Template:Short description Template:Good article Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox writer Eileen Mary Challans (4 September 1905 – 13 December 1983), known by her pen name Mary Renault (Template:IPAc-en<ref name=":0">"She always pronounced it 'Ren-olt', though almost everyone would come to speak of her as if she were a French car." Template:Cite book</ref>),<ref name="st-hughs.ox.ac.uk"/> was a British writer best known for her historical novels set in ancient Greece.<ref name="LoC2024">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Born in Forest Gate in 1905, she attended St Hugh's College, Oxford, from 1924 until 1928. After graduating from St Hugh's with a Third Class in English,<ref>'Oxford University Calendar 1932', Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1932, p. 271</ref> she worked as a nurse and began writing her first novels, which were contemporary romances. In 1948, she moved to Durban, South Africa with her partner, Julie Mullard, and later to Cape Town, where she spent the rest of her life. Living in South Africa allowed her to write about openly gay characters without fearing the censorship and homophobia of England. She devoted herself to writing historical fiction in the 1950s, which were also her most successful books. She is best known for her historical fiction today.

Renault's works are often rooted in themes related to love, sexuality and relationships. Her books attracted a large gay following at the time of their publication, when few mainstream works depicted homosexuality in a positive light. Her work has had a generally positive reception by critics. She has received numerous awards and honours, both during her lifetime and posthumously.<ref name="LoC2024"/>

BiographyEdit

Youth and educationEdit

Eileen Mary Challans was born on 4 September 1905 at Dacre Lodge, 49 Plashet Road, Forest Gate, Essex. She was the elder daughter of physician Frank Challans and (Mary) Clementine Newsome, daughter of dentist John Baxter, who claimed descent from the Puritan church leader Richard Baxter.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Her mother was "a desperately aspirational housewife, whose favourite word was 'nice'".<ref name=":32">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> She had one younger sister, (Frances) Joyce,<ref name=":0" /> who Challans always felt was the favourite daughter. She had a comfortable, yet strained childhood; her parents had a contentious relationship, and her father was neglectful of his children.<ref name=":02">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> When she was 15, her mother's sister Bertha paid for her to be sent to a boarding school in Bristol, and then to attend the University of Oxford. As a result of entering boarding school later than most of her peers, Challans struggled to catch up in mathematics and Latin. She relied on the Loeb Classical Library to read Greek and Latin texts with English translation.<ref>Sweetman, 1994, 26-27</ref>

Challans was educated first at Levick Family School and Clifton Girls School in Bristol.<ref name="LoC2024"/> She began attending St Hugh's College, Oxford, then an all-women's college, in 1924.<ref name=":62">Template:Cite book</ref> While at St Hugh's, she studied history, mythology, philosophy and ancient literature.<ref name=":83">Template:Citation</ref> Although her studies included classical languages such as Latin, her Ancient Greek language skills were self taught.<ref name=":62" /> She graduated with an undergraduate degree in English in 1928.<ref name=":02" /> One of her tutors was J.R.R. Tolkien, who encouraged her to write a novel set in medieval times, but she burned the manuscript because she felt it lacked authenticity.<ref name=":43">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Nursing and early writingEdit

Challans' mother encouraged her to take an interest in marriage.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Following her degree, when her father refused to support her career as a writer, she left home and, to support herself, trained as a nurse.<ref name=":32" /> She began her training in 1933 at the Radcliffe Infirmary in Oxford. During her training she met Julie Mullard, a fellow nurse with whom she established a lifelong romantic relationship.<ref name="LoC2024"/> Despite the mores of the time and the fact that Mullard had received an offer of marriage from one of her male lovers, they were determined to be a couple. They sneaked into each other's rooms at night, and on one occasion had to hide beneath the sheets when a matron burst in.<ref name=":32"/>

