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of Incest and Female Relations in Harriet Hosmer's Beatrice Cenci

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left me." In late 1854, Hays left Cushman outside London<br />

<strong>and</strong> moved back to Rome, where she lived with Hosmer for<br />

four months. Eventually, Hays felt so "miserable" <strong>and</strong> "sor-<br />

rowful" without Cushman that she decided to return to her <strong>in</strong><br />

London. Cushman acknowledged that her partner "has tried<br />

others," suggest<strong>in</strong>g that Hays's four-month liaison with Hos-<br />

mer was <strong>in</strong>deed erotic. Hosmer also had an affair with Cush-<br />

man's future partner Emma Stebb<strong>in</strong>s, <strong>in</strong>form<strong>in</strong>g Wayman<br />

Crow <strong>in</strong> 1857 that she had "taken onto" herself "a wife <strong>in</strong> the<br />

form <strong>of</strong> Miss. Stebb<strong>in</strong>s," <strong>and</strong> comment<strong>in</strong>g that they were "very<br />

happy together." Hosmer later, <strong>in</strong> the 1870s, referred to the<br />

widowed Louisa, Lady Ashburton, as her "sposa" <strong>and</strong> "wed-<br />

ded wife," call<strong>in</strong>g herself Louisa's "hubbie." In another she<br />

promised Lady Ashburton that she will "be a model wife (or<br />

husb<strong>and</strong> whichever you like)." 84 She anticipated <strong>in</strong> a letter to<br />

Louisa their "Laocoon<strong>in</strong>g" <strong>and</strong> fold<strong>in</strong>g her "arms round" her,<br />

while <strong>in</strong> another she looked forward to Louisa tumbl<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>to<br />

her arms, kiss<strong>in</strong>g her, <strong>and</strong> tell<strong>in</strong>g her "how dearly I love<br />

you." 85 In Rome, where these expatriate women could "safely<br />

do many th<strong>in</strong>gs that would have shocked the sensibilities <strong>of</strong> a<br />

narrow New Engl<strong>and</strong> village or British small town," they<br />

reveled <strong>in</strong> their homosocial <strong>and</strong> homoerotic lifestyles. 86<br />

Merrill, Cushman's biographer, conv<strong>in</strong>c<strong>in</strong>gly demonstrates<br />

through a careful analysis <strong>of</strong> correspondence that Cushman<br />

created what Eve Sedgwick called the "wider mapp<strong>in</strong>gs <strong>of</strong><br />

secrecy <strong>and</strong> disclosure, <strong>and</strong> <strong>of</strong> the private <strong>and</strong> the public" that<br />

dictated the terms for underst<strong>and</strong><strong>in</strong>g lesbian desire before<br />

these terms had been def<strong>in</strong>ed <strong>in</strong> medical texts <strong>and</strong> court<br />

transcripts. 8 Cushman <strong>and</strong> her earlier partner Rosalie Sully<br />

burned their letters, although the actress's diaries expressed<br />

their love for one another. 88 Emma Crow Cushman (Wayman<br />

Crow's daughter) was Charlotte's confidante, alleged lover,<br />

<strong>and</strong> daughter-<strong>in</strong>-law (Charlotte had arranged the 1861 mar-<br />

riage between the nephew she had adopted as her son, Edw<strong>in</strong><br />

Charles Cushman, <strong>and</strong> Emma). The actress advised Emma<br />

that their letters must be destroyed <strong>in</strong> case "any unscrupulous<br />

person or persons" read them, which could result <strong>in</strong> "her<br />

reputation" be<strong>in</strong>g "lost forever." 89 Stebb<strong>in</strong>s contributed to<br />

the posthumous sanitiz<strong>in</strong>g <strong>of</strong> Cushman's life by <strong>in</strong>sist<strong>in</strong>g on<br />

writ<strong>in</strong>g her lover's biography herself. She sifted through her<br />

own correspondence <strong>of</strong> a "personal character, which re-<br />

quire[d] careful glean<strong>in</strong>g" before publication. 90 As Merrill<br />

observes, Stebb<strong>in</strong>s's memoir <strong>in</strong>cluded letters edited "so that<br />

