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Thread: Brideshead Revisited

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    Registered User Tabac's Avatar
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    Brideshead Revisited

    I have a friend who thinks that Waugh's Brideshead Revisited is a "gay" novel. I contend that while it has a gay thread, that is not enough to make it a "gay" novel, as there are certainly heterosexual threads as well. Note that this friend is a homosexual of some 80+ years and truly believes that "it's all about sex".

    I would appreciate your input.

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    Ditsy Pixie Niamh's Avatar
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    I wouldnt call it a gay novel, but it is a very sexual novel, and does have a homosexual sub plot in the story based around sebastian. I love it though and loved the bbc drama version of it as well.( Jeremy Irons*faints*)
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    Registered User Tabac's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Niamh View Post
    I wouldnt call it a gay novel, but it is a very sexual novel, and does have a homosexual sub plot in the story based around sebastian. I love it though and loved the bbc drama version of it as well.( Jeremy Irons*faints*)
    Sexual: that's exactly it!

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    closed Bysshe's Avatar
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    I don't know. It's obviously quite homoerotic in places, but there's nothing overtly sexual, so I wouldn't go far as to call it a "gay" novel. It's all down to interpretation, though. I've heard so many different opinions on how "gay" the relationship between Charles and Sebastian is. Waugh sometimes hints at things, but it's difficult to say how platonic or not their relationship is. The only quote people ever seem to use as proof is that thing Charles says about sins early on in the novel. I can't remember what it is, off-hand. I'll have to look it up.

    I loved the TV series too, although it was always Anthony Andrews for me...

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    Vincit Qui Se Vincit Virgil's Avatar
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    Here's my thoughts on this. First it is a GREAT novel and a GREAT BBC production. If anyone enjoys books on tabe, Jeremy Irons does a fine job reading the novel too.

    I don't recall seeing anything explicitedly homosexual in the novel, but the two main characters are incredibly chummy, for lack of a better word. What I recall seeing somewhere was that Waugh based the early parts of the novel on his University experience (Cambridge or Oxford, I can't remember?) and at the early parts of the 20th century there was a lot of homosexual exploration/experimentation by students at that college, even if they were not homosexual. Waugh was not homosexual but he did admit to having partaken in this. (I don't understand why one would if one was not homosexual, but there are a lot of things i don't know.) The Jeremy Irons character (I can't remember the name) went on to marry and have heterosexual affairs in the novel. So I would assume he is not homosexual.

    This is waht I remember seeing somewhere, whether it's true or not I can't vouch for it. If someone else comes across this, please post it here. I would be interested.
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    There is always so much debate on whether Charles is gay or straight...I wonder why no one's ever considered that Charles might simply be bi

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    Anthony Blanche is overtly gay! But the novel is too good to be limited by a genre tag. Equally strong tags might: roman catholic, aristocratic, campus, alcohol... It's many themes tag it as a GREAT novel, a classic that can't be dumped into one genre.

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    Registered User kelby_lake's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mal4mac View Post
    Anthony Blanche is overtly gay! But the novel is too good to be limited by a genre tag. Equally strong tags might: roman catholic, aristocratic, campus, alcohol... It's many themes tag it as a GREAT novel, a classic that can't be dumped into one genre.
    Exactly. Calling something a 'gay novel' implies that its only purpose is to promote homosexuality and that it isn't of any interest to someone who is straight. Even 'Giovanni's Room' has other themes.

    I wouldn't call Brideshead Revisited a 'gay novel'. It's more like a nostalgic one; Sebastian is an eternal innocent- or at least, wants to stay one. He's the dying aristocracy. As for how 'friendly' Charles and Sebastian were...the sunbathing was a bit suss, wasn't it?

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    Just to be pedantic, the wonderful tv adaptation was by ITV, not the Beeb . as for being a "gay" book, I agree, it shouldn't be called such, it's a good book, with many themes running through it.

