Thesis submitted for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department
Transcription
Thesis submitted for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department
Madness in the Text: A Study of Simone de Beauvoir's Writing Practice Alison T. Holland Thesis submitted for the Degreeof Doctor of Philosophy NEWCASTLE UNIVERSITY -------------------------097 52113 LIBRARY, 3 ---------------------------ý1ý2ýºs L(oýý5 Departmentof French Studies University Of Newcastle September,1997 Abstract This study, which is based on close readings of L'Invitee, Les Belles Images and La Femme rompue, focuses on the textual strategies that Simone de Beauvoir uses in her fiction. It shows that madness is an intrinsic quality of the text. Marks of excess, interpreted inscription disruption transgression are as an of madness at a plurality, and discursive level. Madness is discernable in the text whenever the meaningfulness of language is subverted. Chapter One, `L 'Invitee: The Gothic Imagination', argues that, in her first novel, Simone de Beauvoir created a Gothic textual universe in order to confront pain and madness. Gothic conventions and figures are shown to inform the text. In so far as it is Gothic and transgressive the text is mad. Chapter Two, `Continuities in Change: Imagery in L'Invitee, Les Belles Images and La Femme images how in by is text that evoke pain and the examines madness rompue', mediated distress and a sense of lost plenitude. Detailed readings reveal a close affinity between the symbolic landscapes of L'Invitee and the later fiction where excess and hyperbole `Instability investigates how disruptive Three, Chapter Incoherence', textual persist. and It textual the to of a creation mad and contribute universe. meaning strategies unsettle demonstrates how the text subverts notions of a unified and stable identity. Temporal be incoherence fragmentation to the a source and are seen of multi-layering confusion, disrupt destabilise in Traits text. that the text and the and which exemplifies madness duplicate madness are illustrated and discussed. Analysis also reveals how disarticulated and contorted syntax is instrumental in the evocation of the anguish of madness and how syntax can convey a sense of claustrophobia and obsession. Chapter Four, `Language and Meaning: Les Belles Images', locates madness in the text at those points where the meaningfulness of language is subverted. The way plurality, irony, enumeration and repetition enact madness in the text is the focus of attention. It emerges clearly from the close readings undertaken, that Simone de Beauvoir's writing is inflected by forceful emotions and disrupted and destabilised by the excess of madness. Contents Page Acknowledgments iii Introduction 1 Chapter One L'Invitee: The Gothic Imagination 39 ChapterTwo Continuities in Change:Imagery in L'Invitee, Les Belles Images and La Femmerompue 87 Chapter Three Instability and Incoherence 142 ChapterFour Languageand Meaning: Les Belles Images 188 Conclusion 225 Bibliography 229 ii Acknowledgements First and foremost, I thank my supervisor,Dr. Rachel Edwards,for her unfailing support and encouragement.Her meticulous critical advice has beeninvaluable. During the times when I thought I had lost my way, shewas there to remind me where I was going. My thanks also go to Dr. Ursula Tidd who has been generouswith her time and commentedthoughtfully and encouraginglyon my work. Elizabeth Fallaize took my wörk seriously and gaveme the encouragementI neededto go on with my reasearchat a crucial moment. I thank her warmly. I am also pleasedto be able to expressmy gratitude to the University of Northumbria at Newcastle,Departmentof Modern Languagesfor the allocation of H.E.F.C.E. researchfunding which afforded me the spaceand time to completethis study. I have greatly appreciatedthe support of colleagues.My family have supportedme steadily throughout my academiccareerand this study could not have beenwritten without them. I should like to take this opportunity to offer them my heartfelt thanks. I should also like to acknowledgethe numerousways that my friends have given me support, intellectually, emotionally and practically, over recentmonths. Their warmth, humour and generosityhave carried me through. Finally, I want to expressmy specialthanks to Cairine Fotheringham,whose help and enthusiasmI haverelied on. precious 111 Madness in the Text: A Study of Simone de Beauvoir's Writing Practice Introduction This study of Simone de Beauvoir's fiction will focus on her writing practice, on her textual strategies.I want to examinehow shetells the stories shetells and intend to demonstratethat madnessis inherent in the text, in the very telling of the stories. On the whole, Simone de Beauvoir's fiction in generaland her writing practice in particular have beenneglected,a fact that has not goneunnoticed.Elaine Marks tells has been forty-five de Beauvoir in Simone `during the that written about years which us in newspapers,literary magazines,women's magazines,scholarlyjournals, and has been her journals feminist books, the on emphasis and major specifically ' She her on women and old age'. essays writings and on substantial autobiographical identifies a needfor more work on close textual analyses(p. 11). Elizabeth Fallaize fictional have dealing `the the the that work given at of with studies majority points out least as much attention to her essaysand/ or autobiographicalwritings'? She addsthat studiesthat deal with the fiction tend to focus on theme and content,rather to the exclusion of a considerationof form (p. 3). Likewise, Toril Moi regretsthat little attention has beenpaid to the style of Simonede Beauvoir's writing? This presentstudy of Simone de Beauvoir is positioned precisely in this `gap' where fiction and form intersect.My own readings,however, have not emergedin a intended They are vacuum. not to silence other interpretationsbut to exist in dialogue ' Marks, Elaine, `Introduction', in Critical Essays Simonede Beauvoir, on ed. by Elaine Marks, Boston, Massachusetts:G.K. Hall, 1987,p. 8. This book is a casein point. Only two of the contributions deal with the fiction. In `Metaphysicsand the Novel', Maurice Merleau-Ponty offers a reading of L'Invitde (pp. 31-44) and in `Psychiatry in the PostwarFiction of Simone de Beauvoir', Terry Keefe examines Les Mandarins, La Femmerompue and Les Belles Images (pp. 131-44). 2Fallaize, Elizabeth, TheNovels Simonede Beauvoir, London: Routledge, 1988, 2. p. of 3Moi, Simonede Beauvoir: TheMaking of an Intellectual Woman,Oxford: Blackwell, 1994. Seefor example, footnote 16 p. 269. 2 for Simone de Beauvoir's complex and ambiguoustexts generatemultiple them, with readings,none of which is definitive or exclusive. With this in mind, it will be useful to considerthe current stateof Beauvoir criticism, before going onto examinethe relationship betweenmadnessand the text in detail. Toril Moi provides a useful overview of full-length studieson Simone de Beauvoir published in French and English from 1958to 1992. She divides the studies into `impressionistic' categories:catholic, existentialist/ socialist, scholarly, popular, and feminist. Between 1980 (when Beauvoir studies shifted away from France) and 1992,twenty-one studieswere published.Five of thesewere `scholarly', six were `popular' and ten were `feminist'. Of thesestudiesonly two were dedicatedto Simone de Beauvoir's fiction, one `scholarly', one `feminist' 5 Five books look at the fiction in 6 Simone de Beauvoir's writings as a whole. JaneHeath's feminist study the context of readsL'Invitee, Les Mandarins and Les Belles Imagestogetherwith the autobiographies,accordingto Toril Moi, in an attemptto `rescueBeauvoir for poststructuralistfeminism'(p. 77). Other studieswhose concernsare political or 8 fiction to a much lesserextent. Since 1992,none of the philosophical, examinethe major studiesof Simonede Beauvoir that have beenpublished, focusesexclusively on the fiction, although Toril Moi's `personalgenealogy' of Simone de Beauvoir provides 4Moi, Simone de Beauvoir, footnote 8 pp. 267-68. sThey are: Hibbs, FrancoiseArnaud, L'Espace dons les romans de Simonede Beauvoir: son expression et safonction, Stanford French and Italian Studies59, Saratoga,California: Anma Libri, 1989, ('scholarly'); Fallaize, TheNovels, (`feminist'). 6They are: Ascher, Carol, Simonede Beauvoir: A Life of Freedom,Boston: Beacon Press,1981, a feminist study describedby Toril Moi as verging on the adulatory; Keefe, Terry, Simonede Beauvoir: A Study of her Writings, London: Harrap, 1983;Marks, Elaine ed., Critical Essayson Simone de Beauvoir; Brosman, Catherine Savage,Simonede Beauvoir Revisited,Twayne's World Authors Series820, Boston: Twayne, 1991.Toril Moi classifiesthesethree studiesas `scholarly'. The fifth study, this one in Toril Moi's `popular'category,is: Winegarten,Renee,Simonede Beauvoir: A Critical View, Oxford: Berg, 1988. 7Heath, Jane,Simonede Beauvoir, London: HarvesterWheatsheaf,1989. For example,Evans, Mary, Simonede Beauvoir: A Feminist Mandarin, London: Tavistock, 1985; Okely, Judith, Simonede Beauvoir, London: Virago, 1986. Seealso Simons, Margaret A., ed., Feminist Interpretations ofSimone de Beauvoir, Pennsylvania:The PennsylvaniaStateUniversity Press,1995. 3 an exciting reading of L'Invitee and certainly underlinesthe importanceof her rhetorical strategies. A number of critics comment on the disappointed,not to say hostile tone of least half Marks Beauvoir Elaine that of the critical essays notes at criticism. much included in the collection she edited are `sarcastic'to somedegree.Sheasserts:`They presentSimone de Beauvoir as a slightly ridiculous figure, naive in her passions,sloppy in her scholarship,inaccuratein her documentation,generally out of her depth and inferior as a writer' (p. 2). She is criticised for being `too feminist' and, paradoxically, for being `not feminist enough'. Elaine Marks arguesthat theoretical divergence betweenSimone de Beauvoir and contemporaryfeminists results in hostility and debate becoming conflated. Elizabeth Fallaize also commentson the disappointmentof readers fiction in the a confirmation of Le Deuxiemesexeor a reflection of who seek Simone feminist investigates (p. 3). Toril Moi the that thought perception contemporary de Beauvoir is an undistinguishedwriter and devotesa chapterof her book to a close in de hostile Simone Beauvoir's to themes work, of recurring responses examination responsesthat are surprisingly common even among critics who professto be wellintentioned and unbiased She assertsthat `the hostile critics' favourite strategyis to .9 personalizethe issues,to reducethe book to the woman: their aim is clearly to discredit her as a speakernot to enter into debatewith her' (p. 75). Certainly, it is not the case that Simone de Beauvoir should be abovecriticism. However, appraisalmust be based on careful reading. When it comesto the fiction, dismissive commentsas to the literary merits of Simone de Beauvoir's writing by critics who have barely engagedwith the text are regrettableto say the least. 9Moi, Simonede Beauvoir, Chapter3, `Politics and the Intellectual Woman: Cliches and Commonplaces in the reception of Simone de Beauvoir', pp. 73-92. 4 In Simonede Beauvoir: A Study of her Writings, Terry Keefe regretsthe fact that much of the work done on Simonede Beauvoir has centeredon her feminism or her '0 Sartre, distorted her thus producing a associationwith Jean-Paul view of as a writer. He intends his study to be a balancedstudy of all her books, although his readingsof the fiction centre on an interpretationof content and characterand little spaceis given to form. When form is addressed,it is generally narrative techniquesthat merit a brief he For commentson shifting narrative viewpoints in L'Invitee but example, mention. neglectsother aspectsof Simone de Beauvoir's writing. His relative neglect of form leadshim to considerthat the novel is somewhatlong and repetitive and to find that this is justified only in so far as it reflects the shapelessness and texture of life itself (pp. 157-58).He doesnot considerthe effect that recurring eventsmay have (apart from inferring that it is boring) and neglectssymbolic significance that accruesas the text gathersmomentum. Just over one pageis allotted to a discussionof what Terry Keefe `small in Belles devices' de Les Simone Beauvoir to the that as scale stylistic refers uses Imagesto convey Laurence's stateof mind (p. 211). His analysis leavesmuch room for development;for example,he alludesto the single viewpoint in the novel but fails to point out that there are in fact two narrative voices, a split between `je' and `eile' at the heart of the narrative." Likewise, Keefe links the stateof mind of Murielle, the narrator in `Monologue', the middle story in La Femmerompue,to the use of languagein the story but doesnot develop the connectionthoroughly, commenting only that erratic punctuation conveysthe idea that words are whirling round in Murielle's headand that the intensity of her feelings is straining languageto its limits (p. 216). There is no other mention of form in La Femmerompue. Despitethis relative lack of analysisof form, loKeefe, Simonede Beauvoir: A Study her Writings, Preface. of '1 I will be investigating this in ChapterThree. 5 Keefe levels severecriticisms at Simonede Beauvoir's fiction and concludesthat its `disinclined defects us even to considerwhether they are make aesthetic might Images Les Belles Whilst (p. 229). that and acknowledging art' works of accomplished `Monologue' reveal her to be capable`of the highest achievementson the artistic level', he neverthelessattacksher fiction for its narrow range,for failure to make more use of inventiveness, for Simone de Beauvoir's for lack of conflicting perspectives, (pp. 227-28). its for being limited heroines and conventional and overidentification with His praise can seem patronising and begrudging: Whateverthe flaws in her books, we can only be grateful for storiesthat not only imaginary figures but firmly into that the of project us so mentalities entertainus, however is the enriched, over ofzpeople and real world permanently our awareness narrow a range. (Simonede Beauvoir: A Study of her Writings, p. 228.) Terry Keefe's intoductory guide to Les Belles Imagesand La Femmerompue, Simone de Beauvoir's in 1991, thoughtful of provides a more appreciation published 13 later fiction. A whole section is devotedto narrative techniqueand style in Les Belles Images.He toucheson a whole rangeof stylistic devices(focalization, reliability, use of pronounsand tense,repetition, questioning,use of parenthesesand suspensionpoints and ambiguity), concluding that `the style of the novel would undoubtedly repay closer in Femme form La (p. 36). Less is three the to the stories of study' attention paid `L'Age de discretion' is Terry `broadly The literary and of noted, orientation rompue. Keefe commentsthat `the style itself has certain minor poetic qualities not entirely common in Beauvoir's fiction' (p. 44). Theseare not explored. The remainderof the '2 Keefe appearsto associatethe lack of a broader perspectiveand more balancedtreatmentwith the absenceof male focalizers in the shorterfiction (p. 221). He also makesthe following strange comment: `There has beena tendency,perhapsbecauseof her relationship with Sartre,to expect too much of Beauvoir's works [...] (p. 228). 13Keefe, Terry, Simonede Beauvoir: Les Belles Images,La Femme rompue, Glasgow Introductory Guides to French Literature 12, Glasgow: University of Glasgow French and GermanPublications, 1991. 