Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Ada Lovelace Day!

FindingAda.com has declared March 24 to be Ada Lovelace Day, "an international day of blogging to draw attention to the achievements of women in technology and science." Last year's day had over 2000 participants, and since this is a topic very close to my heart I hope they have many more this year! My own contribution is this Heroine of the Middle of the Week, one of my favorite historical women of science Madame du Chatelet, French mathematician, physicist, and author.

Gabrielle Emilie Le Tonnelier de Breteuil, marquise duChatelet was born on December 17, 1706 in Paris. Her father was Principal Secretary and Introducer of Ambassadors to King Louis XIV, a position that gave his family great status at Court and also put them at the center of nobility and intellectual leaders of the day. One of her father's friends was Fontenelle, perpetual secretary of the Academie des Sciences, who would talk astronomy with little Emilie when she was only 10 years old. Unusually for parents of the time, they recognized and encouraged their daughter's early precocity and arranged for tutors and also lessons in fencing and riding. By age 12 she was fluent in Latin, Italian, Greek, and German; she went on to publish translations of Greek and Latin plays and works of philosophy. She was also educated in dance and music (which she loved), mathematics, literature, and the sciences, and made enormous and quick progress. At that point her mother, Gabrielle-Anne de Froulay (who had received only the usual cursory convent education) became concerned about her daughter's unseemly intellectual pursuits and tried to have her sent to a convent.

On June 12, 1725 she married the Marquis Florent-Claude du Chastellet-Lomont (which later became the more known Chatelet). She had little in common with her new husband, but they seemed to get on well enough and were able to fulfill their duties. They had 3 children, after which Emilie considered her duty done and arranged to live separately from her husband while still maintaining appearances. The marquis was a military man and governor of Semur-en-Auxois in Burgundy, so often away from home anyway. Both spouses took lovers. At 24 Emilie fell in love with the Duc de Richelieu and embarked on a year and a half affair with him. The duc was also interested in literature and philosophy, and the two of them enjoyed intellectual debate. He introduced her to the works of Isaac Newton and inspired her to take more lessons in higher mathematics. She took geometry classes from Moreau de Maupertuis from the Academy of Sciences, and became very interested in the new theories. (She also used her mathematical knowledge in a practical way! After losing a tremendous amount of money to card cheats at a party at Fontainebleau, she repaid her debts by devising a financing arrangement similiar to the modern idea of derivatives, where she paid tax collectors a fairly low sum for the right to their future earnings, as they were allowed to keep a portion of the taxes they collected for the king, and promised to pay the court gamblers part of these future earnings).

Emilie's most famous (and longest lasting lover) was Voltaire. They were true partners in study as well as love, studying physics and mathematics. She also began to publish scientific articles and translations in their years together, where they lived most of the time at Emilie's estate of Cirey-sur-Blaise in northwestern France. Their friends and fellow intellectuals often joined them there for long house parties of scientific discussions and amateur theatricals!

In 1737 Emilie published her paper Dissertation sur la nature et la propagation du feu, based on her research into the nature of fire, which predicted infrared radiation and the nature of light. In 1740 she published her book Institutions de Physique, a review of new ideas in science and philosophy which she intended to be studied by her 13-year-old son. She combined the theories of Gottfried Leibniz and the observations of Willem Gravesande to show that "the energy of a moving object is proportional not to its velocity" (as had previously been believed by Newton, Voltaire, and others) "but to the square of its velocity." In the year of her death, she finished her crowning achievement, her translation into French, with her own commentary, of Newton's Principia Mathematica, including her derivation from its principles of mechanics the notion of conservation of energy. Her work is still the standard translation used in French education.

Emilie died on September 10, 1749. Her last affair, after the break-up of the relationship with Voltaire, was with the young poet Jean Francois de Saint-Lambert, and she died 6 days after giving birth to their daughter at age 42. She was only at the beginning of her important work.

A couple great online sources on her life can be found here and here. I have a couple of great recent biographies that I've used to dig up this information and highly recommend! Passionate Minds: The great love affair of the Enlightenment, featuring the scientist Emilie du Chatelet, the poet Voltaire, sword fights, book burnings, assorted kings, seditious verse, and the birth of the modern world by David Bodanis (how can you resist that title??) and La Dame d'Esprit by Judith P. Zinsser.

Who is your favorite woman of science?

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Blog Day!

