Uranian Poetry

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The Uranians were a relatively obscure group of largely British and American pederastic poets, which flourished between 1880 and 1930. The group's name derives, in part, from the Platonic theory of "heavenly" or "Uranian" pederasty (see Plato's Symposium). Uranian poetry was characterized by a sentimental infatuation for pubescent (or nearly pubescent) boys, and by a use of conservative verse forms.

The Uranian writer John Addington Symonds is credited with being the 1st person to use the term "homosexual" in the English-language, in his book A Problem in Greek Ethics (1873/1901). This same book was the also the first to use the term "boy-love" to refer to homosexuality.

Some of these Uranians were William Johnson, Lord Alfred Douglas (1870-1945), John Gambril Nicholson (1886-1931), Edwin Emmanuel Bradford (1860-1944), George Cecil Ives (1867-1950), and John Addington Symonds (1840-1892). Marginally associated with their world were more famous writers such as Oscar Wilde and others. The flamboyantly eccentric novelist Frederick Rolfe (also known as "Baron Corvo") was a unifying presence in their social network. The fame of their work was limited by late Victorian and Edwardian taboos, and by the extremely small editions (often privately printed) in which their verse was promulgated.

The first anthology of homosexual literature to be published in America - Men and Boys: An Anthology (1924) - is credited to the American Uranian poet Edward Mark Slocum. Likewise, Edward Prime-Stevenson, best known for writing what is sometimes described as the first explicitly gay American novel - Imre (1906) - had "sought to provide a comprehensive and sympathetic treatment of homosexuality, or what [...] he called "Uranianism."[1] Prime-Stevenson published his nearly 650-page cultural and historical study of homosexuality titled The Intersexes: A History of Similisexualism as a Problem in Social Life, in 1908 under the penname Xavier Mayne.[2] Professor of English Eric L. Tribunella, wrote in 2023:

In a long chapter of The Intersexes on the “aesthetic professions,” Stevenson provides a survey of homosexual writers and literary works from ancient Greece to the present and, remarkably, includes a section on homosexual juvenile fiction, perhaps the first such attempt to identify a body of gay children’s literature in English. Stevenson was also one of the first writers to take seriously the possibility and value of homosexual children, whom he called “young Uranians,” as opposed to his contemporaries, who saw homosexual activity or desire in children as evidence of temporary or disordered perversion.[3]

Prof. Tribunella includes Eduard Bertz, Howard Sturgis, Horace Vachell, Horatio Alger and Stevenson himself, among his list of Uranian poets.

Michael Matthew Kaylor's scholarly work has contributed significantly to the understanding of Uranian poets and poetry.

References

  1. Eric L. Tribunella, Male Homosexuality in Children's Literature, 1867–1918: The Young Uranians (Routledge: New York / Oxford, 2023, p. 1). [Annas Archive PDF Link].
  2. Ibid.
  3. Ibid.