Title: French Cultural Studies 292H1S
1French Cultural Studies292H1S
-
- Love, Sex and Desire
- in French Literature and Cinema
- Instructor Marie-Anne Visoi
- University of Toronto
2 Marguerite Duras The Lover 1984
3Major Themes
-
- Love
- Sexuality
- Desire
- Transgression
- Self-discovery through the process of writing
4A new type of novel(nouveau roman)
- events of the plot, characters and emotions are
presented through alternate perspectives - voluntary memory plays an important part in
the story time and space are manipulated
throughout the novel according to the changing,
unstable aspect of memory - the reader is gradually drawn into the story by
the truthfulness of the mature writer who talks
about the hidden stretches of her youth (Page 8)
5Voluntary Memory
-
- the writer attempts to defy the time by making an
effort to revive a significant event from her
adolescence in Indochina - by remembering her past, Duras understands the
significance of the crossing of the river
6The Image that doesnt exist
- The photograph could only have been taken if
someone could have known in advance how important
it was to be in my life, that event, that
crossing of the river. (Page 10)
7Narration
- the haunting image of the fifteen year old
becomes the focus of narration - the mature writer retells her own story, analyzes
and reflects on the nature of her memorized
desire and her sexuality in the form of an
interior monologue
8Love and Erotic Pleasure
- Aristophanes myth in Symposium presents a
view of love as intense desire and erotic
pleasure felt at the restoration of the lost
unity between the reunited halves. There are
several passages in The Lover where Duras uses
sensorial imagery in order to evoke the feelings
of the two lovers.
9Love and Desire
- events from her past the symbolic meeting on the
ferry, her feelings of an outsider during the
initiation scene, sexuality and repressed
love (the lover, Helene Lagonelle) will be
recreated in her story - the exploration of the young womans desire for
the Chinese Lover becomes a source of creativity
for the adult writer
10- The skin is sumptuously soft. The body.
- And, weeping, he makes love. At first pain. And
then the pain is possessed in its turn, changed,
slowly drawn away, borne toward pleasure, clasped
to it. - The sea, formless, simply beyond compare. (Page
38) - The lover from Cholon is so accustomed to the
adolescence of the white girl, hes lost. The
pleasure he takes in her every evening has
absorbed all his time, all his life. (Page 99)
11Sexual Initiation
- the sexual act is described through the
narrators straightforward, simple language and
beautiful imagery - the vivid descriptions pull the reader into the
story due to the heightened emotional level
created by the narrative voice - And she, slow, patient, draws him to her and
starts to undress him. With her eyes shut.
Slowly. (Page 38) - Whiffs of burnt sugar drift into the room, the
smell of roasted peanuts, Chinese soups, roast
meat, herbs, jasmine, dust, incense, charcoal
fires, they carry fire about in baskets here,
its sold in the street, the smell of the city is
the smell of the villages upcountry, of the
forest. (Page 41)
12Style characteristics
- a fragmented story told alternately from a first
and third person point-of-view (the young, white
girl on the ferry and the mature writer) - portrayal of characters is inconsistent as it
relies on fragments of memories recalled by the
adult writer - elliptic, short, repetitive sentences
characterize the language of the novel - metaphorical, sensorial descriptions (Mekong,
Cholon) -
13So its during the crossing of a branch of the
Mekong, on the ferry that plies between Vinh Long
and Sadec in the great plain of mud and rice in
southern Cochin China. The Plain of the Birds.
(Page 10)
14Its in Cholon. Opposite the boulevards
linking the Chinese part of the city to the
center of Saigon, the great American-style
streets full of streetcars, rickshaws, and buses.
Its early in the afternoon. (page 36) The
noise of the city is very loud, in recollection
its like the sound track of a film turned up too
high, deafening. I remember clearly, the room is
dark, we dont speak, itès surrounded by the
continuous din of the city, caught up in the
city, swept along with it. There are no panes in
the windows, just shutters and blinds. (page
40)
15Study questionsSocio-historical and cultural
context
- Why is the crossing of the ferry a rite of
passage? - Where is the novel set? What is the importance
of this type of setting for the plot? - How is the sexual initiation described in this
context? Are race and culture important?
Explain.
16Setting
- Read the following excerpt
- Dusk fell at the same time all the year round.
It was very brief, almost like a blow. In the
rainy season, for weeks on end, you couldnt see
the sky, it was full of an unvarying mist which
even the light of the moon couldnt pierce. In
the dry season though, the sky was bare,
completely free of cloud, naked. Even moonless
nights were light. And the shadows were as
clear-cut as ever on the ground, and on the
water, roads and walls. (p. 81) - What kind of mood does this setting evoke?
17Characters
- How is the lover described in the novel?
- Describe two major characters in The Lover. Use
examples from the text to show how Marguerite
Durass characterization techniques differ from
those of a traditional novelist. - Is there any similarity between Prousts and
Durass description of characters? Justify your
opinion.
18Passage Analysis
-
- Analyze your favourite passage. Discuss
significant elements of style, structure and
language such as - Repetition
- Sensorial detail
- Narration
- Explain how the above elements contribute to the
understanding of the novel.
19 She was leaning on the rails, like the first
time, on the ferry. She knew he was watching her.
She was watching him too, she couldt see him any
more but she still looked toward the shape of the
black car. (Page 111-112)