I'm over at Borders True Romance blog today, giving away a copy of Countess of Scandal! Come and let me know what your favorite historical time periods are...

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Auction Alert!


If you're in the New York City area on March 24th and are in the mood for an auction, don't miss Augusta Auctions' consignment sale of antique and vintage clothing and textiles (lots from various museums, including the Brooklyn Museum, ranging from the 15th to the 20th centuries). You can read all about it here. And if you do go, could you bid on this 1910 evening gown for me?? I seriously covet it...

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Heroine of the Weekend

If you're an opera fan like me, you probably know Cilea's opera Adrienne Lecouvreur, but (also like me) maybe not so much about the real woman who inspired the music. The French actress died on this day in 1730, and her life was certainly dramatic and tragic, and ripe to be made into an opera!

Adrienne was born in 1692 in the village of Damery, not far from Rheims. Her mother died in childbirth, and her father was a hatter. She often helped her aunt, who was a laundress, with her work, but even as a child people noticed her great beauty and preternatural intelligence. She liked to memorize and recite poems, and was soon able to earn money by declaiming at parties and such. When she was about 13, her father sent her to a cheap school in Paris, where gathered a group of other young people around her to form a sort of amateur theatrical group. A grocer let them have an empty store-room for their venue, and this is where Adrienne made her debut as a leading lady in a tragedy by Corneille. These performances gained a degree of fame, and a few members of the nolbility would come "slumming" to watch them. A Madame de Gue took a liking to Adrienne, and offered the courtyard of her home for a theater, which soon became crowded with members of the Royal Court and actors from the Comedie Francaise.

The little troupe soon disbanded, but Adrienne was befriended by La Grande, societaire of the Comedie Francaise, who trained her and found her acting work in the provinces (the theaters of Paris being super-tough to break into, especially for an unknown!). For about ten years she traveled the provinces, honing her art. She also had 2 daughters in this time. In 1717 she at last had her debut in Paris, in the title role of Crebillon's Electre with the Comedie Francaise. She had an immediate success, and for 13 years was considered the "queen of tragedy" on the Paris stage. She played over a hundred roles 1184 times, and was a sensation for her new, naturalistic style of acting and emotion that went against the traditional, more stilted method. She was all the rage, both on stage and in her salon, and became friends with people like Voltaire (who wrote poems in her honor, and on her death declared himself her "friend, admirer, lover" on her death).

She also fell deeply in love with Maurice, comte de Saxe, the handsome, dashing illegitimate son of Duke Augustus II of Saxony. He was married at a young age to the immensely wealthy Countess von Loben, but within 3 years had squandered her fortune and got heavily into debt, and then went on to seek greener pastures in Paris. He was very popular there (especially with the ladies) and Adrienne fell for him hard. They had a daughter together, who later went on to be the great-grandmother of George Sand. They were together for 9 tumultuous years, even through the disaster of his quest for the Grand Duchy of Courland. Adrienne sold all her plate and jewels to help him in trying to gain this throne for himself, but his election failed and he returned to her with all the money gone. They quarelled violently, which threw Adrienne into depression, but still they stayed together.

She wasn't the only woman in Paris to fall for Maurice's charms, though. The Duchesse de Bouillon, a notoriously licentious woman of the Court (shocking!) resolved to get him for herself, and devised a plan to get Adrienne out of the way. Adrienne was to star in a gala performance of Racine's Phedre, and the duchesse sent a contingent of her lackeys to jeer and hiss and throw things at the stage, humiliating her rival. The duchesse took her place in her box, and the curtain went up on Adrienne. The uproar began, and she knew right away what was going on. She threw her whole talent into the part, awing even the hired lackeys into silence. Adrienne walked to the front of the stage and declared, "I am not one of those women void of shame, who, savoring in crime the joys of peace, harden their faces till they cannot blush!" The whole audience leaped up, cheering and applauding, and the duchesse rushed from the theater. (Very operatic!)

But not long afterward, on March 15, 1730, Adrienne collapsed on stage with terrible stomach pains and was carried to her home. She died there a few days later, after a scene no less dramatic--a priest was summoned to give her the last rites, and refused to do so unless she repented of her life in the theater. She refused to do so, being proud of her life as "the greatest actress of her day." She was buried in unconsecrated ground.