[the] eroticism evident <strong>in</strong> the orig<strong>in</strong>al letters is omitted."<br />

"<strong>Harriet</strong> Hosmer, with whom Charlotte <strong>and</strong> Emma Stebb<strong>in</strong>s<br />

lived for years, is only mentioned once," <strong>and</strong> Sully <strong>and</strong> Hays<br />

"are omitted entirely." 91 Stebb<strong>in</strong>s thus elim<strong>in</strong>ated <strong>in</strong>forma-<br />

tion about her sexuality <strong>and</strong> that <strong>of</strong> her partners, Cushman<br />

<strong>and</strong> Hosmer. Hosmer, to protect her own reputation, also<br />

"ghosted" her sexuality at a time when "romantic friendships"<br />

were acceptable among women but same-sex desires <strong>and</strong><br />

public behaviors were problematic.<br />

Castle argues that <strong>in</strong> the Western literary imag<strong>in</strong>ation,<br />

lesbianism exists primarily as "an absence ... a k<strong>in</strong>d <strong>of</strong> love<br />

that, by def<strong>in</strong>ition, cannot exist," 92 partly because Cushman,<br />

Stebb<strong>in</strong>s, Hosmer, <strong>and</strong> others <strong>in</strong> their circle collaborated <strong>in</strong><br />

construct<strong>in</strong>g this absence. 93 "Lesbian sexuality," Vic<strong>in</strong>us elab-<br />

orates, "repeatedly evaporates <strong>in</strong>to denial, concealment, or<br />

displacement. But it also never disappears." 94 Hosmer, ad-<br />

dress<strong>in</strong>g the highly sensitive subject <strong>of</strong> <strong>in</strong>cest, was drawn to<br />

the contradictions, conflicts, <strong>and</strong> silences manifested <strong>in</strong> the<br />

<strong>Cenci</strong> narrative because <strong>of</strong> her own unconventional behavior<br />

<strong>and</strong> lifestyle. In other words, the artist may have been sym-<br />

pathetic to the subject <strong>of</strong> <strong>Beatrice</strong> <strong>Cenci</strong> because her own<br />

sexuality had to be hidden. Hosmer is complicitous with the<br />

ghost<strong>in</strong>g (cultural <strong>and</strong> sexual constra<strong>in</strong>ts force her to be<br />

complicit) <strong>of</strong> <strong>Beatrice</strong> <strong>Cenci</strong> because she is the artist who does<br />

not name or identify—iconographically or otherwise; at the<br />

same time, she is also the object <strong>of</strong> "ghost<strong>in</strong>g" whose own<br />

lifestyle rema<strong>in</strong>s hidden <strong>in</strong> deference to cultural <strong>and</strong> sexual<br />

norms. <strong>Hosmer's</strong> failure to name <strong>in</strong>cest signifies a form <strong>of</strong><br />

complicity or subservience to authority, mak<strong>in</strong>g her a part <strong>of</strong><br />

the problem, which she nevertheless attempts to rectify by<br />

expos<strong>in</strong>g how <strong>in</strong>cest is "ghosted" <strong>in</strong> American culture.<br />

