The satire of the Salonnière: women and humour in Seventeenth-Century France

This article reassesses styles of humour in the literary output of seventeenth-century French salons by attending to women and satire. While scholarship has repeatedly dwelt on salons and salon hostesses as objects of satire, this study argues that salon hostesses were also writers of satire, and im...

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Autor principal: Nicholson, A
Formato: Journal article
Idioma:English
Publicado em: Liverpool University Press 2022
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author Nicholson, A
author_facet Nicholson, A
author_sort Nicholson, A
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description This article reassesses styles of humour in the literary output of seventeenth-century French salons by attending to women and satire. While scholarship has repeatedly dwelt on salons and salon hostesses as objects of satire, this study argues that salon hostesses were also writers of satire, and importantly writers of satire aimed at would-be hostesses, via an analysis of Madeleine de Scudéry’s Artamène; ou, Le Grand Cyrus (1649–1653). In the “Histoire de Sapho” (Book II, Tome X of Artamène), Scudéry presents a satirical portrait of an “anti-salonnière” named Damophile. This wannabe salon hostess strives to imitate the titular salonnière, Sapho, and become a well-respected savante, but instead appears excessive and pedantic in her efforts, attracting the ridicule of Sapho and her circle. Drawing together modesty, mockery and collective amusement, Scudéry uses satire to provide a model for other women writers that is firmly reconciled with the honnête values of salon culture.
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spelling oxford-uuid:bab2e967-18a1-45db-a5c2-3df6fc71c27f2023-05-31T13:26:50ZThe satire of the Salonnière: women and humour in Seventeenth-Century FranceJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:bab2e967-18a1-45db-a5c2-3df6fc71c27fEnglishSymplectic ElementsLiverpool University Press2022Nicholson, AThis article reassesses styles of humour in the literary output of seventeenth-century French salons by attending to women and satire. While scholarship has repeatedly dwelt on salons and salon hostesses as objects of satire, this study argues that salon hostesses were also writers of satire, and importantly writers of satire aimed at would-be hostesses, via an analysis of Madeleine de Scudéry’s Artamène; ou, Le Grand Cyrus (1649–1653). In the “Histoire de Sapho” (Book II, Tome X of Artamène), Scudéry presents a satirical portrait of an “anti-salonnière” named Damophile. This wannabe salon hostess strives to imitate the titular salonnière, Sapho, and become a well-respected savante, but instead appears excessive and pedantic in her efforts, attracting the ridicule of Sapho and her circle. Drawing together modesty, mockery and collective amusement, Scudéry uses satire to provide a model for other women writers that is firmly reconciled with the honnête values of salon culture.
spellingShingle Nicholson, A
The satire of the Salonnière: women and humour in Seventeenth-Century France
title The satire of the Salonnière: women and humour in Seventeenth-Century France
title_full The satire of the Salonnière: women and humour in Seventeenth-Century France
title_fullStr The satire of the Salonnière: women and humour in Seventeenth-Century France
title_full_unstemmed The satire of the Salonnière: women and humour in Seventeenth-Century France
title_short The satire of the Salonnière: women and humour in Seventeenth-Century France
title_sort satire of the salonniere women and humour in seventeenth century france
work_keys_str_mv AT nicholsona thesatireofthesalonnierewomenandhumourinseventeenthcenturyfrance
AT nicholsona satireofthesalonnierewomenandhumourinseventeenthcenturyfrance