Censoring Queen Victoria : how two gentlemen edited a queen and created an icon / Yvonne M. Ward.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: London : Oneworld, 2014, c2013.Description: 208 p. : ports. ; 23 cmISBN:
  • 9781780743639 (hbk.)
  • 1780743637 (hbk.)
Uniform titles:
  • Unsuitable for publication
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 941.081/0922 23
LOC classification:
  • DA552 .W37 2014
Contents:
The editors. To publish the Queen's letters ; A peculiar genius : the second Viscount Esher ; It's very remarkable : A. C. Benson ; Preparing the ground ; The editing -- The Queen. Sir John Conroy and the ghost of Lady Flora -- King Leopold : the foreign adviser ; The welcome foreigner : Prince Albert -- Women's business -- The Queen and her ministers -- The King's censors -- The editors' Queen.
Summary: In 1901, two literary gentlemen were appointed a novel task: to preserve the memory of Queen Victoria in her own words. By the time they were finished, 460 volumes of the Queen's correspondence had become just three. Their decisions--and distortions--would influence perceptions of Victoria for generations to come. The editors chosen for the task were deeply eccentric and complicated men. Baron Esher was the consummate royal confidant who hid his obsession with Eton boys and incestuous relationship with his youngest son behind a persona of charm and discretion. Arthur Benson, an ex-Etonian master and closeted homosexual, struggled to fit in with the blue-blooded clubs and codes of the court while fighting bouts of severe depression. Together with King Edward VII they would decide how Victoria was to be remembered--avoiding scandal, protecting the new king, promoting their own preconceptions about Victoria and her court, obscuring her role as a mother, and propping up the politics of the day.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book Stonewall Non-Fiction DA 552 WAR 2014 1 Available 17807436391

Originally published as Unsuitable for publication : editing Queen Victoria (Collingwood, Vic. : Black Inc., 2013).

Includes bibliographical references (p. 177-197) and index.

The editors. To publish the Queen's letters ; A peculiar genius : the second Viscount Esher ; It's very remarkable : A. C. Benson ; Preparing the ground ; The editing -- The Queen. Sir John Conroy and the ghost of Lady Flora -- King Leopold : the foreign adviser ; The welcome foreigner : Prince Albert -- Women's business -- The Queen and her ministers -- The King's censors -- The editors' Queen.

In 1901, two literary gentlemen were appointed a novel task: to preserve the memory of Queen Victoria in her own words. By the time they were finished, 460 volumes of the Queen's correspondence had become just three. Their decisions--and distortions--would influence perceptions of Victoria for generations to come. The editors chosen for the task were deeply eccentric and complicated men. Baron Esher was the consummate royal confidant who hid his obsession with Eton boys and incestuous relationship with his youngest son behind a persona of charm and discretion. Arthur Benson, an ex-Etonian master and closeted homosexual, struggled to fit in with the blue-blooded clubs and codes of the court while fighting bouts of severe depression. Together with King Edward VII they would decide how Victoria was to be remembered--avoiding scandal, protecting the new king, promoting their own preconceptions about Victoria and her court, obscuring her role as a mother, and propping up the politics of the day.

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