Night in French libertine fiction

Bibliographic Information

Night in French libertine fiction

Marine Ganofsky

(Oxford University studies in the Enlightenment, 2018:06)

Voltaire Foundation, c2018

  • : [pbk.]

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Note

Bibliography: p. 263-278

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In the age of Enlightenment the concept of night evolved from being a time of dread to a time for pleasure. Between the start of the Regence (1715-1723) and the French Revolution the nocturnal and the erotic became intrinsically connected: shadows and darkness were reconfigured as the object of the philosophes' fascination, while night was increasingly experienced as the realm of the self. Nowhere is this paradigmatic shift better recorded than in French libertine literature of the long eighteenth century. Marine Ganofsky delves into the night scenes of libertine fiction to analyse how the idea of night was reimagined and represented by writers ranging from Crebillon to Sade. Her original analysis of erotic encounters in pornographic novels, gallant stories and sensual fairy tales reveals how they capture the period's emancipation from superstitions and traditions. The nocturnal settings of these libertine narratives were the primary means of staging men and women's hitherto hidden sexual encounters and innermost fantasies, and ultimately illustrate the conquest of night-time terrors in favour of social encounters and amorous intimacy. Libertine nocturnal scenes reflect above all the Enlightenment's re-invention of shadows less as an obstacle than an incentive to discover the mysteries they harbour. Through her innovative research Marine Ganofsky presents the erotic nights of libertine fiction as a sign that the siecle des Lumieres, free to enjoy the charms to be found in, or under, the cover of darkness, was also the siecle de la nuit.

Table of Contents

Introduction i. Libertine fiction: a nocturnal genre? ii. Libertine nocturnes iii. The 'Nocturnal Order' of libertine nights iv. The eroticisation of the nocturnal v. The nocturnalisation of eroticism vi. Chapter outline 1. Enlightening the night: a cultural and historical perspective on eighteenth-century nights i. Intellectual enlightenment ii. Material enlightenment 2. The nocturnal aesthetics of libertine fiction i. Libertine writing, pornography and obscurity ii. The embellishing obscurity of Crebillon's oriental tales iii. The eroticism of demi-jours in Le Souper des petits-maitres and Les Soupers de Daphne iv. Voluptuous shadows in Themidore v. Felicia and sublime obscurity 3. Night as a hiding space i. Night as a private space within communal living in Le Portier des chartreux and Memoires de Suzon ii. Night as an indulgent architectural space in La Petite Maison iii. Night as an intimate body part in La Nuit merveilleuse 4. Nocturnal illusions: dreams of sylph-like lovers i. The dream: the sleep of reason produces sylphs in Le Sylphe ii. The mistake: the genie Makis, or the mistaken lover in Angola iii. The lie: Clitandre, or a sylph of no consequence in La Nuit et le moment iv. The illusion: Mirbelle, or the fleshless sylph in Les Malheurs de l'inconstance 5. Nocturnal revelations i. Damon's Nyctelian initiation in Point de lendemain ii. Laure's nocturnal education in Le Rideau leve iii. Cecile's nightly enlightenment in Les Liaisons dangereuses 6. Queens of the night: women and their nocturnal mystery in Les Liaisons dangereuses i. The marquise de Merteuil's nights, or the masquerade of femininity ii. The presidente de Tourvel's shadow, or the female mystery 7. The end of libertine nights: Les Cent Vingt Journees de Sodome i. Sade's Gothic and sublime nocturnes: within the dark night of the soul ii. The Sadean nocturnal fortress iii. Sade versus the libertine clair-obscur Epilogue: beyond libertine nights - mornings and morrows i. Mornings ii. Morrows Bibliography Index

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