The Beautiful Boy

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The Beautiful Boy
Bjorn-Andresen-The-Boy-Cover-by-David-Bailey-1970.jpg
Cover of The Beautiful Boy, showing Björn Andrésen in 1970 by David Bailey
Author Germaine Greer
Language English
Subject Art history
Published 2003
Publisher Rizzoli
Pages 256 pp
ISBN 0-8478-2586-8
File:TheBoyByGermaineGreer.jpg
Cover released in Europe as simply "The Boy" was viewed as less explicit.

The Beautiful Boy (or just The Boy[1]) is a book, ISBN 0-8478-2586-8, by Germaine Greer, published in 2003. Its avowed intention was "to advance women's reclamation of their capacity for and right to visual pleasure". It is a study of the youthful male face and form, from antiquity to the present day, from paintings and drawings to statuary and photographs.

The cover picture caused minor controversy when the subject of the photograph, Björn Andrésen, a Swedish actor and musician who played Tadzio in Death in Venice (billed by the director Luchino Visconti as "the most beautiful boy in the world") stated in the press that he objected to the picture having been used without his permission.[2][3]

The book contains some 200 pictures of boys through the ages, and is a history of boys in art. Pictures and discussions range from Cupid to Elvis, Boy George, Kurt Cobain, and Jim Morrison.

The book generated some controversy because "society is not accustomed to seeing beauty in young males", Greer claims. Greer has described the book as "full of pictures of 'ravishing' pre-adult boys with hairless chests, wide-apart legs and slim waists". She goes on to say that, "I know that the only people who are supposed to like looking at pictures of boys are a subgroup of gay men," she wrote in London's Daily Telegraph. "Well, I'd like to reclaim for women the right to appreciate the short-lived beauty of boys, real boys, not simpering 30-year-olds with shaved chests."[4] She was criticized for these comments with some writers labeling her a paedophile.[5]

Germaine Greer responded vigorously on Andrew Denton's television talk show Enough Rope.[6]

Notes

  1. Depending upon the edition the cover shows the title to be "The Boy" or "The Beautiful Boy", as do booksellers
  2. 'The Guardian:' comments following use of Andrésen's picture on the cover of "The Boy"
  3. 'Fairfax Digital:' "I'm not Greer's play toy"
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