Michael Davidson

From NewgonWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Michael Davidson's famous autobiography

Michael Childers Davidson (1897 - 1975) was a British journalist, memoirist, and an open pederast. He was an English foreign correspondent widely respected for his intelligence, keen observation and sympathy for the underdog. He joined the Berlin communists against Hitler, crossed wartime Morocco in Arab disguise, and opposed the British authorities in Malaya and Cyprus. In 1962, Gay Men's Press published his autobiography, The World, The Flesh and Myself. In an England where homosexuality was still illegal and widely reviled, Davidson caused a sensation with the book's opening sentence, “This is the life-history of a lover of boys.” The book impressed many with its candid accounts of his journalistic and sexual adventures.[1]

Life and work

Davidson was born in London on 24 February 1897 into an upper-middle-class family in, but he was brought up in Guernsey from the ages of one to eleven, when the family moved to Bitterne in Hampshire. He was educated at Lancing, England.

Davidson joined the army in 1914, and was wounded at Paschendaele in 1916. After the war, he made an unsuccessful attempt to set himself up as a farmer in South Africa. In 1922, he became a newspaper reporter, initially in Norwich. In 1928, he moved to Berlin where, apart from a stint as a proof-reader in the International Labour Office in Geneva, he was to remain until 1933, supporting himself as a translator of leftist books and articles. He also joined the Communist Party of Germany out of a belief that only it was seriously countering the rise of the Nazis. When Hitler came to power, at great danger to himself, he wrote newspaper articles about the full implications of Hitler's ideology, which he had seen up-close, but, apart from the communist Daily Worker, British newspapers were not interested in publishing them. In July 1933, threats by the Nazi step-father of a boy with whom he was having a liaison caused him to flee at short notice, and return to London. There, his continued involvement with communism, albeit brief and unenthusiastic, drew the attention of MI5, who kept an eye on him for the rest of his career. He spent the rest of his working life serving as a foreign correspondent for The Observer, The News Chronicle, The New York Times and other newspapers,[2] drawing the ire of the British colonial authorities in Malaya and Cyprus for his revelations.

At age 26, Davidson met W. H. Auden, then 16, and they began a "poetic relationship". Davidson mentored Auden and was responsible for his poems first being published.

Davidson was open about his love for adolescent boys. His 1962 autobiography The World, the Flesh and Myself, described by Arthur Koestler in The Observer as one of the three best books of that year,[3] begins: "This is the life-history of a lover of boys." His follow-up memoir Some Boys (1969) focused entirely on the boys he had met around the world, while working as a foreign correspondent. His last book, Sicilian Vespers,, about Favignana, the tiny island off Sicily where he lived from 1966 to 1973, together with a selection of his personal correspondence and a brief biography, was posthumously published.

Published books

For a more complete list, see “A bibliography of Davidson’s writings” in Davidson’s Sicilian Vespers listed below, pp. 357–60.

  • The World, the Flesh and Myself. 1st edition, London: Arthur Barker, 1962. Four editions, 1966-97. Current edition, London: Arcadian Dreams, 2022.
  • Some Boys. 1st edition, London: David Bruce & Watson, 1969. American and only unexpurgated edition, Kingston, New York: Oliver Layton, 1971; 2nd British edition, London: GMP, 1988.
  • Sicilian Vespers and other writings London: Arcadian Dreams, 2021.

References

  1. For lengthy information, see Greek Love. Reviews of his famous autobiography. Kindle
  2. Aldrich, Robert (2002): Who's Who in Contemporary Gay and Lesbian History - from World War II to the present day, page 104.
  3. The Observer, 23 December 1962, p. 7

External links