    Niamh and Bysshe, I am watching The Pallisers at the moment, a wonderful series from the 1970s from the series of books by Trollope. What does this have to do with us, I hear you ask? Well, I'm almost at the end of the 26 part series, and who do you think has popped up in it? Only both Jeremy Irons and Anthony Andrews as best friends. I didn't realise they had worked together prior to BR. They must have been so young. I think the thread of the story is that Jeremy is going to end up with Anthony's sister, with Anthony's family being aristocrats, while Jeremy is from a humbler background. Hmm.....ring any bells? I presume the producers of BR must have seen them in this. It's well worth a watch if you get the chance. But then I love Trollope. Oh, and it was always Anthony for me too

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    Registered User Emil Miller's Avatar
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    Brideshead Revisited is not a homosexual novel although homosexuality was rife in the real life family that Waugh based it on. Similarly, the group of old Etonians that Waugh frequented at Oxford, and who are a prominent feature of the story, were mostly homosexual.

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    Neo-Scriblerus Modest Proposal's Avatar
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    I'm just about finished with the novel and have a few thoughts on this question.

    My main however, is: with how candid Waugh was about Blanche's homosexuality--very--why would he have been so reeticent about showing Charles and Sebanstian as such? I think this book is more about love than sex. I don't think Waugh was 'implying' or afraid to say what he meant. The main character admits to loving Sebastian but never hints at their having sex. Blanche talks about sex a lot and he isn't even the POV character.

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    [QUOTE=Tabac;342132]
    I have a friend who thinks that Waugh's Brideshead Revisited is a "gay" novel. I contend that while it has a gay thread, that is not enough to make it a "gay" novel, as there are certainly heterosexual threads as well. Note that this friend is a homosexual of some 80+ years and truly believes that "it's all about sex".

    I don't think it is a 'gay' novel. Sebastian and Charles are definitely lovers, but among the European upper class, especially the aristocracy (Sebastian is an aristocrat), sexual experimentation had long been accepted. Evelyn Waugh was bisexual.

    I don't think it is relevant. All that matters is that Waugh was one of the greatest comic/ satirical writers of the 20th century. His prose is close to perfection, his characters are as memorable as Dickens' or Shakespeare's and he is the funniest writer in the English language- funnier than PG Wodehouse. His reputation should be higher than it is.

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    Mr RonPrice Ron Price's Avatar
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    REVISITING BRIDESHEAD

    Revisiting Brideshead was televised last night.1 I had seen this 11 part series on television back in the 1980s or early 1990s after it first came out in 1981. I had not read the novel, Brideshead Revisited, The Sacred & Profane Memories of Captain Charles Ryder by English writer Evelyn Waugh which was first published in 1945. In 2015 I had the pleasure of seeing the 2008 film version.2 I wrote about the TV series and the film after I had retired from my 50 year life-experience as a student and in paid employment, 1949-1999, and after I had seen the series a second time in Australia.

    The Flyte family who lived at Brideshead symbolises the English nobility, and Waugh's marvelously melancholy elegy brings that nobility to life. One reads in the book that Brideshead has "the atmosphere of a better age." Viewers, millions, enjoy the opulent and aristocratic edge, the glitter and gloss, the grandeur and the glamour of this wealthy family estate, and of a time in our history now quickly dying-out, if not long gone. In this one house, as one reviewer put it, is a fading, a dying, empire; or is it just sublime real estate. For many, in the millennial and generation Z, I can just about hear them clicking on the remote and uttering a now familiar word, a word especially familiar to people like me who retired after more than 30 years in classrooms: borrrring!

    There's room for more than one Brideshead in this far less glamorous day and age, though, room at least for the baby-boomers and for the silent generation among the viewing public, with the glitter and gloss of society now often tarnished beyond repair in our complex 21st century.-Ron Price with thanks to 1ABC2, 11:55-12:45, 19 & 20/9/’11, and 2ABCTV, 8/2/'15, 10:05-11:30 pm.

    1981 was a bad year in the UK
    with 2 & ½ million out of work
    and a list of bad news to fill all
    those English heads to the top.1

    There was nothing like this bit
    of escapism from the real world
    into a nostalgic, a romanticized
    past, homoerotic suggestiveness,
    Evelyn Waugh’s WW2 vision.2

    I’ll let all you readers find out
    what it all meant to Waugh, to
    his critics & to modern viewers
    whose views are available for us
    to see on that new source of info:
    the internet, the world-wide-web.3

    1 See Wikipedia for all the bad news in 1981.
    2 Waugh wrote in the preface to the 1959 edition of the book that he was appalled by his book, and that he found rereading it distasteful. I was only 15 at the time, and had read none of Waugh. I lived in Ontario’s Golden Horseshoe, had just joined the Baha’i Faith, and was in love with sport and at least 3 girls. The plot of the book was set in 1943-1944, in the months when I was in utero.
    3 I was particularly interested in Waugh’s defence of Catholicism, his critique of secular humanism, and his emphasis on the many forms of conversion that take place in peoples’ lives.

