1st Edition

Female Sexuality and Cultural Degradation in Enlightenment France Medicine and Literature

By Mary McAlpin Copyright 2012
    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    In her study of eighteenth-century literature and medical treatises, Mary McAlpin takes up the widespread belief among cultural philosophers of the French Enlightenment that society was gravely endangered by the effects of hyper-civilization. McAlpin's study explores a strong thread in this rhetoric of decline: the belief that premature puberty in young urban girls, supposedly brought on by their exposure to lascivious images, titillating novels, and lewd conversations, was the source of an increasing moral and physical degeneration. In how-to hygiene books intended for parents, the medical community declared that the only cure for this obviously involuntary departure from the "natural" path of sexual development was the increased surveillance of young girls. As these treatises by vitalist and vitalist-inspired physiologists became increasingly common in the 1760s, McAlpin shows, so, too, did the presence of young, vulnerable, and virginal heroines in the era's novels. Analyzing novels by, among others, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Denis Diderot, and Choderlos de Laclos, she offers physiologically based readings of many of the period's most famous heroines within the context of an eighteenth-century discourse on women and heterosexual desire that broke with earlier periods in recasting female and male desire as qualitatively distinct. Her study persuasively argues that the Western view of women's sexuality as a mysterious, nebulous force-Freud's "dark continent"-has its secular origins in the mid-eighteenth century.

    Introduction: Daughters of Eve; Chapter 1 Puberty and the Splitting of the Single Sex; Chapter 2 Women as Bellwethers of Cultural Degradation; Chapter 3 Julie d’Etange, or Sexuality and the Virtuous Heroine; Chapter 4 The Marquise de Merteuil, or Sexuality in the State of Nature; Chapter 5 Marie-Jeanne Roland, or Sexuality and the Republic of Virtue; conclusion Conclusion: Sade’s Way;

    Biography

    Mary McAlpin is Associate Professor of French at the University of Tennessee, USA.

    'McAlpin's close accounting of the symptoms of vitalism on the body of the novel clarifies the degree to which the adolescent girl played a starring role in an Enlightenment discourse of cultural degradation that fueled both the development of imaginative literature and the medical attempt to explain the relation between the social and the individual as a function of the imagination’s work on the body.' H-France