TY - JOUR
T1 - Vanessa Springora et le fossoyage des mythes de la séduction « à la française »
AU - Aristondo, Angélique Ibáñez
AU - Nizard, Lucie
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Le Consentement by Vanessa Springora took the French literary world by storm in 2020. In the wake of the #metoo movement, the memoir’s impact has much to do with its ability to uncover the concealing power the persona of the seductive, “civilized,” French man; relatedly, it demystifies a notion of romantic and sexual consent that is problematic in its association of female amorous and sexual desire with the guilt and violence of a destructive and romantic passion. This essay first proposes to historically and culturally situate the twofold deconstruction that Springora achieves within a genealogy, not of love, but of the “French” occultation of violence and sexual abuse. It offers historical distance by putting Le Consentement in dialogue with the cultural context of the First World War, which the essay frames as a rupture that marked a significant change in gender relations in modern France and produced longstanding myths shaped in response to traumatic sexual violence. Second, the article focuses on how Vanessa Springora deconstructs gender domination as conveyed by fairy tales and literature to show that the denial of consent is not romantic.
AB - Le Consentement by Vanessa Springora took the French literary world by storm in 2020. In the wake of the #metoo movement, the memoir’s impact has much to do with its ability to uncover the concealing power the persona of the seductive, “civilized,” French man; relatedly, it demystifies a notion of romantic and sexual consent that is problematic in its association of female amorous and sexual desire with the guilt and violence of a destructive and romantic passion. This essay first proposes to historically and culturally situate the twofold deconstruction that Springora achieves within a genealogy, not of love, but of the “French” occultation of violence and sexual abuse. It offers historical distance by putting Le Consentement in dialogue with the cultural context of the First World War, which the essay frames as a rupture that marked a significant change in gender relations in modern France and produced longstanding myths shaped in response to traumatic sexual violence. Second, the article focuses on how Vanessa Springora deconstructs gender domination as conveyed by fairy tales and literature to show that the denial of consent is not romantic.
KW - consent
KW - fairy tales
KW - French exception
KW - sexual violence
KW - V. Springora
KW - World War I
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85129934769&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/17409292.2022.2038894
DO - 10.1080/17409292.2022.2038894
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85129934769
SN - 1740-9292
VL - 26
SP - 160
EP - 169
JO - Contemporary French and Francophone Studies
JF - Contemporary French and Francophone Studies
IS - 2
ER -