6 brief is the the dealing to use of consideration of a given over style with paragraph `diary' form in the story. The form of `Monologue' is treatedsomewhatmore his illness Murielle, is the the to although narrator, of thoroughly and related mental is in to the be that, considered story to whilst contradictory somewhat argumentappears be `a successfulattempt to project us into the strangementality of a tortured woman', the monologue form is seento hamperour efforts to judge Murielle (p. 52). Likewise, the diary form in `La Femmerompue' is acknowledgedto be well suited to the depiction of a characterundergoing changebut it too, is perceivedas a barrier to making `a soundjudgement' (p. 61). No other aspectof the form of `La Femmerompue' is 14 examined. ReneeWinegarten's declaredaim is to `assessthe value of Simone de Beauvoir's activity and writings in the spheresof feminism, politics and 15 literature'. Her starting point is that `basically, [Simone de Beauvoir] was not an inventive or highly imaginative writer' (p. 3). There is no careful evaluationof Simone de Beauvoir's writing in her book; instead,sheconcentrateson philosophical and lack de Beauvoir's Simone fiction, that of the concluding aspects of autobiographical inventive powers led her to write romans a clef and romans a these(p. 105). Her Belles is Les One to dismissive page allotted and unfounded. commentsare consistently Images; she considersthis to be Simonede Beauvoir's `most accomplishedwork of fiction in the formal sense'(p. 114) but restricts herself to summarisingthe plot. Her it is, is `skilfully the novel seemsthin and the that as smoothly constructed and verdict 14In 1991Keefe continuesto regret the fact that Simone de Beauvoir's stories are narratedexclusively from the woman's point of view. As regardsthe upbringing of children in Les Belles Images and La Femmerompue, he argues,we are preventedfrom `seeingthings through the father's eyes, and therefore from making a balancedjudgement on the father's contribution to the upbringing process' (p. 72). (This seemsespeciallyto concernKeefe in light of the fact that the stories in La Femme rompue `are cautionary tales, warning againstthe unreliability of certain women's testimony'. ) is Winegarten,Simonede Beauvoir, p. 6. 7 16 in dismissed is Femme (p. 115). La rompue summedup and plot mechanismartificial' ten lines (p. 115). My argumenthere is that, if critics claim to evaluateSimone de Beauvoir's fiction and her contribution to literature, then the least they owe is a careful '7 reading of the texts. JaneHeath's study of three of Simone de Beauvoir's fictional works and her 18 autobiographiesfocus `on textuality not personality'. By placing emphasison the in in feminine fictional the the to the texts the way which examine she seeks processof texts, defined as a site of resistance,representsa challengeto the patriarchal order (pp. 8,13,14). She argues that Simone de Beauvoir is inscribed on the side of the masculine, in her `predominantly discourse to the the man allowing and of repression' speaking Jane Heath feminine, in 9). However, (p. tells us, the the spite of repressionof speak feminine returnsto the texts. Sheoffers interesting psychoanalyticalreadingsof the fiction but I shareToril Moi's disquiet at her use of the notions femininity and 19Much of what shereadsas the feminine, my readingswill reinterpret as masculinity. in madness the text. CatherineSavageBrosman looks at Simone de Beauvoir's fiction in the context deals One in Revisited. Simone de Beauvoir her with the chapter work as a whole of Note fiction. The Publisher's fiction later drama the promises and with early and another `an objective considerationof Simonede Beauvoir's lasting contribution to literature by left is intended fill Indeed, Brosman's Catherine the to gap study and philosophy'. is `this `unbalanced', be the case that to arguing studiessheconsiders overspecialisedor 16Sheaddsthe following, rather odd remark: `All is weighted againstthe majority of Laurence's circle, and the battle seemswon in advance' (p. 115). 17I have not included Carol Ascher's book in this review. Her aim is `to render the character, preoccupations,and main themesof de Beauvoir's life - as [she] see[s] them' (p. 3). '$ Heath, Simonede Beauvoir, 3. p. "See Moi, Simonede Beauvoir, footnote 27 pp. 272-73. 8 20 feminist from the viewpoint' . Although particularly with the numerousstudiesdone is in detail, de fictional little Simone Beauvoir's technique to treat space sheclaims form instance, is devoted it. barely For than to the to one more page actually given over of L'Invitee and one paragraphof this is concernedwith showing that autobiographical just (p. 55). heavily Likewise, than questions of style one weigh more considerations pagedeals with the form of Les Belles Images (p. 88) and there is one paragraphgiven in in La form Femmerompue (pp. 94,95, the the to consideration of each of stories over 98). When techniqueis dealt with, focalization is the aspectconcentratedon. The tone of CatherineBrosman's study is hostile, begrudgingand dismissive. Her estimateof the in be book's L'Invitee, for is `she Xaviere the that most example, may of portrait (p. had live is due Beauvoir, though to and she a model' credit even successfulportrait, 52). As for Simonede Beauvoir's technique,CatherineBrosman writes: `The progress the author had madein storytelling sinceher early attemptsis visible in L'Invitee. Thanks perhapsto Sartre's influence, Beauvoir had a senseof what techniquecould contribute to her fiction. [...] The fact that two initial chaptershad to be excised,on an (p. in that the the was not manuscript perfect' craftsmanship editor's advice, suggests 55)21 Such commentsrecur throughout the study which, though it can provide insights, ?2 also contains curious, unsubstantiatedreadingsand misreadingsof the texts Some of 20Brosman, Simonede Beauvoir Revisited,Preface,p. ix. 21Brosman neglectsto mention that thesechapterswere `excised' from an early draft of the first hundred pagesof what would be L'Invitee. Simonede Beauvoir discussesthe genesisof her novel in La Force de 1'äge,p. 346. (The two chaptersappearin Les Ecrits, pp. 275-316.) 22For example, Brosmanwrites that in L'Invitee Francoiseand Pierre bring Xaviere to Paris to pursueher philosophical studies(p. 51). In fact, Pierre's first idea is that she should learn shorthand(L'Invitee, p. 27). Brosman offers a strangeinterpretationof the ending of Les Belles Images: 'Laurence's task is enormous:to bring all her intimates to a common recognition of freedom and creation of an authentic self. There is somehope that she can do so for and with Catherine' (p. 92). It is hard to reconcile this with the tentative, personal `resolution' reachedin the final sentencesof the novel: `Mais les enfants auront leur chance.Quelle chance?eile ne le sait m6mepas' (p. 183). Brosman doesnot provide textual evidencethat Monique in `La Femmerompue' `was indeedan oppressivemother' (p. 99). Certainly Monique expressesdoubts aboutthe way shebrought up her children in the light of Maurice's cricism (pp. 186,219) but for conflicting evidenceseepp. 188,250. 9 thesewill be dealt with during the courseof my study. In particular, I want to show that her assertionthat the tone of Les Belles Imagesis detachedis untenable. Toril Moi's book Simonede Beauvoir: TheMaking of an Intellectual Woman de She Simone Beauvoir'. `the textual makesno offers a close reading of is `Simone de `life' `text'; between Beauvoir' distinction a and methodological fictional, the the of philosophical, autobiographicaland epistolary effect construction, texts that sheherself wrote and of all the texts that have beenwritten about her (p. 4). For Toril Moi, all of thesetexts participate in the samediscursive network and sheaims `to read them all with and againsteachother in order to bring out their points of tension, 4 L'Invitee, Le Deuxieme focuses (p. She 5). sexeand on and similarities contradictions the memoirs and her book is a dazzling combinationnot only of biography and literary `reception but also studies,sociology of culture, philosophical analysis, criticism de is Simone inquiry feminist (p. Attention 7). to theory' paid and psychoanalytic Beauvoir's rhetorical strategies;L'Invitee is read as an existential melodramaand its de in Simone imagery the analysed; use of metaphorand metonymy powerful Beauvoir's accountof subjectivity and sexuality in Le Deuxiemesexeis investigated; On depression. in in tone the shifts and style memoirs are readas effects of anxiety and balance,the emphasisin Toril Moi's study falls on psychoanalytic and philosophical in ideas her language in developing imagery interested I the texts. and on readingsof am late fiction. Simone de Beauvoir's to and early relation 23Brosman, 86. p. 24Toril Moi acknowledgeswhat she call the `ethical integrity' of 'purely aesthetic' approachesto Simone de Beauvoir but regretsthat they tend to miss the `real cultural significance' of her work by concentratingon her as a writer of fiction (p. 5). However, given the dearth of studiesthat deal with the form of the fiction in any depth, it seemsappropriatethat, within the context of recognised cultural significance, effort should be devotedto an evaluation of Simone de Beauvoir's writing in the fiction, to the appraisalof `how' shewrites. This is not to preclude comparablestudiesof nonfictional works. 10 In her study of Simone de Beauvoir'sfiction, Elizabeth Fallaize concentrateson Simone de Beauvoir as a writer and intendsto make up for the relative lack of attention 25 has been literary her formal that qualities of work until now. In particular, paid to the she is interestedin the narrative strategiesSimonede Beauvoir usesin her novels and both to the meaning of her texts and to the sexual these to stories short and wishes relate her She in introduction (p. 1). the to her book that narrative of writing out points politics strategieswill figure much more prominently in her discussionof certain texts where languageis foregroundedthan in otherswhere philosophical, political and personal concernsare dominant (p. 4). In her discussionof L'Invitee Elizabeth Fallaize considersthe implications of narrative techniquesfor the psychology of the charactersand thematic/ plot development.Thus, she argues,switchesin focalization are intended to allow external (p. 27). Her important Francoise Mandarins Les treatment also raises views of of questionsto do with narrative voice; during her analysisElizabeth Fallaize notesthe female folly (p. `accent 90) the and of a narrative voice suffering, emergence on and death' within Anne's monologue (p. 114).Les Belles Images is often consideredto be Simone de Beauvoirs most literary novel. This is reflected in the fact that Elizabeth Fallaize devotes a good deal of her chapter on Les Belles Images to a consideration of narrative voice and language.Shereadsthe narrative split in Les Belles Imagesas a split betweena first personnarrator, Laurence,and a third personexternal narrator and interprets this as an expressionof `the unequalstrugglebetweenLaurence'sfragile subjectivity and the weight of social structures' (p. 125). I should like to pursuean alternative reading, suggestingthat Laurenceis narrating her own story throughout the text and that the je/ eile split figures rather Laurence'scrisis and her senseof alienation 25Fallaize, TheNovels, 3. p. 11 from herself. My analyseswill build on Elizabeth Fallaize's exploration of Simone de Beauvoir's narrative strategies. Elizabeth Fallaize notesthat meaningis subvertedin Les Belles Images (p. 126) and I should like to expandher analysisand considerthe implications of this, distinguishing betweentext and story; betweenthe ideological use of languageby charactersbelonging to a specific classand the way the text itself underminesmeaning. Elizabeth Fallaize implies that the natureof meaning is also posited as problematic in the stories collected in La Femmerompue (pp. 160,166-67). For her, the stories collected in La Femmerompue are narrativesof bad faith and the women narrating their deceiving themselves,using discoursesto concealtheir situation from are stories own themselves(pp. 154-55).This reading is basedon the premisethat there exists a true, correct version of their stories that they are too blind or perhapstoo wilful to see. Elizabeth Fallaize adoptsthe `detectivestance'advocatedby Simone de Beauvoir and, reducing the texts to a coherentnarrative,tells us what really happened.A quite different reading is also possible, one which seesthe women in the processof constructing reality. Far from positing a true version of eventsagainstwhich to measure the bad faith of the narrators,the text can be shown to questionthe very notions of truth and reality. I shall be exploring this later. In Simonede Beauvoir's fiction as a whole, Elizabeth Fallaize identifies an overall reduction in plurality and a loss of authority concededto the female voice which, however, becomesthe dominant voice. Shenotesthat gradually the narrative voice is taken over by negative,mad women and asksthe crucial question as to how the connectionbetweenwomen and folly and the abuseof words can be accountedfor (p. 179). Interesting autobiographicaland historical points are advancedto explain developmentsin Simonede Beauvoir's narrative strategies.My readingsof Simone de 12 Beauvoir will develop Fallaize's insights into Simonede Beauvoir's narrative strategies by addressingthe connectionsbetweenmadnessand languagein the text. I shall explore the textual strategiesthat call into questionthe meaningfulnessof languageand the nature of truth. FrancoiseArnaud Hibbs's study, L'Espace dans les romans de Simonede Beauvoir: son expressionet safonction, examinesthe way Simonede Beauvoir uses from how in her different times presented a of showing spaces are number novels, space different points of view and at different points in the narrative and how thesespaces change: `Un meme lieu seral'objet de descriptionsmultiples. Sa realite n'apparaitra au lecteur que comme une serie de possibilites; de facon ideale une synthesemeine ne devrait pas s'imposer ä lui'26 She goeson to analysethe meaningsSimone de Beauvoir in identifies her to what sherefers to as space novels and and autobiographies attaches `la dialectique du cercle et de la ligne' (p. 84). Shearguesthat charactersbreak out of/ open up the luminous circle of consciousnessand the threat of nothingnessthrough de dialectique du is `un `la lineaire' (p. 94) that et cercle mouvement and action which la ligne traduit la confrontation permanenteentre cloture et ouverture,passivite et action, limites et liberte' (p. 110). In FrancoiseHibbs's study, the treatmentof space for a starting point raising philosophical, metaphysical and psychological provides considerations. This review of major critical studiesof Simone de Beauvoir's work that consider her fiction to somedegree,revealsthat there is a place for further analysisof her fiction. It confirms that the form of her novels and short storiesremainsa relatively neglected areaof study. Attention here will therefore centreon text as opposedto story and 26Hibbs, L'Erpace dans les romans de Simonede Beauvoir, Stanford French and Italian Studies 59, Saratoga,California: Anma Libri, 1989,p. 10. 13 basic for Rimmon-Kenan by Shlomith labels the the These the used are narration. 27 histoire, distinction between Genette's fiction. They to correspond aspectsof narrative 28 `Story' denotesthe narratedeventsand the participants in these recit and narration. denotes discourse, `Text' however `le the spokenor minimal. events, contenunarratif , denotes `Narration' the the that tells the or act process of production, story. written, fictional All by three aspects the text. the within a narrator narrative communication of fiction interrelated. base To on an of narrative an evaluation are essentialand is is that evidently of events and characters, examination an appreciationof story only, how is To telling the meaning of the story. the the extent, of a great partial. Simonede Beauvoir attacheda great deal of importanceto the artistic reworking lived did She transcribe lived to the simply not creative process. experience, of her in bulk 1966, fiction. in in her In lecture Japan the of when a she gave experience fiction was alreadywritten, shetold her listeners: `Ecrire un roman, c'est en quelque introduire les le elements qu'on pourra sorte pulveriser monde reel et n'en retenir que Bansune re-creationd'un monde imaginaire [...]. Un roman c'est une especede machine le dans le de titre fabrique eclairer monde'. sens noire pour qu'on 9 The transposition of be litteraire into fiction, to the paid attention required experience creation of une oeuvre to form. Toril Moi quotesthe diary entry in La Force des choseswhere Simone de Beauvoir writes that for the lifeless sentencesthat transcribeher life to becomea real facon de how `la have the told to to to she story, work, shewould pay attention 30 Shedoesnot have the time to rework her diary entries, she says,but raconter' long, describes des in La Force the painstaking processof chosesshe elsewhere 27Rimmon-Kenan, Shlomith, Narrative Fiction: ContemporaryPoetics, London: Methuen, 1983, pp. 3-4. 