Is albert gay
LucreciaLeVrai said:
Okay, my thoughts on these characters' sexual preferences:
1) Albert is definitely into WOMEN. The present makes it clear he's very much in affectionate with Eugenie. What he feels for the Calculate is a mixture of awe, hero worship and admiration. Albert would probably say there's a dep bond between them, but it's more like a connection of souls, not carnal desire.
My opinion: Albert is heterosexual.
I completely agree that Albert is into women since he had stated himself that he's in adoration Eugenie, but I'm not so sure about his feelings for the Calculate. True, it may just be awe, idolizing and admiration but to the point where he's blushing at his almost every word? They way they read their lines sometimes was almost like lovers, but that just may be me who thinks that.
LucreciaLeVrai said:
2) Franz is most certainly deeply in love with Albert; it's rather obvious in the anime. Take that episode when Albert's poisoned, for example, when Franz and Maximilien discuss their feelings: Franz nearly states out loud it's Albert whom he loves - not only as a friend. Then he sacrifices his life for Albert and it's
Albert Einstein was many things: The father of relativity. The creator of the world’s most famous formula, E=mc2. The breakout luminary of Oppenheimer. One thing he was not, as far as history knows, is a gay male. But the internet has other ideas, thanks to a viral post about an entirely different historical figure.
The post shows a screenshot from Wikipedia, representing three homoerotic sketches and the line, “There hold been debates about Eisenstein’s sexuality.”
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But of course, the post was never about Einstein in the first place. Those sketches and speculation are from the Wikipedia page for Sergei Eisenstein, not Albert Einstein.
Eisenstein was a Soviet filmmaker, best known for his silent films appreciate Strike and Battleship Potemkin, released in the 1920s. He and Einstein hold similar names and were alive at the equal time — but that’s about where the similarities stop.
Where Einstein was arguably a ladies’ man, having two wives (and several affairs). Eisenstein also marr
Albert Camus was a French philosopher, author, and writer who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1957.
His works, including The Stranger and The Plague, are considered classics of modern literature. However, despite his literary achievements, there has been speculation about his personal animation and sexuality.
In this article, we will explore the question of whether or not Albert Camus was gay. We will analyze his life, his relationships, and his views on sexuality to try and shed some light on this intriguing topic.
So, let’s dive in and examine the life of one of the most noted writers of the 20th century.
Was Albert Camus Gay
There has been much speculation about Albert Camus’s sexuality, but there is no concrete evidence to advise that he was male lover. Camus was married twice and had many extramarital affairs with women, which suggests that he was attracted to women.
However, it is important to record that sexual orientation is a complex and nuanced aspect of human culture. Just because someone is married or has relationships with one gender does not necessarily mean they are not attracted to other genders.
Despite this, there is no evidence to suggest that
The queeny prince
Kate Hubbard reviews Prince Albert: The Male Who Saved the Monarchy by A N Wilson
A few months before the publication of Prince Albert, I went to perceive A N Wilson converse about his forthcoming novel at a small literary festival.
A couple of remarks tossed into the sea of (mostly) silvery heads caused something of a stir: first, Wilson likened the marriage of Victoria and Albert to a same-sex union between two women; and secondly, he mentioned Albert’s identify in the same breath as that of the sinister Rob Titchener of Archers fame. This was intriguing. Was he really suggesting that the royal marriage could be seen as a case of coercive control with a transgender twist?
There was of course an element of facetiousness (not a quality to be start in Albert) in Wilson’s comments, but a thoughtful point, too. In his earlier biography of Victoria, he described the marriage as the stormy partnership of two very tough wills. Here he doesn’t so much deviate from that line as embellish it. For Albert, as Wilson rightly says, tenderness ‘went hand in hand with control’. That the royal couple referred to each other as ‘my Master’ and ‘my Child’ says much.
Victoria’s nine
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