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Marie-Hélène Chabut



Abstract:

This essay focuses on the representation of the young man – lover or potential husband – in four women’s novels written at the end of the eighteenth century: Isabelle de Charrière’s Henriette et Richard and Lettres trouvées dans des porte-feuilles d’émigrés, Marie-Jeanne Riccoboni’s Histoire de Christine de Suabe, and Sophie Cottin’s Claire d’Albe. It argues that these novels, in large part through the kind of young male characters they invent, question and resist not only the classical canon of the rational masculine, but also the new developing romantic canon of « feminized » masculinity and the masculine body that was developing during that period, and that ended up relegating women to literary, social and political nonexistence. To different degrees then, they succeed in avoiding the new masculine ideal that was rapidly becoming fashionable and would culminate in the romantic period.



SvD, January 2009



  • Publications > Belle de Zuylen Papers > 2008 > Chabut

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