28Genette,Gerard, `Discours du rdcit', in Figures III, Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1972,p. 72. 29Beauvoir, `Mon experienced'Ccrivain', ConfbrencedonnCeaujapon, le 11 octobre 1966, in Francis, Claude and FernandeGontier, Les icrits de Simonede Beauvoir: La vie - L'ecriture, Paris: Gallimard, 1979,p. 443. 30La Force des choses,quoted in Moi, Toril, Simonede Beauvoir, p. 247. 14 `un labeur initial drafts her books; the the writing, penible'; the second of reworking draft, `[1e]brouillon'; and then the final rewriting: M'aidant de mon brouillon, je redige ä grandstraits un chapitre.Je reprendsla bas, je la refais phrasepar phrase;ensuiteje corrige premiere page et arrivee en chaquephrased'apres 1'ensemblede la page,chaquepaged'apres le chapitre entier; plus tard, chaquechapitre, chaquepage,chaquephrased'apres la totalite du livre. (La Force des choses,p. 294.)31 In her contribution to the 1964 debate,Quepeut la litterature, Simone de Beauvoir is in literature, that which is essentiallyan exploration/ a search(`une categorical recherche'), `la distinction entre le fond et la forme est perimee; et les deux sont 32 inseparables' She goeson to say: `On ne peut pas separerla maniere de raconteret ce le de la la de que c'est parce rythme meme recherche, maniere raconter qui est raconte, c'est la maniere de la definir, c'est la manerede la vivre'. 3 Given the importance Simone de Beauvoir attachedto form, given the care shetook with the writing of her 34 fiction, with the craft of writing, this aspectof her work deservesclose examination. Considerationof Simone de Beauvoir's writing practice is amply rewarded.Not her it it does her the texts, of alternative afford readings canalso only reveal richnessof early and late fiction. Thesemay be deconstructivereadingsthat undermine authorial readingsof the texts. 31The whole processis describedin `Intermbde', La Force des chores, pp. 293-95. 32In Quepeut la litterature, ed. by Yves Buin, Paris: Union Generaled'$ditions, 1965,pp. 73-92 (p. 84). 33Que peut la litterature, p. 85. Seealso Simonede Beauvoir's commentsin the interview with Catherine David, `Beauvoir elle-meme', Le Nouvel Observateur,22 January 1979,pp 82-90, (p. 88-89). In responseto the interviewer's remark that style doesnot seemto be of great importanceto her, Simone de Beauvoir replies: `Au contraire,j'y attacheune grande importance.Je travaille bnormbmenttout ce quej'6cris. Vous savez,pour emouvoir, il faut que les chosessoient Bitesd'une certaine facon, avec un certain ton, des ellipses,des images,des diveloppements. ca a toujours beaucoupcompt6 pour moi. [...] Dans mes romanset mes Memoires,je fais toujours tres attention ä la mani6re dont je dis les choses,On ne peut 6videmmentpas sbparerla mani8re du contenu'. 34Simone de Beauvoir statesthat some essayscan also be describedas works of literature to the extent that `Bans1'essaim¬me il ya un style, une ecriture, une construction; on communique aussi ä travers ce qu'il y ade commun et de dbsinformatif Bansle langage'. `Mon experience', p. 441. 15 Before going further, it will be useful at this point to examinesomeof the de knew (thought fiction. Simone Beauvoir her to she author's own views with regard knew) what her texts meant.Her intentions are, in eachcase,clearly spelt out in her 5 Toril Moi has pointed out how `the autobiographybecomesa repertoire of memoirs. her de Beauvoir Simone to the attempts control of meaning as readings', authorized books. 6 Martha Noel Evans also discussesthe way in which Simone de Beauvoir's fiction is `documentedand shadowed'by her memoirs. 7 She seesthe autobiographyas `a secondwriting that explains, completes,andjustifies the first' (p. 77). Simone de Beauvoir's memoirs reveal a tension betweenher desireto control the meaning of her texts, particularly her fictional texts, and her wish to leave room for a certain ambiguity is life (in intended there to no closure,no certainty, no guaranteevraisemblance she Truth). About L'Invitee shewrites: `bans les passagesreussisdu roman, on arrive ä une (La Bans la de ä to realite' qu'on rencontre qui correspond celle significations ambige Force de 1'äge,p.352). Shequoteswith approval what Blanchot saysabout existencein his essayon le roman a these:`Le but de 1'ecrivain c'est de la donner a voir en la (La 1'ambiguite' des il la il l'appauvrit, trahit, s'il n'en respectepas mots: recreantavec Force de Vage, pp.558-59). This is Simonede Beauvoir's declaredreasonfor preferring L'Invitee to Le Sang des autres, because`la fm en demeureouverte; on ne saurait en tirer aucunelecon' (La Force de I'äge, p.559), whereas,Le Sang des autres `aboutit ä 35L'Invitee in La Force de läge pp. 347-53; Le Sang des autres in La Force de 1'dge pp. 555-58; Tous les hommessont mortels in La Force des choses,pp. 75-9; Les Mandarins in La Force des choses,pp. 283-92; Les Belles Images, in Tout comptefait,, pp. 171-75;La Femmerompue, in Tout comptefait,, pp. 175-81. 36Moi, Toril, `Intentions and Effects: Rhetoric and Identification in Simone de Beauvoir's "The Woman Destroyed"', in Feminist Theory and Simonede Beauvoir, Oxford: Blackwell, 1990, p. 67. 37Evans, Martha Noel, Masks Tradition: Womenand the Politics of of Writing in Twentieth-Century France, Ithaca: Cornell University Press,1987,p. 76. She contendsthat Simone de Beauvoir establishesa hierarchy in which the (masculine) commentarytakes precedenceover the (feminine) fiction and relatesthis to what she defines as Simone de Beauvoir's ambivalent views of fiction that are, in turn, linked with her ambivalencetowards her gender. 16 de 1'äge, Force (La concepts' et en maximes une conclusion univoque, reductible en `Le her Blanchot, is de Beauvoir text than Simone 559). writing: of critical evenmore p. defaut qu'il denoncen'entachepas seulementles dernierespagesdu roman: d'un bout ä 1'autre,il lui est inherent (La Force de 1'äge,p.559). Ambiguity is what Simonede Beauvoir values in Tous les hommessont mortels: En le relisantje me suis demande:mais qu'est-ce quej'ai voulu dire? Je n'ai j'inventai. 1'aventure Le recit se contestesans d'autre dire que que rien voulu repit; si on pretendait en tirer des allegations,elles se contrediraient;aucunpoint de vue ne prevaut definitivement; celui de Fosca,celui d'Armand sont vrais des la dimension dit dans J'aurais entreprises que essai mon precedent ensemble. humainesn'est ni le fini ni l'infini, mais l'indefini: ce mot ne se laisseenfermer dansaucunelimite fixe, la meilleure maniere de l'approcher, c'est de divaguer divagation les hommes Tous c'est cette sont mortels, sur sespossiblesvariations. d'incertains des departs les des themes theses mais vers n'y sont pas organisee; vagabondages. (La Force des chores,p.79.) Indeed, for Simonede Beauvoir, ambiguity is at the heart of the literary enterprise.This is what shewrites in La Force des choses:`J'ai dit dejä quel est pour moi un des roles des la litterature: de verites ambigues,separees,contradictoires, manifester essentiels ä de hors totalise reussit ni moi, ni en moi; en certainscas on ne qu'aucun moment ne 38 les ressemblerqu'en les inscrivant dansl'unite d'un objet imaginaire' (pp.282-83) Rejecting the idea that Les Mandarins is un roman a these,shewrites: La confrontation - existence, neant - ebauchee ä vingt ans dans mon journal intime, poursuivie ä travers tous mes livres etjamais achevee, n'aboutit ici non des des ä des ä ä J'ai et en proie espoirs gens montre plus aucune reponse sure. doutes, cherchant ä tätons leur chemin. Je me demande bien ce que j'ai demontre. (La Force des choses,p. 290.) Simone de Beauvoir's commentshere are in line with the conception of fiction as a in `Litterature developed for discovery alike, a conception author and readers processof et metaphysique'where shewrites: 38Seealso `Mon Ecrits, Gontier, in Les Francis and experience' p. 447. Simone de Beauvoir told her listeners: `II s'agit, dansun roman, de donner ä voir 1'existencedans sesambiguitbs,dans ses contradictions.L'existence est detotalisee,toujours inachevCe,toujours a reprendre,l'existence ne conclutjamais'. 17 Or ceci exige que le romancier participe lui-meme ä cette rechercheä laquelle il doit les d'avance lecteur: conclusions auxquelles celui-ci s'il prevoit convie son des ä lui lui fait theses son adhesion arracher sur pour s'il aboutir, pression de liberte, l'oeuvre illusion lui alors qu'une accorde s'il ne preetablies, incongrue; le roman ne revet sa valeur et mystification qu'une n'est romanesque le lecteur decouverte l'auteur dignite une comme pour sa que s'il constituepour vivante. (`Litterature et metaphysique',p109.)39 Like the pursuit of ambiguity, Simonede Beauvoir's acknowledgementthat in in to the also appear stand contradiction to of can creation meaning a role play readers her desireto control the meaning of her books. In view of the severity with which she find it is back (I her to to this somewhat surprising shall come shortly), readers criticises her writing, `un livre est un objet collectif les lecteurscontribuent autant que l'auteur A 40 idea is des It ]' (La Force 49-50) [... le creer an echoedin her prefaceto choses,pp. Anne Ophir's book, Regardsfeminin: conditionfeminine et creation litteraire, when she acknowledgeswith gratitude that, although she set out to reveal the mauvaisefoi of her heroinesin La Femmerompue, shehad beenshown how her texts (`recits') `pouvaient etre envisagessousde tout autresaspects'.Shetells us: `Anne Ophir m'a fait faire des decouvertes'and asserts:`Qu'une etudecritique apporteä son ecrivain des lumieres inattenduessur son travail, je penseque c'est le plus grand eloge qu'on puisse faire' 4' In fact, this is an attitude that appearsearly in Simonede Beauvoir's career. Commentsshemakes about the reception of L'Invitee are revealing; Simone de Beauvoir recognisedthat her book was now beyond her control, yet was happy with this stateof affairs only insofar as it was interpretedin line with her intentions: 39`Litterature et mdtaphysique' in Existentialismeet la sagessedes nations, Paris: Nagel, 1948,pp. 10324. 40Sartre echoesthesesentimentsin his contribution to the debateon literature published in Quepeut la litterature?. He arguesthat an author dependson his readersto find out what he has actually written: `L'objet qu'il a fait lui est renvoye autre qu'il n'a cru le faire, par les lecteurs,parce que prbcisdment il ya creation dans la lecture' (p. 119). 41Prefaceto Ophir, Anne, Regardsfeminin: conditionfeminine et creation litteraire, Paris: Denoal/ Gontier, 1976. [Pagesnot numbered.] Reprinted in Francis and Gontier, E'crits, pp. 577-79. 18 Je lus avec un agreableetonnementles remarquesque fit Thierry Maulnier [...]: je les trouvai justes et elles me prenaientau depourvu; mon livre possedaitdons 1'epaisseurd'un objet: dansune certain mesure,il m'echappait. Cependantj'eus intentions. ä trahi n'avait pas mes aussi constater qu'il plaisir . (La Force de 1'age, p. 571.) It is already clear from thesecommentsthat the freedom accordedto readerswas to be strictly limited. Simone de Beauvoir was confident that shehad said what shemeant to say. In the light of this, the extent to which her texts are read differently than sheintended, `misread' and `misunderstood'in her terms, is striking. In her memoirs sherepeatedly deploresthe fact that her readershave, once again, failed to understandher message. She setsout to correct misconceptionsand is careful to tell us exactly what we would have understoodif only we had read more carefully. This is what shewrites in La Force des chosesabout the reception of her secondnovel: Le Sang des autres parut en septembre;le theme principal en etait, je 1'ai dit, le paradoxede cette existencevecuepar moi comme ma liberte et saisie intentions Ces echapperentau public; comme objet par ceux qui m'approchent. le livre fut catalogue«un roman sur la resistance. Par moment, ce malentendum'agaca... (La Force des choses,p.49.) Unfortunately, Simonede Beauvoir was equally disappointedby the reception of Les Mandarins. She rejectsthe idea that it is a roman a cle and goeson to write: `J'aurais souhaitequ'on prennece livre pour ce qu'il est; ni une autobiographie,ni un reportage: her de In Simone Beauvoir (La des 289). evocation' Force memoirs p. choses, une in justifiably defensive Le Deuxieme so, perhaps, the sexe, appearsextremely as regards 42 light of the bitter reactionsit provoked. Shewas convincedthat her book had been je l'ai (La ecrit' `je Le Deuxieme tel que sexe soit compris que misunderstood: souhaite Force des choses,p.207); ' Mes adversairescreerentet entretinrentautour du Deuxieme 42SeeLa Force des choses,pp.203-11. 19 sexede nombreux malentendus'(La Force des choses,p.209); `Mal lu, mal compris, il agitait les esprits' (La Force des choses,p.210). Simone de Beauvoir was awareof the risks involved in the new textual strategies she adoptedin her later fiction: `Demanderau public de lire entre les lignes, c'est dangereux' (Tout comptefait, p. 175), she says.The techniquein Les Belles Images is contrastedwith what shehad donepreviously: Dans mes precedents romans, le point de vue de chaque personnage etait nettement explicite et le lens de 1'ouvrage se degageait de leur confrontation. Dans celui-ci, il s'aggissait de faire parler le silence. Le probleme etait neuf pour moi. (Tout comptefait, p. 172.) Although the book was generally well received,a section of her public did not appreciateher intentions and, in particular, Simone de Beauvoir regrettedthat `le personnagedu pere de Laurencea souventdonne lieu ä un malentendu' (Tout compte fait, p. 174). Even so, shewent on to usethe samestrategyin La Femmerompue. `La Femmerompue' and `Monologue' are also constructed`ä travers des silences' (Tout 3 It is 177). comptefait, p. with regardto `La Femmerompue' that Simonede Beauvoir is most prescriptive. Her sympathiesclearly lie with Maurice and Simonede Beauvoir sets out to expose Monique's mauvaisefoi: J'aurais voulu que le lecteur lilt ce recit comme un roman policier; j'ai seme deci de-lä des indices qui permettent de trouver la cle du mystere; mais ä condition qu'on depiste Monique comme on depiste un coupable. [Emphasis added.] (Tout comptefait, pp.175-76.) Sadly, Simone de Beauvoir writes, `le livre fut encoreplus mal compris que le precedent [Les Belles Images] et cette fois la plupart des critiques m'ereinterent' (Tout comptefait, p. 177). Sheregretsthat her women readers`partageaient1'aveuglementde Monique' 43I am reminded of Kristeva's commentsabout women's writing and one of the ways women tend to deal with the art of composition: `- silence,and the unspoken,riddled with repetition, weave an evanescentcanvas'. Kristeva, Julia, `Talking about Polylogue' in French Feminist Thought,ed. by Toril Moi, Oxford: Blackwell, 1987,pp. 110-17(p. 113). 20 enorme (Tout `leurs believed that contresens' compte sur un and reactionsreposaient fait, p. 178). Simone de Beauvoir is severe:`La plupart des critiques ont prouve par leurs 44 lu' (Tout 1'avaient 178) tres mal comptefait, p. comptesrendusqu'ils In summary,there is an evident tension in Simone de Beauvoir's fiction between control and ambiguity. This desireto control the reading of her texts exists alongside Simone de Beauvoir's desireto enhanceambiguity in her texts. The freedom she in the creation of meaning coexistswith the to accords readers participate professedly interpretation differs from her These directs own. she at whose readers severecriticism contradictionsare revealing. Why is Simone de Beauvoir so defensive?As Toril Moi says,`the very intensity her Beauvoir's texts may make the sceptical to the true of efforts enforce of meaning 45 in is if `there Toril Moi she wonders something why protests so much' readerwonder 46 ' thesetexts that threatensto escapeeven Simonede Beauvoir? 