“Jeune fille qui ne pleure pas son oiseau mort”: female puberty in Stendhal's Lamiel

This article is a close reading of the fausse phthisie ruse in Stendhal's Lamiel. It examines the scene in the 1840 version of the manuscript in which Lamiel and Doctor Sansfin fake the symptoms of tuberculosis using the blood of a dead bird. In the first instance, this article analyses the nov...

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Main Author: Jones, S
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: University of Nebraska Press 2021
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author Jones, S
author_facet Jones, S
author_sort Jones, S
collection OXFORD
description This article is a close reading of the fausse phthisie ruse in Stendhal's Lamiel. It examines the scene in the 1840 version of the manuscript in which Lamiel and Doctor Sansfin fake the symptoms of tuberculosis using the blood of a dead bird. In the first instance, this article analyses the novel's motif of the dead bird by using Jean-Baptiste Greuze's Jeune fille qui pleure son oiseau mort (1765) and Denis Diderot's Salon de 1765 as intertexts revealing the quasi-incestuous dimension of the fausse phthisie scene. In the second instance, it demonstrates how Lamiel charts the eponymous heroine's physiological progression through puberty via its use of the terms petite and jeune fille. Ultimately, this article argues that Lamiel's personal and sexual freedom is intimately connected to her subversion of both the visual iconography and the medical discourse of the jeune fille.
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spelling oxford-uuid:f0202d3e-a934-47bc-a856-dcfc963dbc822022-03-27T11:45:27Z“Jeune fille qui ne pleure pas son oiseau mort”: female puberty in Stendhal's LamielJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:f0202d3e-a934-47bc-a856-dcfc963dbc82EnglishSymplectic ElementsUniversity of Nebraska Press2021Jones, SThis article is a close reading of the fausse phthisie ruse in Stendhal's Lamiel. It examines the scene in the 1840 version of the manuscript in which Lamiel and Doctor Sansfin fake the symptoms of tuberculosis using the blood of a dead bird. In the first instance, this article analyses the novel's motif of the dead bird by using Jean-Baptiste Greuze's Jeune fille qui pleure son oiseau mort (1765) and Denis Diderot's Salon de 1765 as intertexts revealing the quasi-incestuous dimension of the fausse phthisie scene. In the second instance, it demonstrates how Lamiel charts the eponymous heroine's physiological progression through puberty via its use of the terms petite and jeune fille. Ultimately, this article argues that Lamiel's personal and sexual freedom is intimately connected to her subversion of both the visual iconography and the medical discourse of the jeune fille.
spellingShingle Jones, S
“Jeune fille qui ne pleure pas son oiseau mort”: female puberty in Stendhal's Lamiel
title “Jeune fille qui ne pleure pas son oiseau mort”: female puberty in Stendhal's Lamiel
title_full “Jeune fille qui ne pleure pas son oiseau mort”: female puberty in Stendhal's Lamiel
title_fullStr “Jeune fille qui ne pleure pas son oiseau mort”: female puberty in Stendhal's Lamiel
title_full_unstemmed “Jeune fille qui ne pleure pas son oiseau mort”: female puberty in Stendhal's Lamiel
title_short “Jeune fille qui ne pleure pas son oiseau mort”: female puberty in Stendhal's Lamiel
title_sort jeune fille qui ne pleure pas son oiseau mort female puberty in stendhal s lamiel
work_keys_str_mv AT joness jeunefillequinepleurepassonoiseaumortfemalepubertyinstendhalslamiel