67:
115:'s—literary press, Editions des Quatre Chemins, for a total printing of 21 copies: 10 for Cocteau, and 11 for the public. In 1930, it was published in a new edition by Éditions du Signe, and received a run of 450 copies; where the first edition had no illustrations, the Éditions du Signe had 17 by Cocteau and
179:
Frédéric
Canovas wrote that Cocteau's choice not to change the novel's text over its several editions, but instead to update the text with illustrations, was a recognition by Cocteau that his ideas about gay identity dramatically changed over his lifetime, and that updating the novel to account for
199:, wrote in 1953 that the book is both confessional and apologetic: It confesses the narrator's gay identity in an "amazingly frank, sharply effective" way, while it also defends the right to develop a gay identity in a "less effective" manner. In contrast, the poet
123:, all of which varied considerably: Some (such as in the first edition) had no illustrations at all, and some had 43 (such as in the 1983 Editions de Messine version, all of which were drawn by Cocteau himself and were largely sexually explicit).
130:
as the novel's title because of the term's contemporary usage as an official document that addresses social issues. According to
Canovas, gay identity and experiences were seen as social problems by Cocteau's contemporaries.
111:: "Not to be published. It should only be published after my death or anonymously in a deluxe edition limited to five copies". It was published that year, 1928, in his friend's—
184:
about
Cocteau's choice: He never signed the book, meaning he never accepted its history, but also changed its design, meaning he stayed in the process of "acknowledging" it.
107:
The details of the novel's writing process are unclear, and
Cocteau never claimed the novel as his own. He initially did not want it to be released, writing on his 1928
58:
by having sex with men and watching men have sex with each other. Cocteau never placed his name on the book, but he provided illustrations for some of its editions.
78:
203:
said
Cocteau's attempt at writing erotically failed in the scenes where the narrator watches people through mirrors, saying it was more
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these changes would lead to "too many cuts in the text, too many drastic changes to the plot". Canovas said there was a kind of
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Williams, James S. (August 2006). "Resurrecting
Cocteau: Gay (in)visibility and the clean-up of French culture".
588:(2009) . "A generational and theoretical analysis of culture and male (homo)sexuality". In Pinar, William (ed.).
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The book is a semi-autobiographical account of
Cocteau's life. An unnamed narrator grows up and develops his
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M.B. Armington. By 2007, it was published at least 13 times, including two editions translated into
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171:. The narrator is never accepted by those around him, and he retreats from society as a whole.
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Calamus: Male homosexuality in twentieth-century literature: An international anthology
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identity being acknowledged after watching two boys have sex—watching nude people
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Frédéric
Canovas, a scholar of French literature, wrote that Cocteau chose
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about
Cocteau's life, and centers on an unnamed protagonist developing his
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in the south of France for the latter part of 1927. When staying in
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Articulate flesh: Male homo-eroticism and modern poetry
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475:Canovas, Frédéric (January 2007). "Jean Cocteau's
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557:. Vol. 6, no. 8, "for love of a boy".
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92:later that year, he probably finished writing
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268:A parallel to Cocteau's childhood in
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644:. Critical Lives. Cromwell Press.
14:
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777:Les Chevaliers de la Table ronde
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613:Modern & Contemporary France
534:Leach, Nigel (September 1983). "
259:Possibly a fictitious publisher.
210:The book was called one of the "
1143:Notre-Dame-de-Jérusalem, Fréjus
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493:10.1080/02666286.2007.10435768
262:
253:
1:
964:Les Dames du Bois de Boulogne
511:; Sabisch, Christian (1982).
1047:Les mariés de la tour Eiffel
562:Rutledge, Leigh W. (1992) .
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174:
42:) is a 1928 French novel by
7:
640:Williams, James S. (2008).
380:Galloway & Sabisch 1982
214:erotic classics" alongside
10:
1210:
538:by Jean Cocteau". Review.
517:William Morrow and Company
234:, by LGBT studies scholar
62:Background and publication
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1063:Le jeune homme et la mort
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939:
870:
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728:
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666:. Yale University Press.
625:10.1080/09639480600818441
590:Queer theory in education
479:: Sex, text and images".
897:The Eagle with Two Heads
547:Mulford, Harry (1953). "
246:
134:
1194:Novels by Jean Cocteau
996:La Princesse de Clèves
860:Opium: Diary of a Cure
71:
52:autobiographical novel
32:
1189:Pederastic literature
980:Les Enfants terribles
921:La Villa Santo-Sospir
905:Les Parents terribles
852:Les Enfants terribles
785:Les Parents terribles
737:Le Gendarme incompris
564:The gay book of lists
69:
1122:Jean Cocteau: A Life
929:Testament of Orpheus
889:Beauty and the Beast
817:L'Aigle Ă deux tĂŞtes
761:The Infernal Machine
594:Taylor & Francis
242:Notes and references
70:Jean Cocteau in 1923
1184:French LGBTQ novels
1133:Jean Cocteau Museum
1039:Le BĹ“uf sur le toit
1004:Thomas the Impostor
881:The Blood of a Poet
801:La Machine Ă Ă©crire
793:Les Monstres sacrés
568:Alyson Publications
566:(fourth ed.).
1174:1928 French novels
1169:1920s LGBTQ novels
1148:The Orphic Trilogy
1128:Jean Cocteau House
769:L'École des veuves
191:, the magazine of
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1098:Le pauvre matelot
948:The Phantom Baron
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187:Harry Mulford of
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56:sexual identity
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619:(3): 317–330.
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477:Le Livre blanc
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542:. No. 4.
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713:Jean Cocteau
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642:Jean Cocteau
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554:ONE Magazine
552:
548:
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468:Bibliography
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446:Mulford 1953
441:
434:Canovas 2007
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351:
346:, p. 2.
344:Canovas 2007
329:Canovas 2007
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317:Canovas 2007
304:, p. 1.
302:Canovas 2007
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226:Ronald Tavel
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205:pornographic
189:ONE Magazine
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75:Jean Cocteau
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44:Jean Cocteau
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1138:Jean Marais
1090:Oedipus rex
551:". Review.
487:(1): 1–15.
98:debut novel
94:White Paper
82: [
1163:Categories
577:1555831206
458:Sears 2009
407:Leach 1983
395:Woods 1987
212:pederastic
193:gay rights
169:bathhouses
165:casual sex
157:masturbate
109:manuscript
48:pederastic
46:. It is a
16:1928 novel
633:144476755
501:192007302
280:Citations
270:Marseille
197:ONE, Inc.
175:Reception
1082:Antigone
972:Ruy Blas
662:(1987).
221:Boychick
216:Leo Skir
159:through
117:colorist
1109:Related
913:Orpheus
825:Bacchus
745:Orpheus
121:English
102:J'Adore
90:Chablis
1101:(1927)
1093:(1927)
1085:(1927)
1066:(1946)
1058:(1924)
1050:(1921)
1042:(1920)
1034:(1917)
1031:Parade
1026:(1912)
1007:(1965)
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991:(1951)
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967:(1945)
959:(1943)
951:(1943)
932:(1960)
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916:(1950)
908:(1948)
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884:(1932)
863:(1930)
855:(1929)
847:(1928)
828:(1951)
820:(1946)
812:(1943)
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764:(1934)
756:(1930)
748:(1926)
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163:, and
145:Toulon
28:French
836:Prose
729:Drama
629:S2CID
497:S2CID
247:Notes
182:irony
86:]
50:semi-
668:ISBN
646:ISBN
598:ISBN
572:ISBN
521:ISBN
224:and
135:Plot
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228:'s
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153:gay
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26:(
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