Homosocial Bonds and Narrative Strategies in Adolphe Belot’s <i>Mademoiselle Giraud, ma femme</i> (1870)

Autor

  • Iwona Janicka University of Cambridge

Abstrakt

Adolphe Belot’s bestseller Mademoiselle Giraud, ma femme (1870) is a striking example of narratological tension between implied readers and the narrator. Adrien’s narrative, recounting the story of his unhappy marriage to a lesbian Paule Giraud, is significantly influenced by homosocial bonds with the male reading public — the implied readers of the text. Conscious of clear expectations towards a heterosexual man and a husband, the narrator reverts to hyperheterosexual narration in order to give legitimacy to his story and his desires. However, his narrative strategies backfire on him and, in consequence, undermine his credibility. The paper shows how tension in the choice of narrative tools subverts the blatantly anti-lesbian message of the text. By using René Girard’s theory of triangular desire and mimesis, the article also proves that the narrator is a male lesbian who had to subscribe to 19th-century convention of a husband.


Key words: 19th-century literature, French literature, queer studies, male lesbianism, lesbian, narratology, René Girard, mimesis, triangular desire, Adolphe Belot, implied reader, homosocial bonds, manipulation.

Biogram autora

Iwona Janicka - University of Cambridge

Iwona Janicka is a doctoral candidate in the French Department at the University of Cambridge, Trinity Hall. She specializes in contemporary critical theory. Her current research project deals with the concept of the universal in recent philosophical thought. She is also interested in theories of anarchism, feminism, queer studies and narratology.

Bibliografia

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Jak cytować

Janicka, I. Homosocial Bonds and Narrative Strategies in Adolphe Belot’s <i>Mademoiselle Giraud, ma femme</i> (1870). Romanica Silesiana, 8(1). Pobrano z https://trrest.vot.pl/ojsus/index.php/RS/article/view/5867

Numer

Dział

Jouer avec le genre / Playing with Gender