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D'une voix l'autre : Plaisirs feminins dans la litterature francaise de la renaissance

Posted on:2015-11-24Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:University of Ottawa (Canada)Candidate:Gilles-Chikhaoui, AudreyFull Text:PDF
GTID:2475390017491687Subject:Literature
Abstract/Summary:
The study of feminine pleasures in the sixteenth-century French literature leads to a multiplicity of representations. All of them coincide with the idea of honesty. Because of a strong misogynist ideology, women could hardly reconcile these social and moral requirements with the notion of pleasure. Nevertheless, the texts studied in this thesis (narratives, poems, essays and treatises) show a dynamic between feminine and masculine voices that gives way to new discourses on pleasure. The first part focuses on pleasure within marriage. Be it within their relationship with their spouses or in adultery, feminine sensual pleasure was considered both an honest need and a deviance. The second part deals with social pleasures: public amusements (from dance to conversations) as well as encounters between lovers, which were influenced by amour courtois, neoplatonism, and, petrarquism. The third part, dedicated to the self, breaks away from the social morals attached to the first two parts in order to study pleasure as self-accomplishment through motherhood, knowledge, spirituality and writing.
Keywords/Search Tags:Pleasure
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