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Austrian-British novelist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rose Laure Allatini (23 January 1890 in Vienna — 23 November 1980 in Rye, Sussex)[1] was an Austrian-British novelist who wrote under the pseudonyms R. Allatini, A.T. Fitzroy, Mrs Cyril Scott, Lucian Wainwright, and Eunice Buckley. She is best known for her 1918 novel Despised and Rejected (written under the pen name A T Fitzroy), which was banned under the Defence of the Realm Act as it combines themes of pacifism and homosexuality which were thought "likely to prejudice the recruiting of persons to serve on His Majesty's Forces". Despised and Rejected was published by C. W. Daniel and was taken up by the Bloomsbury Group. The novel has been described by Angela K. Smith as drawing a connection between the persecution of homosexuals and the rhetoric of imperialism.[2] It tells the story of a young woman's complex relationship with a homosexual composer who is conscripted for military service; his refusal leads to trial and imprisonment.[3]
Rose Laure Allatini Scott | |
---|---|
Born | Rose Laure Allatini 23 January 1890 Vienna, Austria-Hungary |
Died | 23 November 1980 90) Rye, Sussex, England | (aged
Pen name | R. Allatini, A. T. Fitzroy, Mrs Cyril Scott, Lucian Wainwright, Eunice Buckley |
Occupation | Writer |
Language | English language |
Nationality | Austrian-British |
Years active | 1914-1978 |
Spouse | Cyril Scott |
Children | 2 |
Relatives | Amanta Scott (granddaughter) |
Rose Laure Allatini was born in Vienna, into a large and prosperous Jewish family.[4] Her father, Roberto Allatini, was born in Thessaloniki, Ottoman Empire (now Greece) on 17 December 1856, to Moïse (Moses) Allatini (1809–1882) and Rosa Mortera (1819 – 1892);[5] her mother, Bronislawa ("Bronia") Rapoport von Porada was born in Krakow, Poland (then under Austrian control) on 17 December 1869, to Arnold Rapoport, Edler von Porada (1840-1907) and Laura Rapoport Edlen von Porada (Eibenshutz). By 1911, Rose Laure Allatini, her sister Flore and their parents, Roberto and Bronislawa, were living at 18 Holland Park, London, and Robert Allatini was listed in the census as a retired merchant.[6] In 1946, her mother (living at 61B Holland Park) renounced her Italian citizenship upon becoming a naturalized British citizen.[7]
In May 1921, Allatini married the composer Cyril Scott, like her an enthusiast for Theosophy. They had two children, Vivien Mary born 1923 and Desmond Cyril (1926-2019), but separated in 1939, after the outbreak of WWII. Her son's memoir says that "Except for the war years 1939–45, which she spent with Melanie (J. M. A.) Mills ... in Beckley, a small village in Sussex, she lived in London, but every year for health reasons she went to Switzerland and Melanie accompanied her."[8] Both Project Orlando and the Brighton Gay and Lesbian website Brighton Our Story, however, claim that she spent the remainder of her life living with Mills in Rye.[9][10] In the summer of 1980 Rose Allatini moved from her home in London to a retirement home in the country near the home of her friend Melanie Mills.[11]
She died on 23 November 1980 in Rye, Sussex[6] and was buried in Hastings.
From 1914 to 1978, Allatini is known to have written nearly forty novels (some of them under the pseudonym 'Lucian Wainwright' and thirty under the name 'Eunice Buckley'), as well as writing short stories.
Allatini's favourite themes included illness and healing, music, early death, Jewish issues, and the occult.[1]
Her novel Despised and Rejected published in 1918 is set among pacifists during World War I. The sexuality of many of the characters in the book is represented as unstable, in a way unusual for the period. Antoinette, the main female character, at first has a passionate crush on an older woman, and then falls for Dennis, a homosexual who had previously courted her, partly as a disguise for his actual sexuality, and partly in the hope that she might 'cure' him. Dennis is a conscientious objector as well as a homosexual, and the combined themes of pacifism and sexual unorthodoxy made the book one that was bound to cause serious controversy in 1918. Rose Allatini submitted the manuscript to the firm of Allen & Unwin. Stanley Unwin rejected it because of its potential to cause scandal, but suggested that she send it to C.W. Daniel, a committed pacifist who had published several books highly critical of the war. It was decided to issue the book under the pseudonym of A.T. Fitzroy (because she lived in Fitzroy Square). When the book was published, it received unenthusiastic reviews, and some, like Allan Monkhouse, the critic of the Manchester Guardian, expressed a strong distaste for it:
But pacifism is not the main theme. The hero, Dennis Blackwood, walks and talks through a considerable portion of the book before a war breaks out and exhibits himself as a hopeless victim of neurasthenia. He is an abnormal young man, held up for pity as such, but also for admiration. Charity can go no further than look on him as an unhappy invalid. We have no intention of disclosing in what constitutes his abnormality. Those who read his story may regard his malady as ridiculous, others as something worse. A good laugh at Mr Fitzroy’s lack of humour where Dennis is concerned will disperse the rather unwholesome vapours. But what about a pacifist apostle who is so on the ground of abnormality? His whole case is given away.[12]
A campaign to prosecute the book was instigated by journalist James Douglas, who previously incited the prosecution for indecency of The Rainbow by D.H. Lawrence.[13] He wrote in the magazine London Opinion:
A thoroughly poisonous book, every copy of which ought to be put on the fire forthwith, is Despised and Rejected, by A.T. Fitzroy – probably a pen-name. Of its hideous immoralities the less said the better; but concerning its sympathetic presentation, in the mouths of its ‛hero’ and of other characters of pacifism and conscientious objection, and of sneering at the English as compared with the Hun, this needs to be asked: What is the use of our spending hundreds of thousands of pounds on propaganda, and tens of thousands more on Censorship, while pestiferous filth like this remains unsuppressed? The book is published by C.W. Daniel, Ltd., of Graham House, Tudor Street; and I imagine that it will not be long, after the authorities have examined this literary fungus, before he is a Daniel brought to judgment.[14]
The book was tried at the City of London court at the Mansion House on 10 October 1918 and Daniel was fined £420 with £40 costs.[15] After the trial, Daniel published a pamphlet defending himself against charges of immorality, and claiming that he had not realised the sexual implications of Allatini's book.
I was assured by the author that the love between the hero and his friend was analogous to that between David and Jonathan. I did not see what has since been pointed out – that certain passages are open to an immoral interpretation. Personally, I would rather that any book were burnt than that I should be party to lending support to depravity of either the homo-sexual or the contra-sexual types.[16]
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