A good source for her very eventful life is the biography Adrienne Lecouvreur: The Actress and the Age (1971)

Friday, March 19, 2010

Portrait Friday


Today's portrait--Serge Diaghilev by Leon Bakst. (Diaghilev was born on this day in 1872!). For more information on his life and on the Ballet Russes, you can go here...

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Things I Love Thursday

What I love this Thursday--looking at gardening books! Once St. Patrick's Day and Daylight Savings is behind us, it seems like spring is really on its way (at least I hope so! They're saying it might snow here this weekend...). I love anticipating the sun and warm temperatures, and planning what veggies I'm going to put in the garden this year. Tomatoes, cucumbers, squash, beans, lettuce, maybe another rose bush and some hollyhocks. This year I'm going to build some raised beds, so I can plant more--if I can just summon up the energy! (I'm also looking forward to the farmer's market opening in early May)

What are you planting this year?

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Happy St. Patrick's Day!

Happy St. Patrick's Day, everyone! Have a Guinness and wear some green today....




Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Today in History

Today (March 16) was an interesting day in history! Lots going on...

James Madison was born on this day in 1751 (let's hope Texas doesn't cut him out of their history classes, too!)

Rossini married Spanish soprano Isabelle Colbran in 1822

Artist Rosa Bonheur was born in 1822 (you can see her enormous painting The Horse Fair at the Met)

And The Scarlet Letter, the bane of high school students everywhere, was published in 1822!
And tomorrow is St. Patrick's Day! I'm over at Risky Regencies today planning the party. Come and join us!

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Sunday Historical Etsy Find

Today's Etsy find---the "Queen Victoria at the Coronation" necklace at Mata Hara Jewelry! For more information on the actual coronation, you can go here...


Saturday, March 13, 2010

Heyer Read-a-Long!

At Risky Regencies we're featuring a Heyer readalong all March--and today it's on Borders's True Romance blog! Come and see what it's all about...

Heroine of the Weekend

This week's heroine is women's rights pioneer Susan B. Anthony (February 15, 1820--March 13, 1906), who died on this date 104 years ago. Some good biographical info can be found at the Susan B. Anthony House website--I thought we'd look at some favorite Susan B. quotes here...

Independence is happiness.

Men their rights and nothing more; women their rights and nothing less.

Failure is impossible.

The older I get, the greater power I seem to have to help the world; I am like a snowball--the further I am rolled the more I gain.

It was we, the people; not we, the white male citizens; nor yet we, the male citizens; but we, the whole people, who formed the Union.

The fact is, women are in chains, and their servitude is all the more debasing because they do not realize it.

Modern invention has banished the spinning wheel, and the same law of progress makes the woman of today a different woman from her grandmother.

It would be ridiculous to talk of male and female atmospheres, male and female springs or rains, male and female sunshine...how much more ridiculous is it in relation to mind, to soul, to thought, where there is as undeniably no such thing as sex, to talk of male and female education and of male and female schools.

There is not the woman born who desires to eat the bread of dependence, no matter whether it be from the hand of father, husband, or brother; for any who does so eat her bread places herself in the power of the person from whom she takes it.

Cautious, careful people, always casting about to preserve their reputation and social standing, never can bring about a reform. Those who are really in earnest must be willing to be anything or nothing in the world's estimation, and publicly and privately, in season and out, avow their sympathy with despised and persecuted ideas and their advocates, and bear the consequences.

I can't say the college-bred woman is the most contented woman. The broader her mind the more she understands the unequal conditions between men and women, the more she chafes under a government that tolerates it.

What you should say to outsiders is that a Christian has neither more nor less rights in our Association than an atheist. When our platform becomes too narrow for people of all creeds and of no creeds, I myself shall not stand upon it.

I always distrust people who know so much about what god wants them to do to their fellows.

Before mothers can be rightly held responsible for the vices and crimes, for the general demoralization of society, they must possess all possible rights and powers to control the conditions and circumstances of their own and their children's lives.

Bicycling has done more to emancipate women than any one thing in the world. It gives her a feeling of self-reliance and independence the moment she takes her seat; and away she goes, the picture of untrammeled womanhood.

Friday, March 12, 2010

Contest!

My friend author Emily Bryan has a fabulous contest going on at her blog! (Which includes a $100 bookstore gift card). Go and check it out...