    Ron Price
    20/9/'11 to 12/2/'15.
    -------------------------------------------------------------
    BRIDESHEAD REVISITED

    Part 1:

    In the six months between December 1943 and June 1944 the novel Brideshead Revisited was written in England. In those same months I existed in utero on the other side of the Atlantic in Canada. When Evelyn Waugh, the author of this novel, wrote his preface to a revised edition of the book in 1959, and Fr. Ronald Knox published his biography of Waugh in that same year---I was 15 and had just joined the Baha’i Faith, and was in the middle of my adolescent baseball and ice-hockey careers. By my 20s my sport-playing days had ended, although I have remained a Baha’i all my life.

    Waugh converted to Roman Catholicism in his late 20s and remained a Catholic although, as Martin Stannard the author of a two-volume biography of Waugh noted, “he struggled against the dryness of his soul”1 In the end, this is a common experience for believers of all Faiths and non-believers of all philosophies alike, especially in our troubled-age. Stannard saw Waugh as “the greatest novelist of his generation.”2

    Part 2:

    Waugh saw this novel, Brideshead Revisited, as his magnum opus but, on reading it later in life, he found what he called its "rhetorical and ornamental language.....distasteful."3 Readers with the interest in this film and this novel should surf-about on Wikipedia and other internet sources for all sorts of bits-and-pieces of information and analysis.-Ron Price with thanks to 1Martin Stannard, "Evelyn Arthur St John Waugh(1903–66),” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, online edition, 2007; 2Evelyn Waugh: The Early Years 1903-1939, and Evelyn Waugh: The Later Years 1939-1966, W.W. Norton & Co., NY., 1987 & 1992, resp., V.2, p.492; and3 Wikipedia.

    Part 3:

    Without Christianity you saw
    civilization doomed or, as you
    put it in your conversion: “it is
    like stepping out of a Looking-
    Glass world, where everything
    is an absurd caricature, into the
    real world God made, and then
    begins the delicious process of
    exploring it limitlessly........(1)

    This is perhaps the most succinct
    & sufficient description of process
    in the act of conversions that ever
    were written in that 20th century.

    Waugh's own conversion from the
    "absurd caricature" of what might
    be called ultra-modernity to that
    real world of Catholic orthodoxy
    was greeted with astonishment by
    the literary world and it caused a
    sensation in the media. Do those
    who have watched Brideshead in
    these last 30 years know of this?

    I did not until today and, wanting
    to know something about how this
    television series and film came into
    existence in those last twenty-five
    years: 1981 to 2007, I learned that
    there was much to learn with a little
    research and reading, and not even
    reading E. Waugh's book at all.......

    Part 4:

    “Today we can see it on all sides as the active negation of all that Western culture has stood for. Civilization - and by this I do not mean talking cinemas and tinned food, nor even surgery and hygienic houses, but the whole moral and artistic organization of Europe - has not in itself the power of survival. It came into being through Christianity and, without, it has no significance or power to command allegiance. The loss of faith in Christianity and the consequential lack of confidence in moral and social standards have become embodied in the ideal of a materialistic, mechanized state. It is no longer possible to accept the benefits of civilization and at the same time deny the supernatural basis upon which it rests."

    Waugh concluded the above press statement on his conversion by saying that he saw Catholicism as the "most complete and vital form" of Christianity. The article from which the above is taken was written by Joseph Pearce and it appeared in Lay Witness a publication of Catholic United for the Faith, Inc., an international lay apostolate founded in 1968.

    Ron Price
    14/7/'11 to 12/2/'15.
    Ron Price is a Canadian who has been living in Australia for 42 years(in 2013). He is married to a Tasmanian and has been for 37 years after 8 years in a first marriage. At the age of 69 he now spends most of his time as an author and writer, poet and publisher. editor and researcher, online blogger, essayist, journalist and engaging in independent scholarship. He has been associated with the Baha'i Faith for 60 years and a member for 53 years.cool:

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