Challans worked as a nurse while writing her first novel, Purposes of Love,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> using the pseudonym Mary Renault to keep her writing secret should it meet with disapproval.<ref name="Room">Template:Cite book</ref> She chose this pseudonym from Froissart's Chronicles and used it for the entirety of her professional literary career.<ref name="Room"/><ref name=":132">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The novel was published in 1939 by Longman in the United Kingdom, and by William Morrow and Company in the United States. After receiving a cash advance from Morrow, Challans bought an MG sports car. Although Challans had failed her driving test, she decided to drive the car anyway along with Mullard, who also did not have a driving licence. They were involved in a road traffic accident in June 1939 which seriously injured Mullard, who was hospitalized for facial injuries. A few weeks later, the two women retreated to a small cottage in Cornwall where they lived off the income from Purposes of Love.<ref name="LoC2024"/> Challans had nearly completed her second novel when World War II began. By May 1940, both Challans and Mullard had been called in to treat patients at Winford Emergency Hospital in Bristol. There, they briefly treated evacuees from the Battle of Dunkirk.<ref>Zilboorg, pp. 79–84</ref> Renault worked in the Radcliffe Infirmary's brain surgery ward until 1945.<ref>Zilboorg, p. 127</ref>

Her novel The Friendly Young Ladies (1943), about a lesbian relationship between a writer and a nurse, is thought to be inspired by her relationship with Mullard. It is the only lesbian novel written by Renault.<ref name=":72">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="LoC2024"/>

Academic and writing careerEdit

In 1948, after winning an MGM prize worth £37,000 for Return to Night, Challans was able to leave nursing and devote herself to writing full time.<ref name="LoC2024"/> Challans and Mullard emigrated to Durban, South Africa, which was home to a community of gay and lesbian expatriates who had left the more sexually repressive environments of Britain and the United States. Because of this, Challans and Mullard were able to live together as a couple without causing much controversy.<ref name="hns22">Template:Cite news</ref> Challans worked successfully as an author after the couple's arrival in South Africa in 1948, and continued to write until her death in 1983. In 1964, she became president of the South African chapter of International PEN, an association of writers, a position which she held until 1981.<ref>Zilboorg, p. 168</ref> Both women were critical of the less liberal aspects of their new home, and participated in the Black Sash movement against apartheid in the 1950s.<ref name=":83"/> However, Challans was occasionally disillusioned with the Black Sash on account of its insufficiently radical leanings, such as when it refused to protest against the implementation of anti-homosexuality laws in 1968.<ref>Zilboorg, pp. 167–168</ref>

Challans travelled in Africa, Greece and Crete, but never returned to Britain.<ref name=":43"/> She had a mutual admiration for the novelist Patrick O'Brian, with whom she exchanged letters.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Her earlier British reputation as a writer of sensationalist bestsellers faded, and in 1983 she was listed as one of the famous alumnae who had brought honour to the Radcliffe Infirmary Nurses' Home.Template:Sfn Challans became ill in August 1983, and was diagnosed with lung cancer and pneumonia. In her final days she tried to complete a final novel, which remained unfinished after she went into residential hospice care. She died in Cape Town on 13 December 1983.Template:Sfn She directed her papers, including correspondence and the partially finished manuscript, were to be burned upon her death. Mullard died in 1996.<ref name="LoC2024"/>

Chronology of writingEdit

Beginning with Purposes of Love, Challans' first six novels had a contemporary setting. She published Return to Night in 1947. This was followed by The North Face in 1948.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Challans' last contemporary romance novel, The Charioteer (1953), marked a change in theme. It tells the story of two young gay servicemen in the 1940s who try to model their relationship on the ideals expressed in Plato's Phaedrus and Symposium. It echoed themes which Challans later revisited with her historical novels.<ref name=":522">Template:Cite book</ref>

