Book contents
- Queer Kinship after Wilde
- Queer Kinship after Wilde
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Queering Kinship/Kinship as Queer Politics
- Part II Queer Retreat and Cosmopolitan Community
- Chapter 3 An Extraordinary Marriage
- Chapter 4 Decadent Bachelordom and Transnational Adoption
- Part III Decadent Modernism and Eroticized Kinship
- Notes
- References
- Index
Chapter 3 - An Extraordinary Marriage
The Mackenzies and the Queer Cosmopolitanism of Capri
from Part II - Queer Retreat and Cosmopolitan Community
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2022
- Queer Kinship after Wilde
- Queer Kinship after Wilde
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Queering Kinship/Kinship as Queer Politics
- Part II Queer Retreat and Cosmopolitan Community
- Chapter 3 An Extraordinary Marriage
- Chapter 4 Decadent Bachelordom and Transnational Adoption
- Part III Decadent Modernism and Eroticized Kinship
- Notes
- References
- Index
Summary
Chapter Three focuses on Faith and Compton Mackenzie’s choice to rethink their marriage in highly unconventional terms, allowing one another to conduct affairs with other partners, spending a great deal of time apart while at the same time remaining committed to an ideal of loving friendship with one another. They came to this agreement while living abroad on the Italian island of Capri and mingling with the queer expatriate community of Decadent aesthetes on the island. This chapter relies on analysis of the Mackenzies’ life writing and fiction as well as extensive work with their diaries, notebooks, and correspondence to develop an understanding of the rhythms of their alternative form of affiliation and the manner in which their porous bond was influenced by their time on Capri. Throughout the chapter, I consider the role of place in the Mackenzies’ experiences, the manner in which the islandness of Capri enabled and sheltered queer experiments in connection, while at the same time attending to the manner in which visitors to Capri extracted pleasure from the island and its inhabitants, approaching the site according to an ethos of “Mediterraneanism” that structurally resembles Orientalism.
Keywords
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Queer Kinship after WildeTransnational Decadence and the Family, pp. 95 - 125Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022