pdf).
- 1903 L'affaire du prince de Bragance, "AAC", XVIII 1903, pp. 159-161.
- 1903 A propos de l'affaire Shakespeare-Bacon, "AAC", XVIII 1903, pp. 662-665.
- 1904 Les groupes uranistes à Paris et à Berlin, "AAC", n. 132, XIX 1904, pp. 926-936.
- 1905 A propos du syndacat des uranistes, "AAC", XX nn. 136/137, pp. 283-286.
- 1906 Sur Richard Burton, "AAC", XXI 1906, pp. 474-479.
- 1907 Chroniques de l'unisexualité, "AAC", XXII 1907, pp. 606-632 e 767-786. (.pdf).
- 1907 Des mariages entre hommes, "AAC", XXII 1907, pp. 267-268.
- 1909 Chronique de l'unisexualité, "AAC", XXIV 1909, pp. 353-391.
- 1910 L'amour homosexuel, & The origine [sic] and development of the moral ideas, par E. Westermarck (chap. XLIII), "AAC", XXV 1910, pp. 291-295 e 295-305.
References
- ^ a b Raffalovich, Marc-André (1864–1934). glbtq
- ^ Papers of and relating to Marc-André Raffalovich. Archives Hub
Sources
- Marc-André Raffalovich
- Cardon, Patrick, A homosexual militant at the beginning of the century: Marc Andre Raffalovich, "Journal of Homosexuality", XXV 1993 (1-2), pp. 183-191.
- Cardon, Patrick, Discours littéraire et scientifiques fin de siècle : Les Archives d'Anthropologie Criminelle du Dr Lacassagne de Lyon, 1886-1914, Université de Provence, 1984.
- Cardon, Patrick, Un pionnier de l'homoliberté. Avec Marc-André Raffalovitch, l'homosexualité cessait d'être une inversion monstrueuse de l'hétérosexualité. Numéro 389 du 12 octobre 1989 du journal Gai Pied Hebdo (France)
- McCormak, Jerusha Hull, The Man who was Dorian Gray, St. Martin's Press, New York, 2000.
- Rosario, Vernon, L'Irrésistible ascension du pervers, EPEL "les grands classiques de l'érotologie moderne", 2000 (chapitre 3).
- Sewell, père Brocard (dir.), Two friends: John Gray and André Raffalovich: essays. Biographical and critical, Saint Albert's Press, Aylesford (Kent) 1963.
- Sewell, père Brocard, Footnote to the Nineties: a memoir of John Gray and André Raffalovich, Cecil and Emilia Woolf, London 1968. ISBN 0900821019.
- Aldrich R. & Wotherspoon G., Who's Who in Gay and Lesbian History, from Antiquity to WWII, Routledge, London, 2001
External links
- Works by or about Marc-André Raffalovich in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
Categories:- 1864 births
- 1934 deaths
- Converts to Roman Catholicism from Judaism
- English Jews
- English Roman Catholics
- Gay writers
- Imperial Russian emigrants to France
- LGBT Christians
- LGBT Jews
- LGBT rights activists from France
- LGBT writers from France
- LGBT writers from the United Kingdom
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