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3 - Ferocious Beauty: Elizabeth Bowen, Katherine Anne Porter and the Modernist Female Dandy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2012

Ellen Crowell
Affiliation:
St Louis University
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Summary

The distinguishing characteristic of the dandy's beauty consists above all in an air of coldness which comes from an unshakeable determination not to be moved; you might call it a latent fire which hints at itself, and which could, but chooses not to burst into flame.

Charles Baudelaire, ‘The Painter of Modern Life’

I am firmly and increasingly convinced that artists were intended to be an ornament to society.

Elizabeth Bowen, letter to Charles Ritchie, in Glendinning

In the spring of 1950, Katherine Anne Porter received a letter from her niece Ann Holloway, who was then touring Europe with a New York-based ballet troupe. Because of Porter's literary reputation in London, Ann wrote, she was enjoying attention not only from dance enthusiasts, but from literary ones as well. In a subsequent letter Porter recounted this evidence of her ‘fame in Europe’ with obvious pride and amusement:

It would not occur to me that a soul in England had ever heard of me…. Yet stop. Did I tell you Ann's account of my fame in England – London at least? She was there with the de Basil Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo (all the russes being American girls like her, and de Basil not having seen Monte Carlo for twenty years perhaps) and a young British writing man led her around to literary teas, and introduced her with a set speech ‘… the niece of the American Elizabeth Bowen.’

(Porter 1990: 390)
Type
Chapter
Information
The Dandy in Irish and American Southern Fiction
Aristocratic Drag
, pp. 125 - 177
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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