Portrait Friday

Today's Portrait is Anne Hyde, Duchess of York, first wife of James II and mother of Mary II and Queen Anne (artist Peter Lyly, 1660s)


Thursday, March 11, 2010

Things I Love Thursday

Last weekend I got to see Alice in Wonderland, which I had been excited about for a long time! (I love that story in all its wonderful weirdness...). I have to admit I was a bit disappointed. The story seemed sort of half-baked, as if Tim Burton spent so much time on the look of the movie he forgot stuff like character and plot arc. :) But those aesthetics, especially the costumes, were not at all disappointing! I especially loved Anne Hathaway's White Queen gown and want one like it...







Wednesday, March 10, 2010

What I'm Reading Today

I have 3 books going this week--a research book, a paranormal YA, and I decided to reward myself for finishing some revisions by actually reading a romance from my tottering TBR pile! (a rare treat these days). What are you reading today?




Monday, March 08, 2010

Hottie Monday

It feels like a good Monday for some Historical Hotties....












Sunday, March 07, 2010

Sunday Historical Etsy Find

This week--a reproduction miniature eye portrait of Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire! It can be found here at A Double Grace



You can read a bit about the history of romantic, rare eye portraits here...

Saturday, March 06, 2010

Heroine of the Weekend

This weekend in history is rich in heroines' anniversaries! Louisa May Alcott died on this date in 1888, and almost 100 years later Georgia O'Keefe died in 1986. I love both these women and their work, but I decided to look at a woman I didn't know much about, Norwegian author Camilla Collett, who died March 6, 1895. Her novel The District Governor's Daughters is considered Norwegian literature's "first modern novel" as well as one of it's first feminist works. In A History of Norwegian Literature (ed. Harald Beyer) the novel is described as "a demand for the emotional and intellectual liberation of women" and "a breakthrough for the cause of sexual equality in Norway."

Collett was born in Kristiansand, on the southern coast of Norway, in 1813 to a well-known, well-connected family (her brother was poet Henrik Wergeland). In 1817 the family settled in the town of Eidsvoll when her father, Nikolai Wergeland, was appointed the Lutheran pastor there. Nikolai was a progressive man, very involved in the independence movement (Norway declared its independence from Sweden and Denmark in 1814), who believed his daughter should be as well-educated as his son. She went to the Herrnhut Institute to study, while her brother (5 years older than her) became a celebrated literary figure whose poetry and plays celebrated Norwegian identity, which not everyone appreciated. He carried on a long feud with one of his fiercest critics, Johan Sebastian Welhaven. What made this feud even more scandalous was that Camilla was becoming romantically involved with Welhaven! This romance eventually cooled, and they each went on to marry others.

In 1834, Camilla went to France to study literature, and in 1841 she married Jonas Peter Collett (who was over 40 years her senior, and a high-ranking government minister!). Her brother died in 1845, and her husband in 1851, leaving her alone in the world with 2 young sons and financial difficulties. She soon after moved to Copehagen and wrote her novel, The District Governor's Daughters. It was published anonymously in 1854-55, and tells the tale of Sofie Ramm, who falls in love with Georg Kold, a tutor to her younger brother. The young lovers believe marriage should be based on love and not on family arrangements, but they are torn apart and Sofie forced to marry another, which leads to a life of misery. The introduction to the English translation (published in 1992) calls it a "portrait of the rigid Scandanavian society of the period," and remarks on its influence on the plays of Ibsen. It says, "Stylistically it bridges romanticism and realism...Jane Austen's comedies of manners and Charlotte Bronte's headstrong heroines coliding with Victorian ethics of female self-sacrifice."

It was also the first work in Norwegian literature to center on the lives of women at a time when women in Norway had almost no legal rights. A History of Norwegian Literature states, "she demanded a change of attitude, an understanding of the woman's heart. Into this she flung all her glowing passion, writing with bitterness and sympathy and an amazing boldness."

Camilla lived out the rest of her life in a variety of European cities like Stockholm, Berlin, and Paris, writing works of non-fiction and political essays. In 1885 she returned to Norway, and at her 80th birthday party in 1895 she was escorted by Ibsen himself. She died March 6, 1895.

Sources:
Beyer, Harald, ed. A History of Norwegian Literature (New York University Press, 1956)
Collett, Camilla, The District Governor's Daughters (Norvik Press, 1992)

Friday, March 05, 2010

Friday Contest

I'm over at the Grand Central blog today, talking about St. Patrick's Day a bit early and giving away a copy of Countess of Scandal! Drop in and say hi...