44Critics have analysedwhy Simone de Beauvoir fails to achievewhat shewished to do in `La Femme rompue'. In `ResistingRomance:Simone de Beauvoir, "The Woman Destroyed" and the Romance Script', (in Contemporary French Fiction by Women:Feminist Perspectives,ed. by Atack, Margaret and Phil Powrie, Manchester.ManchesterUniversity Press,1990), Elizabeth Fallaize looks at the ideology of romance in connectionwith Simone de Beauvoir's fiction. Sheshows how impossible a task Simone de Beauvoir set herself when she set out to undermine/ demistify the romance script in `La Femmerompue'. No wonder Simone de Beauvoir's readers`misunderstood' her story - it met almost all their expectations,notwithstandingthe unhappy ending from Monique's point of view. Elizabeth Fallaize showshow structuresand readershipwork against Simone de Beauvoir's subversiveenterprise;it was published in serial form in Elle magazineand focused on the complications of love for an individual woman. Although Monique's strategiesare implicated in her failure to win her man, the battle itself is not challenged;Maurice, vindicated by the narrative, is clearly identified asthe prize. Readersare inclined to identify with Monique, not only becauseof the personal,intimate tone of the first personnarrative, but also becauseof the lifestyle they generally sharedwith her. In her analysis of the rhetorical strategiesused in `La Femme rompue', Toril Moi has shown how they provoke the misreadingsidentified by Simone de Beauvoir and confirmed by her own experienceof teachingthe text ( `Intentions and Effects', pp. 61-93). Shemakesa useful distinction betweenthe author's declaredintentions which may not have any discernible textual effects and the intentionality of the text itself, that is, the logic of the text as produced by the reader,whether the writer knows it or not. 45Moi, `Intentions and Effects', 67. p. 46Moi, `Intentions and Effects', 67. p. 21 Speakingof her intentions in her later fiction, Simone de Beauvoir usesphrases 47 is looking `faire This `donner ä transparaitre' a way of at not new such as voir' and literature for Simone de Beauvoir; ambiguity and readers'participation in the creation her her She to enterprise. speaks of earlier fiction in of meaning were always crucial 48 analogousterms What is new is the textual strategiesusedto put theseintentions into effect and the changedemphasisthis approachgives rise to. Noteworthy in this from later is Simone de Beauvoir her Of texts. the course, explicit absence of connection the implied author is never completely absent(after all, it is shewho in `La Femme rompue' plants `des indices qui permettent de trouver la c1edu mystere'49 ), but there is a definite shift from using multiple narrativeviewpoints where the narrators' points of least, Simone de Beauvoir's to the use of narrators to at with some extent coincide view that are placed at a distancefrom her. Speakingof Les Belles Images shewrites: `Personne,danscet univers auquelje suis hostile, ne pouvait parler en mon nom; cependantpour le donner ä voir il me fallait prendreä son egardun certain recul' (Tout comptefait, p. 172). This can be contrastedwith what Simone de Beauvoir saysabout L'Invitee: `A chaquechapitre,je coincidais avec un de mes heros [...] J'adoptai d'ordinaire le point de vue de Franroise ä qui je pretai, ä travers d'importantes transpositions, ma propre experience' (La Force de I'äge, pp. 346-7). She tells us: `bans ce roman,je me livrais, je me risquais [...]' (La Force de 1age, p. 349) and `je m'y etais risqueetout entiere' (La Force de l'äge, p. 570). Simone de Beauvoir's fate is bound up with her character'sin this text: Surtout, en deliant Francoise,par un crime, de la dependanceoü la tenait son amour pour Pierre,je retrouvai ma propre autonomie. [...] il me fallait aller au bout de mon fantasme,lui donner corps sansen rien attenuer,si je voulais 47SeeTout comptefait p. 172. Theseexpressionsare usedwith referenceto Les Belles Images. 48See`Littbrature et m6taphysique', Existentialismeet la sagessedes nations, pp. 106 and 109; `Mon Ecrits, Les experience', p. 447. 49Tout comptefait,, p. 176. 22 En je Francoise. la effet, precipitai oü compte solitide conquerir pour mon l'identification s'opera. (La Force de 1'äge,pp. 348-9.) In Les Mandarins, Simone de Beauvoir wished to put all of herself des 211) de (La Force tout p. choses, moi' mettre - `je voulais y and divides her experience 50 Henri. betweenAnne and It may seemparadoxical that the further Simone de Beauvoir ostensibly became from her texts, the about what they truly meant. she more prescriptive withdrew Heightenedanxiety of control goessomeway towards making senseof and explaining this. The more `freedom' she gavereaders,the less she trustedthem. And the fact that de Beauvoir been Simone had did that she right. they misunderstand,of course,proved had fact in her disappointed the that she readers,was very consciousof who was disappointedthem. It is a recurring theme in her memoirs. Sherepeatsher attemptsto find understandingand approval, in her searchfor a positive closure, only to recreatethe familiar senseof having failed, of having beenmisunderstood,a disappointment.She intention between (re)created the and outcomewhere this pattern could gap repeatedly be relived. It is the feeling of disappointmentthat predominatesdespitethe evident books. her later fiction, her especially of of success Simone de Beauvoir gives readersfreedomto read betweenthe lines but their freedom is strictly limited. Authorial control is not renounced.Foucault tells us that truth is relatedto power. Simone de Beauvoir seeksto retain power over the readerby ' imposing a true reading of her texts. In Simone de Beauvoir's mind there is a correct 50SeeLa Force des choses,pp. 287-8. 51Furthermore,the fact that readersencountera slippery and unstabletext increasesthe likelihood that they will have recourseto authorial commentsbeyond the text for confirmation of the `correct' reading. Martha Noel Evans developsthis point in relation to the use of the style indirect libre in L'Invitee: `By maintaining the readerin a confusedand confusing relation to her discourse,flipping in and out betweenemotional fusion and moral judgement, Beauvoir as author finally displacesthe text as object of desire.The text is so undependableand contradictory that in order to take up a welldefined relation to it we must seekhelp, guidanceapproval from outsidethe text, in the mind and will 23 find Directed free this to to to meaning read reading, that choose. are readers reading betweenthe lines, in the spacewhich is empty and where nothing exists, readerscannot but fail. Simone de Beauvoir's `trust' in her readersis disappointedagain and again. Inevitably, by failing to use their freedomcorrectly, they fall into the mauvaisefoi trap her Her has de Beauvoir Simone women readersas condemns autobiography that set up. her her invites to characters. condemn readers she Simone de Beauvoir, we have seen,valued ambiguity in the nameof realism, be intended to Although the controlled and sought she ambiguity she vraisemblance. inherent in itself, it in language found the lines, between madness the she also contained in'the text, that is to say, in those qualities that destabilisemeaning and identity, that bid to in to `second I the control, as a restore the memoirs writing' representchaos. see In this, defence in my understanding chaos. the text, against the a as madness contain her During Evans. Noel the by Martha of course accordswith the views expressed discussionon genderand the `hidden complex of vulnerabilities and defenses'that Simone de Beauvoir's ambivalencegives rise to, she makesthe following comment: While [Simone de Beauvoir's] ample commentaryon her fiction betrays some fiction's her domesticate to wildness, the net effect of attempt uneasiness,some from is to the the to shield or reader prevent thesecommentaries confusion, cover facing the trouble that is there. (Masks of Tradition, p. 80.) Simone de Beauvoir's anxiety at the excessand ambiguity inscribed in her fiction seems to me to be a key factor underlying her efforts to prescribehow her texts should be read, her attemptto retrench in her memoirs. Her exegesiscan be seento mask other possible 2 The `secondwriting' in the memoirs also reveals Simonede Beauvoir's readings. of its creator'. Masks of tradition: Womenand the Politics of Writing in Twentieth-CenturyFrance, Ithaca: Cornell University Press,1987,p. 90. 52I also relate this to the way that Simone de Beauvoir seemsto have happily seizedupon the debate about the `bad' ending in L'Invitee and to have acquiescedin the criticism in order to elude the more threateningquestionsthat a defenceof its excesswould have raised. Thus, the madnessof the text was 24 compulsion to complete.Fictional texts that replicate the opennessand inconclusiveness in defined (explained the memoirs. and circumscribed) of existenceare My readingsof Simonede Beauvoir will focus on how the madnessinherent in the text of her works, functions to unsettlemeaning.My centreof interest is not the theme of madnessin the fiction. What interestsme is the way that textual strategies duplicate madnessin the text, the way that the text structuresan experienceof madness which is not locatable in any one characterbut which is an effect of the text as a whole. I read madnessmetaphorically as an intrinsic quality of the texts. This is not to say that 53 `mad' the texts per se are I must also underline, given the historical connectionbetweenwomen and madnessin our patriarchal culture, that I do not wish to suggestthat Simone de Beauvoir was `mad' or to seekto devalueher work by doing so. I do not believe that my locating is in in interpreted It be the text this way. widely recognisedthat of madness signs need throughout history, women who haveresistedpatriarchal authority have been defined as 54 This is by Jardine Alice who arguesthat women pointed out mad and silenced. writers are lesswilling to experimentin a radical way with existing literary conventions `respect for form' women's and relates precisely to women's having been `closer to all possibletransgressions'.As sheputs it, `one fatal stepoutside of symbolic pre- defined, curtailed and dismissed.SeeMoi, Simonede Beauvoir, pp. 95-6 for a discussionof Simone de Beauvoir's attitude to the ending of L'Invitee. s3I do not intend to psychoanalysethe texts or Simone de Beauvoir or, for that matter, her characters. saSeeChesler,Phyllis, Womenand Madness,New York: Avon, 1972. She describesthe relationship betweenthe female condition and madness,showing how both women who fully act out the conditioned female role and those who reject or are ambivalent about the female role are defined as mad (p. 56). `The ethic of mental health is masculinein our culture', she argues(p. 69). Seealso Showalter, Elaine, TheFemale Malady: Women,Madnessand English Culture, 1830-1980,London: Virago, 1987 and Evans, Martha Noel, Fits and Starts: A Genealogyof Hysteria in Modern France, New York: Cornell University Press,1991.During a discussionabout the antipsychiatry movement in an interview with Alice Jardine,Simone de Beauvoir said: `Given masculinenorms, it is clear that women are more likely to be consideredcrazy - I'm not saying to be crazy. [...] It's terrible this tendencyto considerwomen somethingdangerousto society... but, truthfully speakingthey are dangerous,even thosewho aren't feminists, becausethere has always been a women's revolt'. Jardine,Alice, `Interview with Simone de Beauvoir', Signs, Winter, 1979,224-36, p. 229. 25 55 in designated In [they a sense, as mad'. reading transgressionand are] scriptions and fiction I de Beauvoir's in Simone as signs of madness, am reappropriating resistance 56 force within the text. as a positive madness One of the most influential studieson madnessto date has beenundertakenby 57 ä 1'äge Foucault in his Histoire de lafolie classique Much of what he argueshere can be relatedto Simone de Beauvoir's textual practice. What interestsFoucault is the way individuals and the social body are regulated through the articulation of discourses, through the application of knowledge/ power. For Foucault, discoursesare `historically variable ways of specifying knowledge and 58 Discoursesproduce `reality'. Discursive practicesproduce the categoriesin truth' knowledges Truth think of are not verifiable claims ourselvesand our society. which we Foucault in discourses the they rejects conventional are produced. outside which histories of psychiatry that interpret the emergence of psychiatric medicine as a series of humanitarianadvances.For Foucault, the modem conceptionof mental illness and the have been unknowingly constructedout of elementsof the classical asylum 59 (seventeenth-century)experienceof madness ssJardine,Alice, `Pre-textsfor the Transatlantic Feminist', YaleFrench Studies,62,19.81,220-36 (pp. 232-33). s6In so doing, I do not wish to glamorise madnessitself. As Elaine Showalter says,interpreting madness as a form of feminist protest comes`dangerouslyclose to romanticizing and endorsingmadnessas a desirableform of rebellion rather than seeingit as the desperatecommunication of the powerless' (The Female Malady, p. 5). Moreover, whilst my study doesnot specifically interrogate genderas a factor of the production of Simone de Beauvoir's texts, this neverthelessforms the context of the discussion.Nor is it the aim of this study to considerthe genderpolitics that inflect the content and reception of Simone de Beauvoir's fiction. This is not to deny the importanceof theseareasof investigation. However, an examination of the genderedideologiesthat permeatethe production and reception of the texts is a project beyond the scopeof this study. 57Foucault, Michel, Histoire de lafolie a1 arge classique,Paris: Gallimard, 1972 (first published in 1961). Further referencesto this study will be included in the text. saThis definition of Foucault's notion of discoursesis given by Caroline Ramazanogluin the Introduction to Up Against Foucault: Exploration of Some TensionsbetweenFoucault and Feminism, London: Routledge, 1993,p. 19. 59For example,see 177. p. 26 Foucault's study begins with the disappearanceof leprosy at the end of the Middle Ages. Madnesswas to take the place of leprosy, prompting the same`jeux d'exclusion' (p. 16), the same`reactionsde partage,d'exclusion, de purification' (p. 18). However, medieval madnessfor Foucault was excluded `within' society, not `from' it as it would be in the seventeenthcentury. Far from being expulsedduring the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries,madnessplayed an essentialrole in the symbolic landscapeof the Renaissance.Foucault discussesthe ritual exclusion of mad strangersand the nomadic existenceof the mad who were to be found in large numbersin centresof des fous', `des Frequently to the mad trade. nefs ships, consigned pilgrimage or occupied a liminal space(p. 22). Foucault gives the following explanation of the origins fous': `la Nef des of C'est qu'elle symbolise toute une inquietude, montee soudain ä l'horizon de la folie le fou deviennent La la fin du Moyen Age. et culture europeenne, vers personnages majeurs, dans leur ambiguite: menace et derision, vertigineuse deraison du monde, et mince ridicule des hommes. (Histoire de lafolie ä1 'age classique, p. 24. ) Madnessreplacesdeathasthe majorpreoccupation towardsthe endof the fifteenth century. `La folie, c'est le dejä-lä de la mort' (p. 26). It cheatsdeath of its victory. Madness,perceptiblein sin and foibles, is the nothingnessof death in life. Foucault considersthe divergent experiencesof madnessin art and literature of the time. He comparesthe tragic, cosmic conceptionof madnessin paintings with the moral critique in writings of the time that seemadnessin human sin and foibles. Progressively,`la tragiquefolie du monde' becameobscuredas a `consciencecritique de 1'homme'was given precedenceand madnessbecamean experiencein language (`dens le champ du langage') `oü 1'hommeetait confronte ä sa verite morale' (p. 39). Ensuing classicalconceptionsof madnessand the modem conceptionsof madnessthat have developedfrom them, neglectthe tragic and are necessarilypartial. By the end of 27 the sixteenthcentury the dominant experienceof madnessis that it is no longer at the into horizon. has been brought It the domain of reason, the threat the on margins, dependent, Madness tamed. and reason were eachguaranteeing mutually and contained the existenceof the other. Madnesscameto be embracedas an essentialpart of reason,a form of reasonitself `soit une de sesforces secretes,soit un des moments de sa dans laquelle forme eile peut prendre conscience paradoxale manifestation,soit une d'elle meme' (p. 44). It is in the seventeenthcentury that the voices of madnessare reducedto silence (p. 56). Foucault tracesthe history of the exile of madnessfrom reasonand truth in the seventeenthand eighteenthcenturies.The mad were only one of the banishedgroupsto endurethe moral condemnationof their age.Unreason('la deraison') is the defining characteristicof the heterogeneouscategoriesinterned during `The Great Confinement', (`Le Grand Renfermement')6° Whereasduring the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, madnesshad beena vague,all pervasivethreat, in the ClassicalAge it becomesa tangible threat that is localised and segregated: A partir du XVII° siecle, la deraisonn'est plus la grandehantisedu monde [...]