La Femme rompue de Simone de Beauvoir : Réécriture ou dépassement de Princesses de science de Colette Yver ? Cover Image

La Femme rompue de Simone de Beauvoir : Réécriture ou dépassement de Princesses de science de Colette Yver ?
La Femme rompue de Simone de Beauvoir : Réécriture ou dépassement de Princesses de science de Colette Yver ?

Author(s): Tiphaine Martin
Subject(s): Literary Texts, Gender history
Published by: Editura Casa Cărții de Știință
Keywords: Simone de Beauvoir; féminisme; Colette Yver; discours anti-féministe; personnages féminin

Summary/Abstract: During her childhood, Simone de Beauvoir had been influenced by her father’s vision of women, and particularly by his definition of women’s devotion, which came from the books he had read on this topic.. It was not from a feminist point of view, but from a patriarchal one. Beauvoir’s father suggested to his daughters, according to Simone de Beauvoir’ Memoirs of a Dutiful Daughter, the example of Colette Yver‘s heroines, who, according Beauvoir’s recollections in her autobiography, preferred the marital home to what she saw as arid intellectuality. Fortunately, neither Simone nor Hélène de Beauvoir did follow or adopt this internalised paternalist way. However, Simone de Beauvoir made the best use of Colette Yver’s books, writing a short story – when she was already more than middle-aged – “The Broken Woman” which can be reminiscent of Colette Yver ‘s “Princesses of Science”. We would like to show how Simone de Beauvoir deconstructed Yver’s novel in order to serve her own feminist agenda at the time : how to offer freedom to women instead of the illusory marital comfort and “bliss”, even though such an option – a way out – could seem arduous and much harder to achieve.

  • Issue Year: 12/2010
  • Issue No: 4-I
  • Page Range: 99-106
  • Page Count: 8
  • Language: French