Poetry Friday


Tomorrow (March 6) marks the birthday of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, born in 1806! Happy birthday to one of my favorite poets...










The Lady's Yes


" Yes !" I answered you last night ;
" No !" this morning, Sir, I say !
Colours, seen by candle-light,
Will not look the same by day.

When the tabors played their best,
Lamps above, and laughs below —
Love me sounded like a jest,
Fit for Yes or fit for No !

Call me false, or call me free —
Vow, whatever light may shine,
No man on your face shall see
Any grief for change on mine.

Yet the sin is on us both —
Time to dance is not to woo —
Wooer light makes fickle troth —
Scorn of me recoils on you !

Learn to win a lady's faith
Nobly, as the thing is high ;
Bravely, as for life and death —
With a loyal gravity.

Lead her from the festive boards,
Point her to the starry skies,
Guard her, by your truthful words,
Pure from courtship's flatteries.

By your truth she shall be true —
Ever true, as wives of yore —
And her Yes, once said to you,
SHALL be Yes for evermore.

Thursday, March 04, 2010

To Bed a Libertine!


TBAL is available now on eHarlequin! This was such a fun story to write--the Greek Muse of erotic poetry, Erato, comes to Regency London...

Things I Love Thursday: Oscar Predictions

This weekend is the Academy Awards, yay! I always look forward to this every year, not because the ceremony is so exciting (it's waaaaay too long, of course, and most of the winners entirely too predictable!). I like to see the clothes, and to see how I do in the Oscar prediction pool. Let's take a look at the picks for this year (with some cranky opinions thrown in):

Picture: There are TEN choices this year (in theory--IMO this was not a good move. It dilutes the prestige of the award, and everyone knows of the 10 there are only really 5, and of the 5 only 2 have a big chance. Plus--there was room for The Blindside but not Bright Star?? Fail!). It seems to come down to these two, Avatar and The Hurt Locker. I have great technical admiration for both films but no great love for either. I think Avatar will sweep all the tech awards and rightly so, but I think Hurt Locker for Best Picture. It could go either way. If it was up to me, I would give it to An Education of the nominees, though Bright Star was my favorite film of the year.

Director: Kathryn Bigelow for The Hurt Locker, and about time a woman wins it, too.

Actor: Jeff Bridges for Crazy Heart, which I have not seen. I have no strong opinions in this category...

Actress: Sandra Bullock in The Blind Side. I would vote for Meryl Street or Carey Mulligan, because they are awesome and I have an irrational dislike of Bullock!

Supporting Actor: Christoph Waltz. Much deserved, he was phenomenal, but it might be nice to see Christopher Plummer get some recognition. (And IMO Stanley Tucci should have been nominated for his great turn as Paul Child in Julie and Julia and not the widely-panned Lovely Bones)

Supporting Actress: Mo'Nique. Again, a category where I have no strong opinions, and Mo'Nique is widely praised for her work. The Supporting categories are such a lock this year, if anyone else wins it will be a shocker. (Quick note--I love Maggie Gyllenhaal, but have heard this performance is not her best. I might have liked to see Diane Kruger in there. I've always loved her fashion sense, but her new-found acting chops in Basterds was amazing)

Original Screenplay: Basterds--it re-writes WWII!

Adapted Screenplay: Up in the Air (which seemed a favorite for Best Picture for a while)

Animated Movie: Up (I do have an opinion on this one! I think I'm the only person who didn't care for Up at all. I would vote for the charming Princess and the Frog, and I would vote for Almost There for Best Song, too)

Foreign Language Film: The White Ribbon. I only recently had a chance to see this, it's gorgeous-looking and harrowing and scary....

Costume: I'm weird, I know, but this is one of my very favorite categories! It's a good one this year, too, really you couldn't go wrong with any of the nominees. I think it will be Young Victoria, which I loved, but I would give the edge to Bright Star.

Now it's your turn! What are your choices?

Wednesday, March 03, 2010

What I'm Reading Today

Since I finished my latest revisions AND finished scoring RITA books, I decided to treat myself to a novel from my TBR pile! This is such a fun, Austen-esque historical mystery....


Tuesday, March 02, 2010

Riskies Tuesday


It's Tuesday so I must be at the Riskies! Be sure and join us over there--I'm talking about my March releases, Scandalous Brides and To Bed a Libertine, and giving away copies of each...