. Elle prend l'allure d'un fait humain [...]. Ce qui etait jadis inevitable peril des choseset du langagede l'homme, de saraison et de saterre [...], commenceä se mesurerselon un certain ecart par rapport ä la norme sociale. (Histoire de lafolie a 1'ägeclassique,p. 117.) Internment, literally and symbolically, placesunreasonat a distance.However, as unreasoninvolves free will, choice and intention, all of which are attributes of reason, the division reason/unreasonremainsuncertain ('mal assure'p. 156). As the mad were held to make the samefree choice as other internees,(the poor, libertines, profaners, debauchees,spendthriftset al.), it was fit that they be subjectto the sameregime of 60Throughout this period there was a concurrent,separate experienceof madnessas illness. A limited number of the insanewere treated in hospitals.Seepp. 131-39. 28 insenses, (`les les And the correction. yet, mad esprits aliens, ou and punishment deranges,les extravagants,les gensen demence'p. 159) did have a special status. Internment that hid the scandalousface of unreasonin general,actually made the mad into a spectacle,a spectaclewatchedfrom a distance,behind bars,unrelatedto reason. Madnesswas animality: `La folie est devenuechoseä regarder:non plus monstre au fond de soi-meme,mais animal aux mecanismesetranges,bestialite oü 1'hommedepuis longtemps,est aboli' (p. 163). Why, Foucault asks,is unreasonreducedto silence whilst `on laisse la folie parler librement le langagede son scandale'?The answerlies in the moral lessonthat madnesshad to give: *Cequi est folie c'est cette incarnation de l'homme dansla bete, qui est, en tant de dernier de la le le que point chute, signe plus manifeste sa culpabilite; et, en tant qu'objet ultime de complaisancedivine, le symbole de l'universel pardon et de 1'innocenceretrouvee. (Histoire de la folie ä 1'ägeclassique,p. 173.) In the seventeenthcentury the ultimate threat of unreason,revealedin the animality of madness,lies in absolutefreedom. When Foucault turns his attention from `The Great Confinement', that is `une la pratique qui maitrise contre-natureet la reduit au silence' (p. 189), to discursive practicessurrounding madnesswhich constitute `une connaissancequi tente de dechiffrer desverites de nature' (p. 189), he fords no dialogue betweenthesetwo experiencesof madness.`Entierementexclue d'un cote, entierementobjective de 1'autre,la folie n'est jamais manifesteepour elle-meme,et dapsun langagequi lui serait propre.' (p. 189). This division explains the profound silence of madnessduring the classical age.It had the effect of making `le fou et la folie [...] etrangers1'un a l'autre' (p. 223). The mad were recognisablewhereasmadnesswas nothingnessand so undefinable. Madnesswas unreason,the negative emptinessof reason,nothing (p. 268). The ultimate paradox of madnessis that it must expressthis nothingness`en signs, en 29 paroles, en gestes[...] en prenantapparencedansfordre de la raison; en devenantainsi le contraire d'elle-meme'(p. 261). A recurring idea in Foucault's study is that madnesscannot be silenced,that it has dominated find Although a critical awareness of madness a since the will voice. Renaissance,the tragic consciousnessof madnesshas never quite disappearedand Foucault finds evidenceof this in the work of Nietzsche, Van Gogh, Freud, Artaud (p. 40). The tragic experienceof madnesscannot be contained;it is dangerouslymaskedby rational analysis of madness as mental illness, but `au point dernier de la contrainte, 1'eclatementetait necessaire,auquelnous assistonsdepuisNietzsche' (p. 40). Foucault arguesthat since the tragic experienceof madness`disappeared'with the Renaissance, interpretationsof madnesshave combined,to differing degrees,four synchronous 1'equilibre defait de `ä instant, fait se ce qui dann et perceptionsof madness: chaque se 1'experiencede la folie releve d'une consciencedialectique, d'un partagerituel, d'une reconnaissancelyrique et enfm du savoir' (p. 187).None of theseelementsever disappearscompletely, though, at any one time, one or other of them may predominate, leaving the others in virtual obscurity, giving rise to tensionsand conflict `au-dessous du niveau du langage' (p. 187). The nineteenthand twentieth centurieshave favoured an analytical approachto madness,an approachthat seeksan objective knowledge of madness.However, Foucault argues,all the other ways of apprehendingmadness continue to exist in the heart of our culture. Qu'elles ne puissentplus guererecevoir de formulation que lyrique, ne prouve pas qu'elles deperissent,ni qu'elles prolongent malgre tout une existenceque le savoir a depuis longtempsrecusee,mais que maintenuesdans l'ombre, elles se vivifient dans les formes les plus libres et les plus originaires du langage.Et leur pouvoir de contestationn'en est sansdoute que plus vigoureux. (Histoire de lafolie ä 1'ägeclassique,p. 188.) 30 Foucault's notion of madnessclearly convergesat times with Simone de Beauvoir's writing practice. In spite of attemptsto silence,confine and ignore madness, it forces its In into in her finds the spite of writing. repression, way a voice madness text. Simone de Beauvoir's text getsaway. It getsmessy.The voice of the madnessin Simone de Beauvoir's text is, in many ways, the voice that madnesshad in Western before it Great Confinement', before `The was silenced.Characteristicsof the culture tragic and critical experiencesof madnessas depictedby Foucault, coincide with the discursive level in Simone de Beauvoir's fiction. the text of at a of madness experience Reading madnessin the text is readingthesequalities. The tragic experienceof madnessinforms Simonede Beauvoir's fiction. The first quality of madnessI shall read for in her writing is excess.Madnesswas excess. Foucault tells us that, with the Renaissance,art becomesdominatedby the imagination, liberated as Gothic forms disintegrate,no longer tied to strict, straightforward `1'image scripture of and and spiritual significations, commenceä representations graviter autour de sa propre folie' (p. 29). In Simonede Beauvoir, as in the tragic experienceof madness,we find a multiplication of significances/meanings.And in her l'insensee, le le deraisonablepeuventse glisser Banscet excesde too, reve, writing sens' (p. 29). I shall also read Simone de Beauvoir's fiction for ambiguity. Madnesswas ambiguity: `Tart de significations diversess'inserent sousla surfacede l'image, qu'elle ne presenteplus qu'une face enigmatique' (p. 30). Madnessexerteda powerful fascination and was representedas a temptation: `La liberte, meme effrayante, de ses reves, les fantasmesde sa folie, ont pour 1'hommedu XV° siecle, plus de pouvoirs d'attraction que la realite desirablede la chair' (p. 31). If the fantastic and wild disorder of animality revealedthe angerand madnessat the heart of human beings, madnesswas 31 had innocence, foolish forbidden knowledge. In the to their mad access secret, also knowledge. Madnessis discernible in imagesthat are the finit of unrestrained imagination. I shall read Simonede Beauvoir's fiction for tracesof the attraction of beyond disorder the expressionof angerand madness,convey a sense that, and excess of elusive meaning.Madnessin the text is excess,multivalence and ambiguity. The characteristicsof the critical consciousnessof madness(p. 39), the second strand of the experienceof madnessin the Renaissance,and which cameto dominate classical conceptionsand thereaftermodem conceptionsof madness,also find echoesin Simone de Beauvoir's writing. In the critical consciousnessof madness,madnessand de inextricably la l'autre, dann `Chacune mesure est et ce seen as are related: reason deux, fondent de 1'une toutes mais se reference mouvement reciproque,elles se recusent by infinite human l'autre' (p. 41). The is the measured when condition madness par wisdom ('raison demesuree')of God. Human madnessis experiencedas contradiction as everything is the oppositeof what it appearsand truth is never attained: `tout l'ordre humain n'est que folie' (p. 42). In its inexpressibility the wisdom of God is also de deraison' is `un (p. 43), abirre reason silenced. So reasonand madness, where madnesscanceleachother out at the sametime asthey construct and affirm eachother in a perpetualdialectic. In the text, madnessinforms the rational and throws light on it. The rational is undermined.Signs of madnesswill be read where oppositesare asserted as equivalentsin a text where contradiction and paradoxare familiar. Likewise, I shall read madnessin Simone de Beauvoir's fiction at points where truth becomeselusive and when languageis brought up againstinexpressibility. The madnesswhich manifestsitself in Simonede Beauvoir's texts is also inflected by classicalconceptionsof madness.By the end of the sixteenth century madnessis no longer at the margins, the threat on the horizon, `cettefuyante et absolue 32 limite' (p. 53). Madnessnow plays on the ambiguousboundary betweenthe real and the illusory, truth and appearance,it is the embodimentof contradiction: `Elle cacheet le dit le lumiere' (p. 54). In the est et vrai et mensonge, eile ombre manifeste, eile hospital of the mad that replacesthe ship in the collective imagination at the end of the `la the century, mad speak contradiction et l'ironie, le langagededoublede seventeenth la Sagesse'(p. 53). Madnessis le signe ironique qui brouille les reperesdu vrai et du chimerique' (p. 55). Simone de Beauvoir's textual strategiesthat blur boundariesin an analogous way will be deemed to introduce madness in the text. Irony and contradiction can be read as madnessin the text. For Foucault, one word conveyswhat the experienceof madnesswas in the de `une `furieux'. designated It the of classical sorte asylums age: region indifferenciee du desordre' (p. 125). Madnessdisturbs/ disrupts. Who (what) is mad is recognised, determinedby referenceto reasonand the senseof logic and coherenceand continuity of their discourse.Madnessis instantly recognisablein its negativity: `Elle est de fordre de la rupture. Elle surgit tout d'un coup comme discordance'(p. 198). Reading for madnessin Simone de Beauvoir's text meansreading for disruption, incoherence, discordanceand fragmention. In this nexus,the meaningfulnessof languageis cast into doubt. Indeed, Foucault arguesthat madness`ne sepresenteBanssessigns les plus manifestesque comme erreur, fantasme,illusion, langagevain etprive de contenu' (p. 191). (Emphasis added.) On a textual level, madnessis apparentwherever the capacity of languageto be fully meaningful is undermined. To summarise,I shall read the characteristicsof madnessoutlined by Foucault as madnessin the text. The tragic experienceof madnessin the Renaissancefigures on a discursive level as excess,disorder, multiplicity, ambiguity and fascination and 33 is in The that the text as of of era enacted critical experience madness elusoriness. in inexpressability and the unattainability of truth. contradiction and paradoxand Finally, the classical experienceof madnessis duplicated in the text when boundaries incoherence, in irony, disruption, discordance fragmention. and and are obscured Madnessis discernible at a discursive level wheneverthe text puts meaningfulnessof languageinto question. My reading of madnessin the text is also indebtedto Julia Kristeva's theoretical writing on language. The object of attention in my study of Simone de Beauvoir's writing practice is languageitself, what Kristeva calls poetic language,the languageof is lie behind/ beyond to to transparency assumed where meaning materiality as opposed language.Kristeva has identified two types of signifying processesat work within the The `symbolic'. `semiotic' the the semiotic processrelates and production of meaning: to the chora which is pre-symbolic. As Toril Moi puts it, `the semiotic is linked to the pre-Oedipalprimary processes,the basic pulsions of which Kristeva seesas dichotomous death, (life anal and v. oral, and as simultaneously predominantly expulsion v. introjection) and heterogeneous.The endlessflow of pulsions is gathered 61 ]'. in [... The symbolic processrelatesto the imposition of symbolic law, up the chora what Leon S. Roudiez refers to as `the establishmentof sign and syntax, paternal 62 function, grammatical and social constraints' Poetic languageis the outcome of a specific connectionbetweenthe semiotic and the symbolic. Toril Moi explains that once the subject has enteredinto the symbolic order, the chora is repressedto a greateror lesserextent and is only identifiable `aspulsional pressure on symbolic language:as disruption, silencesand absencesin the symbolic contradictions,meaninglessness, 61Moi, Toril, Sexual TextualPolitics: Feminist Literary Theory, London: Methuen, 1985, 161. p. 62Roudiez, Leon S., `Introduction' in Julia Kristeva, Desire in Language: A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art, ed. by Leon S. Roudiez,New York: Columbia University Press,1980,p. 7. 34 3 language'. Traditionally, fiction hasbeendominatedby the symbolic. Recently, it has 64 by beenmore affected the semiotic. For Kristeva, poetic languageis revolutionary. Shebelievesthat writing disrupted by the the semiotic the `spasmodicforce' of the , unconscious,underminesconventionalmeaning which is the structurethat upholds the patriarchal symbolic order, that is to say, all human social and cultural institutions. This disruption is related to madness.Toril Moi explains that `if unconsciouspulsations of the chora were to take over the subjectentirely, the subject would fall back into preOedipal or imaginary chaosand develop some form of mental illness. The subject whose languagelets such forces disrupt the symbolic order, in other words, is also the 65 lapsing into 1 disruption the greater who of madness'. read of runs risk marks subject metaphorically as signs of madnessin the text. My study of the madnessthat finds concreteexpressionin Simonede Beauvoir's writing practice, dovetails with ShoshanaFelman's work on literature and madness.Her exploration of madnessin Stendhal'snovels is basedon close textual analysiswhich instances her to the a classification of madnessand of the experiences advance of allows 66 in found them. She goeson to trace the evolution of Stendhal'streatment of madness of madnessover time. In the concluding chapterto this study, `Ecriture et folie', Shoshana Felman raises an important question about madness and language: `Comment la folie pourrait-elle accederau language,puisqu'elle est, par essence,ce qui se tait, ce qui boulversele registre du senset qui, par lä meine s'exclut du domainede l'intelligible? ' (p. 242). Madnessis opposedto reasonablenessand reason:`La folie desire l'hyperbole; la raison impose la litote, pose les bomes meme du discours- et du 63Moi, Sexual Textual Politics, 162. p. 64Roudiez, 7. p. 65Moi, Sexual Textual Politics, 11. p. 66Felman, Shoshana,La «Foliev dann I'oeuvre romanesquede Stendhal,Paris: Librairie JoseCorti, 1971. (It is interesting to note that Stendhalwas one of Simone de Beauvoir's favourite writers. See `Stendhalou le romanesquedu vrai', Le Deuxiemesexe,Vol I, pp. 375-89.) 35 sens:conditions de la rencontrede 1'Autre. L'hyperbole est violence, folie du desir; la litote - barrage,discipline du langage' (p. 242-43). Felman identifies a permanent tension in Stendhalbetweenreasonand madness.I want to investigate the extent to de fiction, in Beauvoir's Simone the way in which the excess tension this obtains which lucid, of madness upsets measured prose. The questionraised in the conclusionto Felman's study of Stendhal,is one of 67 her book, Folie la litteraire. La In the introductory the starting points of et chose chapterentitled `Ecriture et folie: pourquoi ce livre', she statesher aim to explore the connectionbetweenliterature and madness.Her study seeksto determinenot only how texts speakof madnessbut also how madnessis repressedin texts (pp. 15-16).Her analysescut acrossmy own readingsof Simonede Beauvoir. ShoshanaFelman 68 in different examinesthe rhetorical strategiesof writers relation to madness. She distinguishesbetween`la rhetorique de la folie', (that is discourseabout madnesswhich, she argues,is always `une rhetorique de la denegation'), and `la folie de la rhetorique': Mais si le discourssur la folie n'est pas un discoursde la folie, n'est pas, proprement,un discoursfou, il n'est pas moins, Banscestextes, unefolie qui folie qui sejoue toute seuleä travers le langagemais sansque personne parle, une ne puisse devenir le sujet parlant de ce qui sejoue. C'est ce mouvementdejeu qui dejoue le senset par lequel l'enonce s'aliene ä la performance textuelle, queje denomme,dansce livre, «folie de la rhetorique». (La Folie et la choselitteraire, pp. 347-48.) Shearguesthat discourseabout madnessis subvertedby `la folie de la rhetorique', the madnessin the text. My exploration of Simone de Beauvoir's writing practice centres on `la folie de la rhetorique' and this processof subversion. 