Between 1956 and 1981, Challans turned to historical fiction, all of which was set in ancient Greece.<ref name="newyorker.com3">Template:Cite magazine</ref> Challans, by then in her mid-fifties, made her first foray into historical fiction with The Last of the Wine. The novel was her greatest financial and critical success to date, and she followed it with several other historical novels. Her historical novels include a pair of novels about the mythological hero Theseus and a trilogy about the career of Alexander the Great.<ref name=":522"/>

ThemesEdit

RelationshipsEdit

A central theme in Challans' work, both contemporary and historical, is the presentation of love as a struggle between the pursuer and the pursued. This dynamic was greatly influenced by the philosophy of Plato, in particular Phaedrus, his dialogue on love.<ref name=":112">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> Hierarchical relationships, involving age gaps or differences in social status, are frequently explored in Challans' novels. In her novels featuring same-sex couples, these hierarchies serve as an alternative to traditional gender roles. Fire from Heaven centres on the relationship between Alexander and his lover Hephaestion, while The Persian Boy is about the relationship between the enslaved Bagoas and Alexander.<ref name=":15">Template:Cite book</ref> The novelist Linda Proud described Purposes of Love as "a strange combination of Platonism and hospital romance".<ref name="hns22"/> Challans' Return to Night, another hospital romance, explores the power dynamics between Hillary, a doctor, and a younger man with whom she has an affair.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

SexualityEdit

Many of Challans' contemporary romance novels explored same-sex love and desire through their characters.<ref name="LoC2024"/> For example, Colanna, an openly lesbian character, features in Purposes of Love.<ref name=":132"/> The Charioteer has been noted as an early example of the "Gay novel".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> It was written during a period of time when male homosexuality was illegal in the United Kingdom, particularly under the policies implemented by David Maxwell Fyfe, 1st Earl of Kilmuir, who was Home Secretary from 1951 to 1954.<ref name=":92">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Simon Russell Beale described its contemporary context as "that sombre, twilit world of the early 1950s, when so much of homosexual life was threaded through with fear of exposure."<ref name=":22">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The protagonists of the novel, Ralph and Laurie, look to Greek ideals as a template for how to understand their own masculinity and homosexuality. The society of Classical Greece acts as a more tolerant and liberating alternative to contemporary British society.<ref name=":15"/>

Challans' American publishers refused to publish The Charioteer for fear of prosecution. Renault attributed this hesitancy to the rise of McCarthyism in the United States.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> It was not published in the United States until 1959,<ref name="LoC2024"/> which made it a somewhat later addition to homosexual literature in the United States because American readers and critics had accepted serious gay love stories in such works as Djuna Barnes' Nightwood (1936), Carson McCullers' Reflections in a Golden Eye (1941), Truman Capote's Other Voices, Other Rooms (1948) and Gore Vidal's The City and the Pillar (1948).<ref name=":522"/>

Her Alexander Trilogy was one of the first mainstream literary works to feature homosexual relationships prominently.<ref name=":102">Template:Cite news</ref> By turning away from the twentieth century and writing stories about male lovers in the warrior societies of ancient Greece, Renault no longer had to deal with homosexuality and anti-gay prejudice as social "problems". Instead, she was free to consider larger ethical and philosophical concerns while examining the nature of love and leadership.<ref name=":522" />

Role of womenEdit

Women do not play a large role in Challans' historical fiction, and are relegated to the role of wives and mothers. They often behave in stereotypical ways, being simultaneously helpless and ruthless.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Critics have remarked on the negative portrayal of women, particularly mothers, in her work.Template:Sfn This is often attributed to the fraught relationship Challans had with her own mother. David Sweetman remarks in his biography of Challans that her novels generally portray mothers in a poor light and that, particularly in her later novels, this is extended to women in general. Daniel Mendelsohn said that both her "contemporary and the Greek novels feature unsettling depictions of bad marriages and, particularly, of nightmarishly passive-aggressive wives and mothers."<ref name="newyorker.com3"/> Her generally negative depiction of women has also been noted by the critic Carolyn Gold Heilbrun.<ref>Reinventing Womanhood Carolyn Heilbrun, 1979 (Chapter Three)</ref>

