Erna, jeune fille de Berlin

Erna, jeune fille de Berlin

by: Ménalkas

Published:
1932
Pages:
254
Genres:
Languages:
  • French

About:

A utopian technological novel which champions free sex—this time explicitly including homosexuality into the belief. The protagonist studies and visits different environments, teaching herself and the reader about the symbiosis of differing sexualities, and eventually she enters a relationship with Billy, a woman.

Erna, A Young Girl from Berlin in English.

The novel is discussed at length with short translations in Lawrence R. Schehr's French Gay Modernism (2004).

Another source says that the book ends with Erna marrying a strictly conservative man who forces her to remain home (A History of Homosexuality in Europe by Florence Tamagne, 54p).

Author Details:

Ménalkas

Suzanne de Callias (24 January 1883—4 February 1964) was born in Paris. She remained a pacifist and feminist throughout her life, and went on speaking tours to promote women's suffrage and rights.

Ménalkas was her masculine pseudonym for each work written in collaboration with Willy: "L'Ersatz d'amour" (1923) and "Le Naufragé" (1924), a pair of novels, and "Le Fruit vert" (1927), a short story collection. However, her novels did not sell as well as they were acclaimed, and neither sold more than 10,000 copies.

Afterwards, she contributed articles to magazines like the German-language "Hamburger Fremdenblatt," provided illustrations to various journals, and wrote for various publishers. These brought her grander success. For a significant time, her work built each year on Feminist themes, starting with "Jerry: fragments d'un journal authentique; roman inédit" (1923), where a strong-willed female artist wishes for a child but no man; she courts an intellectual American man to obtain what she wants, and succeeds with a faint, hinted regret. "Monsieur Fayol et sa fille" (1924) depicts the modern woman in public life, "Lucienne et Reinette" (1925) depicts a lesbian relationship, and the nonfiction "Florilège de l’antiféminisme" (1926) exposed inequalities between the sexes around the world.