67Felman, Shoshana,La Folie la ChoseLitteraire, Paris: Seuil, 1978. et 68The writers whose work sheexploresare Girard de Nerval, Arthur Rimbaud, Honor6 de Balzac, GustaveFlaubert and Henry James.The rhetorical strategiesshe considersinclude the destabilising of identity and repetition, irony and parody. 36 Another influential study on madnessand literature is The Madwoman in the 69 It dealswith the characterof the Gubar. Gilbert Susan Attic by SandraM. and fiction by Mad in women charactersare read as women. century madwoman nineteenth an expressionof women authors' rage againstpatriarchy and their anxiety of authorship. 0 The but is truth tell the that authors century women nineteenth argument `tell it slant', concealingdeeper,less acceptablelevels of meaning, thus `simultaneously 71 is impressive literary This to study standards' conforming and subverting patriarchal ultimately flawed as author and characterare conflated, the madwomantaken to be `the 72 in in image Yet, double, her this and of and spite an of own anxiety rage'. author's hidden in identifying Gubar's focusing Gilbert the works they plots on and spite of images Madwoman Attic The in textual the strategies and particular pinpoints study, in to the against patriarchy nineteenthcentury expressionof women's revolt related fiction that can also be traced in Simonede Beauvoir's fiction. I shall read textual strategiessuch as the use of parody and irony and the subversionof the conventionsof language,as the stampof madnesson a textual level. Images of enclosure,illness, fragmentationand mirrors that recur in nineteenthcentury fiction by women will be in de Beauvoir inscription in Simone the text. of as madness an read My readingsof Simone de Beauvoir are basedon close textual analysisto show how madnessis enactedin the text. Autobiographical and philosophical matters,whilst they form the context of my analyses,will not, in the main, be directly addressedhere. 69Gilbert, SandraM. and SusanGubar, TheMadwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-CenturyLiterary Imagination, New Haven: Yale University Press,1979. 70Gilbert and Gubar's ideas on women's creativity and the use of imagesof enclosureare related to `La Femmerompue' by Phil Powrie in `RereadingBetween The Lines: A Postscripton La Femme rompue', Modern Language Review,87,1992,320-29. "Gilbert and Gubar, 73. p. n Gilbert and Gubar, 78. For detailed p. a evaluation of The Madwoman in the Attic seeMoi, Sexual TextualPolitics, pp. 57-69. TheMadwoman in the Attic is discussedin relation to Simone de Beauvoir in Fallaize, TheNovels, p. 179. 37 My study interrogatesthe text itself and seeksto be as little distracted from that examinationas possible. To achievea balancebetweendetail and breadth,the corpus that forms the basis and just books, is L'Invitee, Les Belles Images La Femme to three the study restricted of for This texts of allows group useful comparisonsto be madebetweenthe early rompue. and late fiction, including as it doesSimonede Beauvoir's first published novel, L'Invitee, published in 1943,and the last fiction shewrote, Les Belles Imagespublished in 1966 and La Femme rompue published in 1968. The corpus is varied as it contains a long novel, a shorter novel and three short stories.Theseworks have beenselectedas they best exemplify the way madnessinflects the text, yet this is not to imply that these de do fact, Simone Beauvoir's fiction might be read In the that of are only works so. all for madnessin the text in the sameway. Similarly, within this study even, in order to allow for depth of analysis,ChapterOne is basedon a close reading of a single text, L'Invitee, and ChapterFour is basedon a close reading of Les Belles Images only. In has because it best illustrates been the qualities under the text selected eachcase, discussion,not becauseit is the unique exemplar. In ChapterOne, I undertakea closereading of L'Invitee, examining the extent to which Simonede Beauvoir had recourseto Gothic conventionsand figures and challenging realist assumptionsthat surroundher first published text. Networks of images,words and motifs that recur in the novel and contribute to the pervasive Gothic atmosphereare traced.I shall arguethat insofar as the text is Gothic and transgressive,it is also mad. ChapterTwo will deal with the imagery of madnessin all the texts under discussion.I shall examinehow the madnessexperiencedby women protagonistsis mediatedin the texts by imagesthat evoke their pain and distress.Connectionsbetween 38 the imagery in L'Invitee and in Les BellesImages and the three stories in La Femme rompue will be explored. Disruptive textual strategiesthat introduce instability and incoherenceinto the text are the focus in ChapterThree. An examination of characterfunction will reveal how the text reproducesthe disintegrationof identity that is experiencedby characters is how identity brink the the of notion a unified and stable of madnessand on investigate fragmentation disruption I the that and unsettle way undermined. shall meaning and contribute to the creationof a mad textual universe. This chapterwill be basedon readingsof L'Invitee, Les BellesImages, `Monologue', and `La Femme rompue'. Finally, ChapterFour concentrateson the problematical nature of languageand is in Les Belles Images. I that madness exemplified at those points shall argue meaning in the text where languagerefusesto signify and where meaning is unsettled.An examinationof the textual strategiesthat bring readersto shareLaurence's loss of confidencein languageand its meaningfulnessforms the basis of the chapter.The use of plurality, irony, enumerationand repetition will be addressed. My starting point is Simone de Beauvoir's first published novel and the symbolic universeshe createsthere. 39 Chapter One L'Invitee: The Gothic Imagination L'Invitee is a highly figurative text. In this chapterI want to examinethe symbolic universethat Simone de Beauvoir createdin her first published novel. The term symbolic universerefers to more than the sum of the imagesin the text, it is also the network of repeatedkey images,words and motifs that accumulatein the text, contributing to the atmosphereof the text. The writing in L'Invitee acquiresmuch of its power from reiterance.The challengeto thosewriting about this writing is to do justice to the denseweb of repeatedutteranceswhilst avoiding the dangerof repetitiveness. Extensive quotation is unavoidable.The richnessof Simone de Beauvoir's languageand its resonancesmeansthat quotationsusedto illustrate one particular point may well illustrate points that have beenmadeearlier, aswell as points yet to be made. Sometimesconnectionswill be madeexplicit whereas,at other times, certain elements of quotationswill be left, asit were,to speakfor themselves. The symbolic universe of L'Invitee is Gothic. This may be a surprising assertion consideringthat this text has beenread, for the most part, as a realist, philosophical, autobiographicalnovel. Indeed,this readinghas authorial authority. In La Force de 1'äge,Simone de Beauvoir discussesher first novel at length, describinghow the real life trio, Jean-PaulSartre,Olga Kosakievicz (to whom the novel is dedicated)and herself, was transposedinto fiction. ' Simonede Beauvoir placed herself at the heart of her novel in the characterof Francoise(p. 347). She also writes about the form of L'Invitee and acknowledgesa debt to certain American writers of that time, notably to 1La Force de l'kge, pp. 346-53. 40 Dashiell Hammett and to Hemingway, as well as to Dostoyevsky and Agatha Christie. Sheplacesemphasison the realism she set out to achieve: Dans les passagesreussisdu roman, on arrive ä une ambiguite de signification qui correspondä celle qu'on rencontredansla realite. Je voulais aussique les faits ne s'enchainentpas selon les rapportsunivoquesde causalite,mais qu'ils soient ä la fois, comme dannla vie meme,comprehensibleset contingents. (La Force de l'äge, p. 352.) This is not to suggestthat Simonede Beauvoir belongedto the nineteenthcentury realist tradition. In an interview with Jill M. Wharfe, Simone de Beauvoir said in this connection: `Je ne dis pas que je suis un ecrivain realiste. Je suis un ecrivain qui a 3 essayede rendrecompte un peu de la realite' Her notion of reality was, of course, different As Francoise Hibbs Arnaud to of nineteenth century reality. quite notions 4 expressesit, Simonede Beauvoir's was a `subjectiverealism'. Lorna Sagedescribes her as a writer of `realist novels that put reality in quotation marks'. Judith Okely's reading of L'Invitee is autobiographicaland psychoanalytical6 Elizabeth Fallaize highlights the autobiographicalnature of the psychological crisis in L'Invitee and also directs our attention to the way Simone de Beauvoir seemsto advocatea philosophical reading of the novel by placing a quotation from Hegel as its 0 de 1'autre. `Chaque la Emphasisin Renee consciencepoursuit mort epigraph: Winegarten's reading of L'Invitee also falls on autobiographicaland philosophical 2 The influence that American writers had on Simone de Beauvoir is discussedin Celeux, Anne-Marie. Jean-Paul Sartre, Simonede Beauvoir: Une experiencecommune,dear ecritures, Paris: Librairie Nizet, 1976.Toril Moi exploresthe contradictionsinherent in Simone de Beauvoir's use of the thriller and detectivestory models in Simonede Beauvoir, p. 100. 3Wharfe, Jill. M., `Perfect Interlocutors: Intertextuality and Divergence in the Fiction of Simone de Beauvoir and Sartre' (unpublisheddoctoral thesis,University of Birmingham, 1988). Interview with Simone de Beauvoir: Paris, 6 July 1985,Appendix 1, p. 344. I gratefully acknowledgepermission to quote from this interview. 4Hibbs, p. 10. s Sage,Lorna, Womenin the House Fiction: Post-War WomenNovelists, London: Macmillan, 1992, of p. viii. 6Okely, pp. 139-40. 7Fallaize, TheNovels, 26. p. 41 8 is L'Invitee Toril Moi's the closer as a modem melodrama of work. reading aspectsof 9 to my own. Indeed,melodramaand the Gothic sharea number of characteristics, in her below. ) Although (See the emphasis reading remains notably, excess. imagery Toril Moi the associatedwith examines philosophical and psychoanalytical, Xaviere and the threat sherepresentsand sheidentifies what sherefers to as `a kind of 10 imagination'. It is this areathat my reading will explore and develop. It luridly gothic is my contention that this realist, philosophical novel is embeddedin a Gothic universe that Simone de Beauvoir created in order to confront pain and madness, to express that darker side of herself. A close reading of the text revealsthe extent to which shehad it justifiable figures the Gothic to to speak of makes which conventions and recourse Gothic economyof l l the text. The object here is to explore the insights to be gained from looking again at 12 L'Invitee through the lens that the Gothic provides. This is not intendedto be a figures Gothic define to and trace them onto of stock a number reductive attempt Simone de Beauvoir's text. In any case,as Fred Bolting points out in the introduction to his book on the Gothic, it is impossibleto define a fixed set of Gothic conventions;for 8Winegarten, pp. 101-106. 9Moi, Simonede Beauvoir, pp. 95-124. 10Moi, Simonede Beauvoir, p. 97. 11Simone de Beauvoir's correspondencewith Jean-PaulSartrerevealsthat shewas reading M. G. Lewis's TheMonk, (1795), a quintessentialGothic novel, at the time shewas writing L'Invitee. Letter Saturday, 16 December 1939.Simonede Beauvoir: Lettres a Sartre, 1930-1939,vol. I, Paris: Gallimard, 1990.p. 356. Shenotes in this letter that she is reading Antonin Artaud's version of The Monk. This is neither a translation nor an adaptationbut `une sorte de «copie» en frangaisdu texte anglais original'. Artaud, Antonin, "Le Moine" de Lewis racontdpar Antonin Artaud, (first published in 1931), in Oeuvrescompletes,vol. VI, Paris: Gallimard, 1966, `Avertissement', p. 13. Artaud cut the original and intensified `la violence et 1'atrocit6du r6cit' (Notes, p. 417). Interesting echoeslink L'Invitee and TheMonk/ Le Moine. For example,in the first chapter of TheMonk, an agelessgypsy woman who sings and dances,tells the fortune of the heroine (The Monk, pp. 34-39, Le Moine, pp. 48-52). Throughout the novel, details call to mind L'Invitee. In terms of tone, the two texts are congruous.It is interesting to recall that Foucault consideredthat Artaud's writing exemplified the tragic consciousnessof madness.SeeFoucault, Histoire de lafolie, p. 40. '2 Three main sourceshave beenreferred to: Botting, Fred, Gothic, London: Routledge, 1996. MacAndrew, Elizabeth,. The Gothic Tradition in Fiction, New York: Columbia University Press, 1979. Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky, The Coherenceof Gothic Conventions,Revised edition, New York: Arno Press, 1980. 42 him the Gothic is a hybrid form incorporating and transforming other literary forms and developing and changing its own conventionsin relation to newer modesof writing. 13 Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick setsout her aim in the introduction to her book: I want to make it easierfor the readerof `respectable'nineteenth-century[we might add `andtwentieth-century'] novels to write `Gothic' in the margin next to certain especiallyinteresting passages,and to make that notation with a senseof linking specific elementsin the passagewith specific elementsin the constellation of Gothic conventions. (The Coherenceof Gothic Conventions,p. 2.) What then doesthe term Gothic mean?What elementsmight go to make up `the constellation of Gothic conventions', albeit unfixed? The first Gothic novels were storiesof cruel passionsand supernaturalterror that took place in a sinister, medieval 14 setting. The term has since come to apply to any novel with an obsessive,gloomy, violent, doom laden and terrifying atmosphere.The threat of irrational and evil forces looms over everything. Magic and the supernaturalfigure prominently. We know that `spectres,monsters,demons,corpses,skeletons,evil aristocrats,monks and nuns, fainting heroinesand bandits populate Gothic landscapesas suggestivefigures of imagined and realistic threats' and that they arejoined by the mad in the nineteenth 15 century. Gothic texts are preoccupiedwith madness,identity and the dissolution of the self. Split personalitiesand doublesabound.Mirrors are a stock Gothic device, generally signifying alienation. The bestial within the human is a characteristicGothic theme and sexuality a central concern.In Gothic texts sexuality tends to be distorted and emphasisis commonly lain on incest and eroticism. Uncertainties about sexuality are 16 linked to wider threatsof disintegration. Live burial and tombs are favourite regularly themes.Imagesof enclosureand weight coexist with imagesof spaceand vertigo. 