At a time when students and academics are grappling with the cultural legacies of misogyny, Lisa Robertson’s novel The Baudelaire Fractal (2020) offers a challenging, creative mode of engagement with the male canon. It describes the journey into writing of Hazel Brown, a young woman whose painful encounter with Baudelaire’s misogyny inspires not a rejection but an appropriation: one day she discovers within herself the authorship of Baudelaire’s complete works, expressed as a bodily commingling: “that female mouth was both his and mine.” Hazel’s methods of self-expression echo those of both the French pioneers of écriture féminine and recent menstrual theorists, figuring her girlhood as a bloodstain which makes female subjectivity visible. ...
“Literature and Feminine Singularity: 1850–90” argues for the emergence of a mathematically-defined ...
From the courtesan Esther in Honoré de Balzac’s Splendeurs et misères des courtisanes (1838-1847) to...
Colette Piau : Marie-Jeanne Riccoboni and feminine writing. Is there any difference between a femin...
Using French and American feminist theory, I analyze Charles Baudelaire\u27s symbols in Les Fleurs d...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from MLAPosted by permission ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University via ht...
Charles Baudelaire’s poetic production is studied as a canonical example of aesthetic modernity in l...
In Baudelaire, the misogyny, pure provocation or cruel irony, announces an obsession towards the wom...
Resumen: En un epígrafe de L’automne à Pékin (1947), Vian cita un fragmento de Fusées de Baudelaire:...
Women are ubiquitous in Charles Baudelaire’s poetry, presented either as ideal, unattainable figures...
In The Flowers of Evil [Les Fleurs du Mal (1857)], French poet Charles Baudelaire paints three femal...
Dans cet article, nous examinons l’emploi de l’intertextualité littéraire et de ses implications fém...
This essay examines the poem “À Celle qui est trop gaie” by Charles Baudelaire. In addition to exami...
Masculine Hegemony and Feminine Alterity in Baudelaire's 'À une mendiante rousse
It is well known that Jean Rhys’s Wide Sargasso Sea reclaims Bertha Mason, the Gothicised ‘other’ of...
“Literature and Feminine Singularity: 1850–90” argues for the emergence of a mathematically-defined ...
From the courtesan Esther in Honoré de Balzac’s Splendeurs et misères des courtisanes (1838-1847) to...
Colette Piau : Marie-Jeanne Riccoboni and feminine writing. Is there any difference between a femin...
Using French and American feminist theory, I analyze Charles Baudelaire\u27s symbols in Les Fleurs d...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from MLAPosted by permission ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University via ht...
Charles Baudelaire’s poetic production is studied as a canonical example of aesthetic modernity in l...
In Baudelaire, the misogyny, pure provocation or cruel irony, announces an obsession towards the wom...
Resumen: En un epígrafe de L’automne à Pékin (1947), Vian cita un fragmento de Fusées de Baudelaire:...
Women are ubiquitous in Charles Baudelaire’s poetry, presented either as ideal, unattainable figures...
In The Flowers of Evil [Les Fleurs du Mal (1857)], French poet Charles Baudelaire paints three femal...
Dans cet article, nous examinons l’emploi de l’intertextualité littéraire et de ses implications fém...
This essay examines the poem “À Celle qui est trop gaie” by Charles Baudelaire. In addition to exami...
Masculine Hegemony and Feminine Alterity in Baudelaire's 'À une mendiante rousse
It is well known that Jean Rhys’s Wide Sargasso Sea reclaims Bertha Mason, the Gothicised ‘other’ of...
“Literature and Feminine Singularity: 1850–90” argues for the emergence of a mathematically-defined ...
From the courtesan Esther in Honoré de Balzac’s Splendeurs et misères des courtisanes (1838-1847) to...
Colette Piau : Marie-Jeanne Riccoboni and feminine writing. Is there any difference between a femin...