ViewsEdit

Challans was a Platonist, which influenced her personal views on love and relationships.<ref name=":112"/>

Gay liberationEdit

Though Challans appreciated her gay following, she was uncomfortable with the "gay pride" movement that emerged in the 1970s after the Stonewall riots, and she was reluctant to identify as a lesbian.<ref name=":32"/> Like Laurie Odell, the protagonist of The Charioteer, she was suspicious of identifying oneself primarily by one's sexual orientation. Late in her life she expressed hostility to the gay rights movement, troubling some of her fans.<ref name="Moore">Template:Cite journal</ref> Her views on the gay rights movement were elaborated upon in an afterword to The Friendly Ladies written shortly before her death in 1983.<ref name=":5">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Congregated homosexuals waving banners are really not conducive to a goodnatured 'Vive la difference!' ... People who do not consider themselves to be, primarily, human beings amongst their fellow humans, deserve to be discriminated against, and ought not to make a meal of it.<ref name=":5" />

ApartheidEdit

After relocating to South Africa in the late 1940s, Challans was involved in the anti-apartheid movement, although not as actively as many of her contemporaries. In a 1979 interview, Challans said that although she signed petitions and written protests against apartheid, she did not "pass [herself] off as a heroine. You don't get locked up for writing protests."<ref name=":12">Template:Cite news</ref> According to Challans, she did not feel strongly compelled to write about apartheid in her novels because it made no major impact on her life, saying "I have never profited from apartheid and I have never been segregated."<ref name=":12" />

Reception and legacyEdit

ReceptionEdit

Challans' work was generally well received during her lifetime, and has enjoyed a continuously positive reception in retrospective reviews. The historian Tom Holland said that "No other novelist has so successfully evoked the beauty, the charisma and the terror of ancient Greece."<ref name=":10">Template:Cite news</ref> Peter Parker of The Telegraph, described The Charioteer as a "classic" in a 2014 review.<ref name=":92"/> Her novels, both historical and contemporary, have been republished by Virago.

Fire from Heaven, her novel about Alexander the Great, was one of the six books shortlisted for the Lost Man Booker Prize in 2010.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Noël Coward's reception of Challans' work and her portrayal of homosexual relationships in particular was less warm:

I have also read The Charioteer by Miss Mary Renault. Oh dear, I do, do wish well-intentioned ladies would not write books about homosexuality. This one is turgid, unreal and so ghastly earnest. It takes the hero – soi-disant – three hundred pages to reconcile himself to being queer as a coot, and his soul-searching and deep, deep introspection is truly awful. There are 'queer' parties in which everyone calls everyone 'my dear' a good deal, and over the whole book is a shimmering lack of understanding of the subject. I'm sure the poor woman meant well but I wish she'd stick to recreating the glory that was Greece and not fuck about with dear old modern homos.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Historical accuracyEdit

Although not a classicist by training, Challans was admired in her day for her scrupulous recreations of the ancient Greek world. Her work was critically acclaimed for the meticulously researched historical detail she included. Some of the history presented in her fiction and in her non-fiction work, The Nature of Alexander, has been called into question, however.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Her novels about Theseus rely on the controversial theories of Robert Graves, and take liberties in depicting the society of ancient Crete. Mary Beard and John Henderson observed Challans' novels create "in mythical prehistoric Crete [...] a weird 'other world', where a society free from 'our' inhibitions (particularly sexual) can be realized."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Some of her portrayals of individual historical figures have also been criticized. Her portrait of Alexander has been criticized as uncritical and romanticised.<ref name="beyondrenault">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Kevin Kopelson, Professor of English at the University of Iowa, felt that Challans "mischaracterise[d] pederastic relationships as heroic."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Defying centuries of admiration for Demosthenes as a great orator, Challans portrayed him as a cruel, corrupt and cowardly demagogue.<ref name="beyondrenault"/>