13Botting, 14. p. "The first Gothic novel is consideredto be Horace Walpoles's The Castle of Oranto (1764). '5Botting 2. p. t6Botting, 5. p. 43 No accountof the Gothic would be completewithout referenceto Freud's notion '7 is Indeed, in it is discussed his the that uncanny the of name. essay uncanny as of inseparablefrom the Gothic, it is one of its essentialingredients.At the beginning of his leads back frightening is `the Freud the that tells that class of which uncanny us essay, to what is known of old and long familiar' (p. 220) and he draws attention to Schelling's definition: `everything is "unheimlich" that might have remainedsecretand hidden but has come to light' (p. 225). Freud's study allows him to refine his own definition and to is `something determines Schelling's (p. 241). Freud the that uncanny concur with is importance double (p. 241). The the of crucial phenomenonof repressedwhich recurs to Freud's conceptionof the uncanny;a `doubling, dividing and interchangingof the self and the temporal equivalents,repetition and recurrence,all give rise to a senseof the uncanny (p. 234). In the Gothic mode, feeling and emotion exceedreason.Ambivalence and is is Gothic; The term the used sometimes quintessential unspeakable ambiguity prevail. it Kosofsky Sedgwick, Eve to to according simply meanawsome,whilst sometimes, implies `a rangeof reflections on language',whilst at other times it may be enactedin 18 text as characterscontendwith the despairof the uncommunicable. An `overabundanceof imaginative frenzy, untamedby reason' and a style characterisedby boundlessnessand over-ornamentationhave been interpretedas signs of transgressionin 19 Gothic. It is precisely in the expressionof the inexpressibleand the excessesof the the 17`The Uncanny', The Complete Worksof SigmundFreud, Vol XVII, pp. 218-52. Uncanny is the generally acceptedtranslation of the Germanterm `unheimlich' that, in fact, has no exact English or, for that matter, French translation. For a discussionof the different meaningsof the term seeSection I pp. 222-26 of Freud's essay.Further referencesto his essaywill be given in brackets in the text. '8 Sedgwick, p. 3. 19Botting, pp. 5-6. 44 Gothic mode that I locate the madnessin the text of L'Invitee. Insofar as it is Gothic and ° is it thus transgressive,the text of L'Invitee mad, enactsmadness. `Gothic signifies a writing of excess.12l Theseare the first words in Fred Botting's book, signalling how central this notion is to the Gothic. Much of the writing in L'Invitee is, as we shall see,excessive,hyperbolic, extravagant;it is Gothic writing to the extent that it is more likely to evoke emotion and work on readers' feelings than it is to prompt an intellectual responseor rational argument.It is useful to begin this in key Gothic in L'Invitee that, the passages particular, with a number of exploration of epitomise Gothic writing, a writing of excess.A close reading of thesepassages highlights a densenetwork of words and motifs that are found throughout the text and that go to make up what I have referredto as the Gothic economy of the text. These 22 is is interest here, in What be detail of subsequently analysed words and motifs will the quality of the writing that makesit justifiable to speakof its excess. Thesehighly coloured, extravagantpassagesoccur at climactic points in the incident in Xaviere first The the the when night-club passagerelates narrative. deliberately and repeatedlyburns herself with a cigaretteduring a danceperformance: Xaviere ne regardait plus, eile avait baisse la tete, eile tenait dans sa main droite une cigarette ä demi consumee et eile 1'approchait lentement de sa main gauche. Francoise eut peine ä reprimer un cri; Xaviere appliquait le tison rouge contre sa peau et un sourire aigu retroussait ses levres. (L'Invitee, p. 354.) Francoise then watches in horror as Xaviere burns herself again: `Xaviere soufflait delicatementsur les cendresqui recouvraientsa brülure; quand eile eut dispersece petit de le bout de la a sa contre embrase matelasprotecteur,eile colla nouveau plaie mise nu 20Foucault discussesthe links betweenunreason,internment and what he terms `la litt8rature fantastique de folie et d'horreur' that appearedin the nineteenthcentury. SeeHistoire de lafolie, `La Grande Peur', pp. 375-82. 21Botting, p. 1. u The first key passagecan be found on pp. 354-55 of L'Invitee. The secondkey passageis on pp. 36264. The third key passageis on pp. 499-501. 45 in is is Francoise's cool, not one23 related crisis, which a metaphysical cigarette'. , haut-le-corps; `Francoise in hyperbolic but terms: ce n'etait un eut rather rational prose facon d'une plus profonde pas seulementsa chair qui se revoltait; eile se sentait atteinte danger de etre. Derriere jusqu'au irremediable, un maniaque, ce rictus coeur son et plus (p. 354). imagines' definitif tous ceux qu'elle avaitjamais que menacait,plus Ambiguity is fostered.The dangeris at once the most absoluteand indeterminate.The is, in key that many ways, a continuation of the excess exemplifies passage second 4 Spanish During had been interrupted. the that of a poem, rendering previous one Xaviere is as if in a trance and Francoisesuffers anotheraccessof panic: 'Xaviere ne regardait plus la femme, eile fixait le vide; une cigarettese consumait ä braise doigts la atteindresa chair sansqu'elle parüt s'en commencait et entre ses la Francoise hysterique. Bans passa une extase apercevoir; eile semblait plongee etait etouffante l'atmosphere front; etait et au-dedans sueur, en eile main sur son d'elle-meme, sespenseesbrülaient comme des flammes. Cette presenceennemie folle devenait de de dans l'heure ä tout plus en plus sourire un qui s'etait revelee jour le devoilement d'en eviter terrifiant; il apres proche, n'y avait plus moyen jour, minute apresminute, Francoiseavait fui le danger,mais c'en etait fait, eile 1'avait enfm rencontrecet infranchissableobstaclequ'elle avait pressentisousdes formes incertainesdepuis sa plus petite enfance;ä travers la jouissancemaniaque de Xaviere, ä travers sahaine et sajalousie, le scandaleeclatait, aussimonstrueux, face de Francoise, la definitif et cependantsanseile, quelque en que mort; aussi irreductible, libre, absolu, sans recours: comme une condamnation choseexistait dressait. etrangere se une conscience (L'Invitee, pp. 363-64.) Again one is struck by the heightenedand intensetone of the text. Readersof L'Invitee, 25 like readersof Gothic romance,are placed in a stateof suspenseand uncertainty. The long in building is a to text a crescendo;words are piled on words, clauseupon clause into draw hundred (nine lines, to that thirteen readers seems words) and one sentence 23Seep. 375 where Francoisediscussesher crisis with Pierre. 24Toril Moi suggeststhat Xavii're deliberately bums herself on two occasionsand that it is `when Xaviere tries to bum herself for the secondtime' that Francoisereactsvehemently (Simonede Beauvoir, p. 115). In fact, during the rendering of the Spanishpoem, Xavibre seemsto be in a kind of hysterical trance and a lit cigarettebetweenher fingers has burnt down and begins to scorchher flesh. Francoise'sreaction is due to her recollection of the previous incident in a chargedatmosphere.See L'Invitee, p. 363. 25SeeKilgour, Maggie, TheRise of the Gothic Novel, London: Routledge, 1995,p. 6. 46 the text, enactingthe weight of languageand reproducing Francoise'sfeelings of 26 Together,these is in It the the climaxes represent one of novel. passages suffocation. is her happiness, Xaviere Francoise that threat, to that this only a not realises at point but to her very existence.The final key passageI wish to consideris the culmination of the text that is reachedas Francoisecomesto the decision that Xaviere must die. This by hyperbole. is too, characterised passage [Francoise]traversale couloir, eile titubait comme une aveugle,les larmes brülaient sesyeux: `J'ai etejalouse d'elle. Je lui ai pris Gerbert.' Les larmes brülaient, les mots brülaient commeun fer rouge. Elle s'assit au bord du divan et repetahebetee:`J'ai fait cela. C'est moi. ' Dans les tenebres,le visage de Gerbert brülait d'un feu noir, et les lettres sur le tapis etaientnoires comme un pacte infernal. Elle ports son mouchoir a seslevres. Une lave noire et torride coulait *danssesveins. Elle aurait voulu mourir. (L'Invitee, p. 499.) A successionof short and asyntacticsentencesconvey Francoise'sdistress,their rhythm could almost be the rhythm of broken sobs.Repetition addsto the intensity of the text; `brüler', `larmes', `noir'. The samemotifs are found again a few lines later: `Elle ferma les yeux. Les larmes coulaient, la lave brillante coulait et consumaitle coeur' (p. 500). Francoisehas finally come face to face with the threat to her being, `eile etait tombee dannle piege, eile etait ä la merci de cette consciencevorace qui avait attendudans l'ombre le moment de l'engloutir' (p. 500). This writing relies on hyperbole for its impact. In eachcase,the relating of thesethree incidents gives rise to a metacommentaryon language.Excessresults from languagecoming up againstthe inexpressable.What is threateningFrancoiseis beyond language,beyond thought even. `On ne pouvait pas s'en approchermeme en pensee,au moment oü elle touchait au but, la penseese dissolvait; ce n'etait aucunobjet saisissable,c'etait un incessant 26Languagein L'Irrvitee will be treated in more detail in ChapterThree. 47 jaillissement et une fuite incessante,transparentepour soi seuleet ä jamais impenetrable' (pp. 354-55). Only contradiction, languagepushedto the limit of begin to expressthe nature of the threat: can meaningfulness, C'etait comme la mort, une totale negation,une eternelle absence,et cependant ä de boulversante, se rendre present pouvait ce gouffre neant par une contradiction l'univers faire tout entier soi avec plenitude; exister pour soi-memeet se s'engloutissaiten lui, et Francoise,äjamais depossedeedu monde, se dissolvait image le dont dans cerner ne pouvait aucunmot, aucune ce vide elle-meme contour infini. (L'Invitee, p. 364.)27 The threat is like death and not like it, excessive and immeasurable. Language cannot des defendre `on Francoise's threats to the se avec pas ne pouvait existence, remove mots timides' (pp. 500-501). This is an important realisation for Francoisewho, before this crisis, had used languageto ward off the unthinkable. Languageguaranteesour existenceand identity; `tant For Franroise, `I Language be (p. 146). to confers reality. we must able say am' fait il flottait, ä l'avait evenement ä Pierre, tout n'etait vrai: ne raconte aucun qu'elle 28 (p. 30) This attitude is discussedby immobile, incertain, dapsdes especesde limbes' 91 indivisibility. Elizabeth Fallaize in relation to the conceptof Francoiseand Pierre's belief Francoise `has like her that to an unshakable modulate slightly should argument in the power of words'. This is true in the sensethat Francoise,a writer, never losesher fear of the power of narrative or representation(seebelow), however, as Francoise's les `des deepens, language lets her down. belief Her that crisis qu'elle aurait explique `si hope her is disappointed. Likewise (p. ä Pierre, 195) that tout choses serait efface' `les dans des ä s'en arracher'; eile arrivait enfermer phrasesson angoisse,eile pourrait 27See earlier too: `Les mots ne pouvaient que vous rapprocher du mysteremais sansle rendre moins impendtrable' (p. 162). 28Xavi6re accusesFrangoiseand Pierre of substituting languagefor life. `Vous aviez l'air de vivre les chosespour une fois, et pas seulementde les parler' (p. 253). 29Fallaize, TheNovels, p. 37. 48 language becomes Francoise 369). As (p. la delivraient problematical, pas' mots ne is itself Language it her than as a solution. to predicamentrather comes see as part of inherently mysterious and ambiguous.Emblematic of this and a Gothic moment in the text is the illegible note, written on a torn piece of paper,that Xaviere slipped under Francoise's door (`les derrieres phrasesetaienttout ä fait illisibles') and the illegible illisible, dit Il `Pierre. illisible'). C'est her door ('un to gribouillage notice shepinned `des (pp. 387-88). Language, les signes signs mysterieux' considersun moment in 145). She loses her (p. is duplicitous. Francoise (p. 160), trust words ambigus' `Derriere dessous? ' (p. juste 159). de `On tant qu'y a-t-il au se sert mots; mais wonders: les mots et les gestes,qu'y avait-il?' (p. 166). And Francoiseis forced into a position ä `Les de Xaviere etaient knows toujours phrases what anything means. where she never double sens.' (p. 294) She is reducedto guessing(p. 314). Excessthat is manifest in Simonede Beauvoir's writing is presenton a thematic in level too. In L'Invitee, the confrontationbetweenconsciousnesses, signalled the This is fight death. Literally. It in is Gothic to the terms a of excess. epigraph, related 30 for Francoise is by battle the will authority; narrative overlain mortal confrontation kill Xaviere who wishes to `se saisir de Francoiseet la faire entrer de force dans son 1 histoire' (p. 491). Her fear is a Gothic fear of the power of representation. Francoise's is if It intimately by Xaviere. identity is threatened as shewere reducedto a senseof characterin Xaviere's fiction, as if her identity were nothing more than an effect of Xaviere's narrative. Shewill kill Xaviere in order to be able to tell her own story, to 30There is a third struggle taking place too. This struggle is an allegorical battle: `A la longue, le caprice, 1'intransigeance,l'6goTsmesuperbe,toutescesvaleurs truqudes,avaient d6voild leur faiblesse et c'etait les vieilles vertus d&daigneesqui remportaient la victoire. J'ai gagn6,pensaFranroise avec triomphe' (p. 467). Francoise'ssatisfactionis premature.In any case,readersmay find it difficult to concur, asking themselvesexactly which virtues shehas in mind. Francoisehas mademuch of jettisoning her `ämepure' and this `victory' seemsto reside in deceiving and lying to XaviBre. A signal example of mauvaisefoci? 31This aspectof Gothic fiction is discussedby Botting. See pp. 14,157,171. 49 impose her version of the truth. Francoisedestroysthe flesh and blood Xaviere so as to destroy Xaviere's narrative: `Jalouse,traitresse,criminelle. On ne pouvait pas se defendreavec des mots timides et desactesfurtifs. Xaviere existait, la trahison existait. Elle existe en chair et en os, ma criminelle figure. Elle n'existera plus' (pp. 500-501). 32 ' `she her As Elizabeth Fallaize argues, crushesthe claim of anotherto narrate story L'Invitee is Gothic in its violence. The novel celebratesFrancoise's criminal behaviour. Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick tells us that the most characteristicenergiesof the Gothic novel concernthe impossibility of restoring to their original onenesscharacters divided from themselves.3A Gothic preoccupationwith the dissolution of the self runs through L'Invitee as a whole. Francoise'sidentity progressivelydisintegratesin her ä in `Francoise, Xaviere; the the of crisis points novel, as we read at one encounterwith jamais depossedeedu monde, se dissolvait elle-memedansce vide' (p. 364). She is divided from herself: `separeed'elle-meme' (p. 301); `Francoiseconsideraavec horreur cette femme qui etait eile', (p. 499). Shecan only reintegrateher personality through `C'etait final is dying, Xaviere As text the the the of words assert: sacrificial violence. sa volonte qui etait en train de s'accomplir, plus rien ne la separaitd'elle-meme. Elle avait enfin choisi. Elle s'etait choisie.' On anotherlevel Xaviere comesbetween Francoiseand Pierre who asserttheir unity: `Toi et moi, on ne fait qu'un; c'est vrai tu sais,on ne peut pas nous definir 1'un sansl'autre' (p. 29). When Francoisedisagrees with Pierre over Xaviere, Francoise`avait l'impression penible d'etre divisee contre elle-meme' (p. 133). Violence is Francoise'sonly chanceto reintegratethe sundered 34 elements.The text vindicates Francoisebut she is also depictedas a monster. L'Invitee underminesvillain/ victim and villain/ heroine dichotomies and ultimately 32Fallaize, TheNovels, p36. 33Sedgwick, pp. 12-13. 34Simone de Beauvoir refers to her as such in La Force de 1 age, p.348. 50 subvertsthe Gothic convention itself; our villain/ heroine triumphs and readersare deprived of the expectedGothic closureadvancingmoral resolutions35 Xaviere, whose very existenceis conceivedas a threat to Francoise'ssenseof identity, the embodimentof the threatto Francoise,is constructedby the text as a demoniacal, non-human figure. The mystery and threat that Xaviere represents is accentuated by the fact that she appears in the text with no introduction. Her relationship with Franroise before the point when they are sitting in the Moorish cafe together (p. 21) is not elucidated. Like other Gothic characters, Xaviere, an orphan, appears as it were out of nowhere, with almost no history, like a mysterious foundling. As Simone de Beauvoir writes in La Force de 1'äge, the novel begins when `une etrangere' enters Francoise and Pierre's life (p. 346). Mystery is reinforced by the fact that, when abbreviated,Xaviere's name is X. When shebums herself she is portrayed as crazy and dangerous.One of the most disturbing elementsat this point in the text, and one that is picked up again as Francoisesuffersher secondcrisis of the evening, is Xaviere's smile: `un sourire aigu retroussaitseslevres; c'etait un sourire intime et solitaire comme un sourire de folle, un sourire voluptueux et torture de femme en proie au plaisir' (p. 354), `ce rictus maniaque' (p. 354), and `un sourire de folle' (p. 363). Xaviere's smile encapsulatesher madness.Xaviere's madnessis not foregroundedbut is all the more `threatening' in the way it is hinted at. During the ChristmasEve party Xaviere's responseto Paule's dancerevealsher susceptibility and foreshadowsthe incidents in the night-club: `la bouche entreouverte,les yeux embues,Xaviere respirait avec peine; eile ne savait plus oü elle etait, eile semblaithors d'elle-meme; Francoisedetouma les yeux avec gene,l'insistence de Pierre etait indiscrete et presqueobscene;ce visage de 33SeeBotting, pp. 7-8. He points out that somemoral endingswere, in any case,no more than `perfunctory tokens'. 