Aziyadé
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Aziyadé (1879; also known as Constantinople) is a novel by French author Pierre Loti. Originally published anonymously, it was his first book, and along with Le Mariage de Loti (1880, also published anonymously), would introduce the author to the French public and quickly propel him to fame (his anonymous persona did not last long).
Aziyadé is semi-autobiographical, based on a diary Loti kept during a 3 month period as a French Navel officer in Greece and Constantinople in the fall and winter of 1876. It tells the story of the 27-year old Loti's illicit love affair with a 18 year old "Circassian" harem girl named Aziyade. Although Aziyadé was one of many conquests in the exotic romantics life, she was his greatest love, he would wear a gold ring with her name on it for the rest of his life. Forming a love triangle, the book also describes Loti's "friendship" with a Spanish man servant named Solomon, for which most critics believe, based on Loti's diary entries, that some sort of homosexual affair occurred (indeed some believe Aziyade never existed and the entire work is a cover for a homosexual love story, however the evidence for Aziyade's existence seems overwhelming, (See Blanch)). It also describes Loti's love affair with Turkish culture which became a central part of his "exotica" persona.
The only known English translation is by Marjorie Laurie which can be found in many editions, no longer in copyright, however some of the parts have been sanitized regarding harem life, prostitution and homosexuality. The original French first edition is very rare and has become a highly prized collectors item.
[edit] Resources
- Lesley Blanch. Pierre Loti: the legendary romantic. Chapters 6 to 8.
- Richard M. Berrong. "Portraying male same-sex desire in nineteenth-century French literature: Pierre Loti's Aziyade", College Literature, Fall 1998