Legacy and influenceEdit

Challans' work drew a wide readership. When asked who his favourite author was, John F. Kennedy replied "Mary Renault".<ref name=":43"/><ref name="LoC2024"/>

At the time they were published, Challans' works were among the few novels to present love between persons of the same sex as a natural part of life, rather than a problem.<ref name=":132"/> Daniel Mendelsohn discussed the impact that Challans' work, and their correspondences, had on him as young boy.<ref name="Mendelsohn">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The Charioteer has been described as "a historical gay document", providing guidance and comfort to gay men through classical literature in an essentially hostile world.<ref name=":22"/> Her sympathetic treatment of love between men won her a wide gay readership, and led to rumours that Challans was a gay man writing under a female pseudonym. Challans found these rumours amusing but also sought to distance herself from being labelled a "gay writer".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Challans' work has influenced historical fiction and classical literature. The historian Bettany Hughes credited Renault with capturing the "hardcore, drug-saturated sensuality of the ancient world."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Hughes later wrote the introduction to reprints of her work, including The King Must Die and The Bull From the Sea.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

She has been cited as an inspiration by novelists such as Douglas Stuart<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and Kate Forsyth.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Suzanne Collins said that The Hunger Games was partly inspired by The King Must Die, which reimagined Minos' Labyrinth as an arena where Athenian tributes had to fight for their lives to entertain the Cretan elite.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Bernard Dick wrote The Hellenism of Mary Renault (1972), which analyzed the classical influences reflected in her corpus of work. Dick corresponded with Challans from 1969 until her death in 1983. The letters were eventually donated to the St Hugh's College archive, which also holds other letters and transcriptions of interviews with Challans before her death.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

An hour-long documentary about her life titled Mary Renault – Love and War in Ancient Greece was aired on BBC Four in 2006.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The documentary included contributions from Hughes, filmmaker Oliver Stone, and broadcaster Sue MacGregor.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The Mary Renault Prize is offered at St Hugh's College, Challans' alma mater. It awards cash prizes to the best essays on the Classical reception, funded by royalties from Challans' work.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Adaptations of her workEdit

The King Must Die and its sequel The Bull from the Sea were adapted by Michael Bakewell into a single 11-part BBC Radio 4 serial entitled The King Must Die. It was directed by David Spenser and broadcast between 5 June 1983 and 14 August 1983. It starred Gary Bond (Theseus), John Westbrook (Pittheus), Frances Jeater (queen of Eleusis), Carole Boyd (Aithra), Alex Jennings (Amyntor), Sarah Badel, David March and Christopher Guard.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

The Charioteer was adapted into a ten-episode serial for BBC Radio 4's Book at Bedtime, read by Anton Lesser and produced by Clive Brill, which was broadcast over two weeks from 25 November 2013.<ref>"The Charioteer" (Abridged by Eileen Horne; read by Anton Lesser; not currently available), bbc.co.uk.</ref>

PublicationsEdit

Contemporary fictionEdit

  • Purposes of Love (1939) (US title: Promise of Love)
  • Kind Are Her Answers (1940)
  • The Friendly Young Ladies (1944) It was published in the US as The Middle Mist, 1945
  • Return to Night (1947) A French translation was published in Paris in 1948 by A. Michel, under the title "Recours à la nuit".
  • The North Face (1948) (US 1949)
  • The Charioteer (1953) (US 1959) The Charioteer was published in Spanish in 1989 – translated by María José Rodellar – with the title El Auriga, and into Greek in 1990 with the title Hō eniochos.

Historical novelsEdit

Non-fictionEdit

  • The Lion in the Gateway: The Heroic Battles of the Greeks and Persians at Marathon, Salamis, and Thermopylae (1964) — about the Persian Wars
  • The Nature of Alexander (1975) — a biography of Alexander the Great

See alsoEdit

CitationsEdit

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General and cited sourcesEdit

External linksEdit

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