Edward Irenaeus Prime-Stevenson
Edward Irenaeus Prime-Stevenson | |
|---|---|
| Prime-Stevenson in 1928 Prime-Stevenson in 1928 | |
| Born | January 29, 1858 |
| Died | July 23, 1942 (aged 84) Lausanne, Switzerland |
| Pen name | Xavier Mayne |
| Occupation | Novelist, journalist |
| Nationality | American |
Edward Irenaeus Prime-Stevenson (January 29, 1858 – July 23, 1942) was an American writer. He used the pseudonym Xavier Mayne.[1]
Biography
[edit | edit source]Prime-Stevenson (also known as Edward Stevenson, Edward Prime Stevenson, and E. Irenaeus Prime Stevenson) was born in 1858 in Madison, New Jersey,[1] the youngest of five children born to Paul E. Stevenson and Cornelia Prime. His father was a Presbyterian minister and a school principal; his mother came from a distinguished literary and academic figures.[1]
After studying law, Stevenson decided to become a writer and a journalist.[1] During the 1880s, he began a career as a critic in New York City for Harper's Weekly, a political magazine, and as book reviewer and music critic for the weekly Independent. In 1896, Stevenson published The Square of Sevens, and the Parallelogram: An Authoritative Method of Cartomancy with a Prefatory Note by Robert Antrobus that was supposedly written in 1735. However, it is believed that Prime-Stevenson was the author. In 1906, under the pseudonym Xavier Mayne, Stevenson published the homosexually themed novel Imre: A Memorandum, and in 1908 a sexology study, The Intersexes,[1] a defense of homosexuality from a scientific, legal, historical, and personal perspective.
Death
[edit | edit source]In 1901, he moved to Europe, living in Florence and Lausanne. He died in Lausanne of a heart attack in 1942, aged 84.[citation needed]
Quotes
[edit | edit source]"Between a protozoan and the most perfect development of the mammalia, we trace a succession of dependent intersteps...A trilobite is at one end of Nature's workshop: a Spinoza, a Shakespeare, a Beethoven is at the other... gone on insisting that each specimen of sex in humanity must... follow out two programmes only, or else be thought amiss, imperfect, and degenerate [?] Why have we set up masculinity and femininity as processes that have not perfectly logical and respectable inter-steps?".
— Xavier Mayne, History of Similisexualism[2]
Bibliography
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References
[edit | edit source]- ^ a b c d e Bullough, Vern L. Before Stonewall: Activists for Gay and Lesbian Rights in Historical Context, Haworth Press Inc, 2003, pp. 35–36.
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External links
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- Works by Edward Prime-Stevenson at Project Gutenberg
- Works by Edward Irenaeus Prime-Stevenson at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks) File:Speaker Icon.svg
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- 1858 births
- 1942 deaths
- 20th-century American novelists
- American male novelists
- American gay writers
- LGBTQ people from New Jersey
- People from Madison, New Jersey
- Novelists from New Jersey
- American LGBTQ novelists
- 20th-century American male writers
- 19th-century American LGBTQ people
- 20th-century American LGBTQ people
- Writers from Morris County, New Jersey