A Fem<strong>in</strong>ist Statue<br />

As Gw<strong>in</strong> observes, recent American fiction <strong>and</strong> memoirs<br />

about father-daughter <strong>in</strong>cest present stories about "unsuc-<br />

cessful struggle[s] for female agency under patriarchy." 95<br />

<strong>Beatrice</strong> <strong>Cenci</strong> represents such a story <strong>in</strong> which a woman could<br />

not ga<strong>in</strong> female agency under the patriarchal family, state, or<br />

ecclesiastical regime—an ironic choice <strong>of</strong> subject, given Hos-<br />

mer's success as an artist <strong>and</strong> an <strong>in</strong>dependent woman. Hos-<br />

mer, a pr<strong>of</strong>essional, s<strong>in</strong>gle woman who struggled aga<strong>in</strong>st<br />

n<strong>in</strong>eteenth-century ideas about fem<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>ity <strong>and</strong> female sexu-<br />

ality, repeatedly represented images <strong>of</strong> wronged yet heroic<br />

women. <strong>Hosmer's</strong> Medusa (Fig. 2) departs from the norm <strong>in</strong><br />

her image <strong>of</strong> a restra<strong>in</strong>ed, calm, <strong>and</strong> sorrowful face rather<br />

than a tortured vision with writh<strong>in</strong>g serpent<strong>in</strong>e locks. She<br />

becomes both a creator <strong>and</strong> destroyer <strong>in</strong> her role as meta-<br />

morphoser who transforms men <strong>in</strong>to stone. Hosmer por-<br />

trayed Zenobia (Fig. 1) as a heroic <strong>and</strong> majestic queen who<br />

refused to accept the terms <strong>of</strong> surrender <strong>of</strong> her besieged city<br />

<strong>and</strong> who proudly walks <strong>in</strong> cha<strong>in</strong>s despite her defeat. Although<br />

both Medusa <strong>and</strong> Zenobia, like <strong>Beatrice</strong> <strong>Cenci</strong>, are wronged,<br />

they are also, either before or after, powerful.<br />

<strong>Hosmer's</strong> sculptures underscore her <strong>in</strong>tense <strong>and</strong> lifelong<br />

fem<strong>in</strong>ist beliefs, which became apparent later <strong>in</strong> life. Al-<br />

though she never realized her ambition to create a memorial<br />

dedicated to Susan B. Anthony, her oeuvre, which <strong>in</strong>cludes<br />

Zenobia, Medusa, <strong>and</strong> <strong>Beatrice</strong> <strong>Cenci</strong>, forms such a monument<br />

by celebrat<strong>in</strong>g women engaged <strong>in</strong> "gr<strong>and</strong> act[s]." With<strong>in</strong> this<br />

context, Hosmer chose the subject <strong>of</strong> <strong>Beatrice</strong> <strong>Cenci</strong> both<br />

because it suggested the ways that her own alternative lifestyle<br />

<strong>and</strong> sexuality were "ghosted" <strong>and</strong> because it implies a radical<br />

critique <strong>of</strong> a society organized on pr<strong>in</strong>ciples <strong>of</strong> patriarchy.<br />

The sculpture thus makes visible the contradictions between<br />

the Victorian ideal <strong>of</strong> white middle-class womanhood <strong>and</strong> the<br />

realities <strong>of</strong> many women's lives, <strong>and</strong> it prompts viewers to ask<br />

whether an ideology <strong>of</strong> purity, submission, <strong>and</strong> domesticity<br />

really sheltered women from violence, or if it <strong>in</strong>stead pro-<br />

tected the perpetrators <strong>of</strong> violence. The passivity <strong>and</strong> resig-<br />

nation <strong>of</strong> the statue underscore these contradictions; Bea-<br />

trice both submits to <strong>and</strong> rebels aga<strong>in</strong>st patriarchal authority.<br />

Hosmer both expressed (<strong>in</strong> her private letters <strong>and</strong> <strong>in</strong> her<br />

relationships with other women) <strong>and</strong> repressed (<strong>in</strong> public)<br />

her sexuality <strong>in</strong> ways that match the expression <strong>and</strong> repres-<br />

sion <strong>of</strong> sexuality <strong>in</strong> her literary sources <strong>and</strong> <strong>in</strong> the statue itself.<br />

She selected from Jameson <strong>and</strong> Shelley the composition <strong>of</strong><br />

the woman asleep <strong>in</strong> what is subtly signified as a prison cell,

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