51 Pierre's Xaviere's (p. 184). telling to fait etre reaction vu' pour pas possedeen'etait debattait `Xaviere is in love he Xaviere Francoise that se suggestive of madness: are and d'elle, ecrasantes tout seule autour apercevait qu'elle sans secours parmi ces menaces `un is described Xaviere's 255). (p. hallucinee' as cachot room comme une d'hallucinee' (p. 342). Francoise wonders about Xaviere's sanity because of her violent devenue brusquement Xaviere etait `Et Gerbert: had having si sex with reaction to folle? ' (p. 387). There is only one other reference to Xaviere's madness: during a folle' (p. 414) de d'un `le Xaviere triomphant Pierre, and air ruse et regarda quarrel with 36 416) furieux' (p. demon `eile un par semblait possedee after the quarrel we read: Xaviere's smile is a motif that has recurredfrom the very first time that Xaviere 7 For her the text. the Multiple introduced. most part to smile punctuate references was her smiles are connotednegatively, connectedwith scorn,malice and cruelty. Her first jugement `mechancete' `mepris', de dröle `un a and sourire', expressing smile, is `rictus' The that Francoise term (p. 36), an unpleasantshock. gives malveillant' the twisted denote Xaviere's and smile unnatural, to an suggests smiles commonly used image of an animal baring its teeth is often conveyed.Her smiles are frequently herself. Examples are plentiful. with connivance secretiveand mysterious, expressing One of the most striking is when Xaviere smiles to herself, imagining sadistic sexual ferais "Je le dents blanches. de `Les levres Xaviere se retrousserentsur ses pleasure: [... ]. de la d'un dit-elle Francoise malaise regardaavec un peu air voluptueux. souffrir", A quelle image d'elle-meme cacheeaux yeux de tous souriait-elle avec une mysterieuse is Xaviere's Elsewhere (pp. 228-29). ] [... Le clearly smile rictus s'effaca' connivence? describedin terms of vaginal imagery. It is depicted as dangerous,a wound infected by 36The threat to Francoise'ssanity, as opposedto her identity, is underplayedin the text. This will be discussedmore fully in a later chapter. 37Toril Moi notes how XaviBre's mouth is repeatedly emphasised and discusses references to her smile Simone de Beauvoir, p. 116. 52 jealousy: `une passionde haine et de souffrancegonflait sa face, oü la bouche fruit la d'un dans ä blessure trop mar; par cette plaie un rictus semblable s'entrouvrait beante,eclatait au soleil une pulpe secreteet veneneuse'(p. 407). This is a vivid, 38 image. Repeatedreferencesto Xaviere's smile, which is not a smile, horrific Gothic accumulatein the text and contribute to the creation of a threatening,demoniacal it is in To this the text that accounts the accumulation of motif persona. a great extent for its symbolical power.39 Animal imagery associatedwith Xaviere reinforcesthe impressionthat she is demoniacal.The bestial within the humanis, as already noted, a characteristically Gothic theme. Thesepowerful imagescan suggestslaughterand cannibalism.The word `proie' reappearsover and over in the text.40 Francoisebecomesawarethat Xaviere is `charnelle' (animal, sensual)when they are out dancing and when, once again, Xaviere's sexualfantasiesare under discussion:`Les yeux avides,les mains, les dents aiguesque decouvraientles levres entrouvertescherchaientquelquechoseä saisir, quelquechose qui setouche. Xaviere ne savait pas encorequoi: les sons,les couleurs,les parfums, les corps,tout lui etait une proie' (pp. 311-12). Pierre, who has beensurreptitiously watching Xaviere whom he suspectsof falling in love with Gerbert,tells Francoisethat it is as if Xaviere wants to eat up Gerbert.Franroise remembersXaviere's `regardavide' 38The word `plaie' recalls Xaviere's self inflicted wound p. 354. 39This list will indicatejust how frequently referencesto Xaviere's smile recur: `sourire furtif, de connivenceavec elle-meme' (p. 68) `en retroussantun peu sa 18vresupbrieure' (p. 72) `eile eut une sorte de rictus' (p. 75) 'le rictus s'accentua' (p. 124) `sourire de connivencesecr6te' (p. 190) `eile out une rictus presquedouloureux (p. 253) `un dr81ede rictus haineux' (p. 308) `Au milieu de son visage blame seslevres btaientcontractdesdansun rictus de pierre.' (p. 366) `la bouche entrouverte dansun vaguerictus' (p. 395) `un rictus retroussasa lbvre sup8rieure' (p. 416) `La 18vrede Xavibre se retroussasur sesdentsblanches.' (p. 495) `un rictus tordait sa bouche' (p. 498) `un intolerable sourire dbcouvrait sesdentspures' (p. 498) 40Examples:pp. 312,354,364,365. 53 (p. 243). Shortly after the episodein the night-club, Francoiserealisesshe has been powerlessagainst `la haine, la tendresse,les penseesde Xaviere; eile les avait laissees fait d'elle-meme (p. impelled 364) feels to avait une proie' and she sur eile, eile mordre her `tentacules from Xaviere and avidesqui voulaient la devorer toute vive' run away (p. 367). In her room Xaviere is like an animal in her den; the terms `se terrer' and `ruminer' are used (disturbingly discordantwith the term `cloitree' used in the same dans Xaviere `se Pierre, According to terre son coin comme une bete malade' sentence). (p. 163). To Francoise, listening behind Xaviere's door, it is as if Xaviere's thoughts are alive, as if they are `animal': `on aurait cru entendrepalpiter les secretespenseesque Xäviere caressaitdanssa solitude' (p. 341). Xaviere's crying is describedas a `plainte animale' (p. 386) and Francoiseimaginesher `traqueedansun coin' (p. 387). The sexualassociationsof the powerful animal image of Xaviere that opensthe final episode ] Elle femelle, [... `Une [Francoise] L'Invitee avec passion. of are unmistakable: pensa etait lä, tapie derriere la porte, dans son nid de mensonges.' (p. 491) The animalisation of Xaviere combinedwith the senseof hidden dangermake this a supremely Gothic 41 image, full of dread. This animal imagery is in sharpcontrastto the religious overtonesof other images.For example,Francoisehesitatesbefore going into Xaviere's room: `c'etait vraiment un lieu sacre;il s'y celebraitplus d'un culte, mais la divinite supremevers qui montaient la fumee des cigarettesblondeset les parfums de the et de lavande, c'etait Xaviere elle-meme,teile que sespropresyeux la contemplaient' (p. 166). (This is consistentwith Xaviere's mannerwhen attending to herself. `Il y avait Banssesgestes quelquechosede rituel et de mysterieux' and having taken off her scarf `eile redescendit sur terre' (p.226).) Xaviere is divine then as well as animal. The resulting discordance 41This is not the first mention of a nest in connection with Xavibre. Seep. 152. 54 is here distorted; However, the worship taking to religion adds readers' uneasiness. idolatry is and narcissism,cigarettesmoke and perfume replace of place suggestive incenseand the `lueur sanglante' in the room (p. 167) is redolent of sacrifice. Another One L'Invitee; Francoise in final lines Part image the of of occurs memorablereligious in life: her Xaviere to as a miracle refers Elle etait en train de se dessecher ä 1'abri des constructions patientes et des lourdes liberte, de de dans eclatement de lorsque tout et purete un soudain, pensees plomb, de il du humain etait tombe trop naif avait Buffi regard en poussiere; ce monde Xaviere pour detuire cette prison et maintenant, sur cette terre delivree, mille jeune Un de la ange sombre ce ange exigeant. nitre allaient par grace merveilles des femme, des de douces de avec comme mains paysannes, rouges mains avec levres a l'odeur de miel, de tabac blond et de the vert. (L'Invitee, pp. 264-65.) This dramatic metaphoris Gothic in its emphasison weight and imprisonment and it is is ) What L'Invitee. later. (See in integrated dense the of symbolic network of perfectly jeune `grace', `terre delivree', is diction interest here the employed, religious particular it `sombre', is `exigeant' discordances the the and paradoxically set up; angel ange', and is this dark, destructiveangel bringing light into Francoise'slife (seelater for further discussionof light and dark in L'Invitee). The sexual overtonesof the image are is herself, her Xaviere is Xaviere fallen According to soul surely a unmistakable. angel. black; it is the bond she claims with Pierre in opposition to Francoise's `ämepure'. She ] fond des [, `Vows Au Pierre: to creatures et sommes pas morales, says moi, nous ne .. vows etes aussi traltre que moi et vous avez 1'äme aussi noire' (p. 443). Xaviere's divinity is diabolical. Discordanceis set up and resolved.Brought together,the two groups of images,animal and religious, ultimately reinforce eachother and the 42 impression of uneasinessconveyedis accentuated. 42Religious diction is frequently used in connectionwith the trio and their relationships.XaviBre veneratesFrangoise,pp. 137,312,397 and Pierre, p227. FrancoisereveresXavibre, pp. 228,262 and Pierre, 374. An explict religious image castsPierre as a Christ figure and Francoiseand XaviBre as Marthe and Marie (p. 493). 55 The notion that Xäviere castsa shadowon Francoise's life is recurrent. In this `Les language: beyond is Xaviere -defined mots ne pouvaient que mystery as a example il faisait impenetrable: le du ne vous rapprocher mysteremais sans rendremoins its final froide. ' (p. ) 162. As le the narrative enters qu'etendre sur coeur une ombre plus la dont demeurer etrangere `Xaviere ä presencerefusee cette s'obstinait stages,we read: etendaitsur Francoiseune ombre menacante.' (p. 420.) And on the evening before Francoisewill kill Xaviere, Francoiseagain refersto Xaviere as `cettepresenceennemie (p. 484). le etendait une ombre pernicieuse' eile, sur entier, sur monde qui One of the recurring motifs associatedwith Xaviere is her smell. Referencesto her smell are disquieting and add to her malignant aspect.They underline her linked is hint It to the religious the closely a motif of supernatural. mysteriousnessand imagery and becomesa condensedreminder of Xaviere's `divinity/ fiendishness'. From the beginning, Francoiseis tempted by Xaviere's `leger parfum de risque et de mystere' (p. 39). Smells associatedwith Xaviere were important elementsof the religious images (p. de de lavande', les blondes fumee `la des the et parfums et cigarettes already quoted: 166); `levres ä 1'odeurde miel, de tabacblond et de the vert'(p. 265). Xaviere's smell becomesan obsessionfor Francoise;as shetries and fails to imagine Pierre and Xaviere together in Xaviere's room, it is one of the things she focuseson (p. 162). When Francoiseherself is invited to spendthe eveningin Xaviere's room, she enjoys `cette lumiere funebre, et cette odeur de fleurs morteset de chair vivante qui flottait toujours autour de Xaviere' (p. 168). Somehowdeathand living flesh are conflated here; the effect is sinister. The gap betweenFrancoise'spleasureand readers' responseproduces disquiet 43 When they dancetogether,FrangoiseappreciatesXaviere's smell: `avec 43This disparity pervadesthe whole episode.XaviBre, `les yeux brillants de satisfaction', appearsto take sadisticpleasurein seeingFrancoise,who hatestomatoes,`absorberune 6paissepuree de tomates'. It is impossible to concur with Francoise'sindulgent reaction that `il aurait fallu ¬tre un roc pour ne pas titre touch6ede sajoie' (p. 168-69). 56 tendresse,eile respira l'odeur de the, de miel et de chair qui etait l'odeur de Xaviere' (p. 186). The repetition of `chair' in particular, recalls the menacingassociationsthat have beenbuilt up in the text until now, associationsthat again clash with Francoise's is disquiet Her not arouseduntil she smells a new, mysterious positive experience. odour: `meleeau parfum de tabacblond et de the qui flottait toujours autour de Xaviere, une etrangeodeur d'höpital'. (p. 418-19.) Suspenseconcerningthe `odeur insolite' (p. 422) is built up until Franroise realisesthat Xaviere has been smelling ether (p. 423). This too, has Gothic resonances. Xaviere's facial expressionsare frequently referred to as a grimace. 4 Of course, a grimace is a facial expressionclosely relatedto a rictus. A grimace is not an attractive look. Paradoxically,Xaviere is both ugly and beautiful. Her face is transformedalmost 45 from miraculously one to the other. Her beauty is diabolical; when Xaviere confronts Francoiseover her affair with Gerbert, emphasisis placed on fire and burning, motifs that have gatheredmomentum in the text and which are emblematic of hell: `Elle fixait sur Francoisedesyeux brülants, sesjoues etaienten feu, eile etait belle' (p. 498). Her face exemplifies her duplicity, being at once expressiveand indecipherableand full of contradictions,inhuman almost. We read: `Elle avait un seduisantvisage, si nuance,si changeantqu'il ne semblait pas fait de chair; il etait fait d'extases,de rancunes,de tristesses,renduesmagiquementsensiblesaux yeux; pourtant malgre cette transparence etheree,le dessindu nez, de la boucheetait lourdementsensuel' (p. 75). 6 The same idea is repeatedlater in the book: `Son visage decomposepar la fatigue et par l'angoisse semblait plus impalpable encoreque coutume' (p. 263). Francoisefeels that `on n'avait asSee'grimace' (p. 22), 'grimace tragique' (p. 41), `grimace de degoflt' (p. 42), `affreuse grimace' (p. 53), `grimace' (p. 120). asFor example, when Francoiseand Xaviere leave the Moorish cafe. Compare: 'Le dessousde sesyeux etait gonfl6, son teint brouilld' (p. 24) with `Sesyeux brillaient, eile avait retrouve son beauteint nacre' (p. 25). 46This is the second mention of Xaviere's 'nez sensuel'. Seep. 32. 57 jamais fini de decouvrir ce visage.Xaviere etait une incessantenouveaute' (p. 284). She has the uncanny feeling that a strangeris hidden behind Xaviere's familiar features(p. 229), her `imprevisible visage' (p. 333). Xaviere's face is a mask. Discordant language reproducesthe contradictionson a textual level. `Ce visageparfume, tout bruissantde tendresse,quellespenseesveneneuses1'avaientsoudainaltere?Elles s'epanouissaient avec malignite sousce petit front tetu, ä 1'abri des cheveuxde soie, et Francoiseetait 47 defense contre elles [...]' (p. 293). Xaviere's `traitre visage' and `traits sans sans mystere' are assertedas equivalentsand in her dependence,Francoisewould like to collude with the mirage, with the `illusions charmantes'which hide `mille venins caches' (p. 404). Franroise is repelledby Xaviere's `frais visage cruel' (p. 482). In a typically Gothic fashion the text fostersambiguity. Xaviere's innocent, childlike face is assertedas equivalentto her evil face. Sheis demoniacaland animal and she is also `une petite fille aimanteet desarmeedont on aurait voulu couvrir de baiserslesjoues nacrees' (p. 48), she openswide her `pure' eyesand smiles charmingly (p. 79), Francoisewants to believe that Xaviere's `traits charmantscomposaientune honnetefigure d'enfant et non un masqueinquietant de magicienne' (p. 168). Her denial only confirms it to be so. Is Xaviere an instance of the Gothic split personality? This reading is supported by the text to someextent. Shedoesdisplay the self hatred of the Gothic (anti)heroine: `Elle fixa dannle vide un regard faroucheet dit ä voix basse:"Je me degoüte,j'ai horreur de moi"' (p. 131). Pierre tells Francoiseabout Xaviere's `crise de degoüt d'ellememe' (p. 162); he believesthat `tout est si pur en eile et si violent' and recognisesin her a need `de faire du mal, de se faire du mal, et de se faire hair' (p. 164). Nevertheless the ambiguity remains,residing in our dependanceon a narrator who is far from impartial, not to say unreliable. Xaviere is deniedthe opportunity to tell her own story. 47The original title of L'Invitee was 'Legitime defense'. 58 Xaviere is not the only demoniacalcharacterin L'Invitee. Francoise,we have Elisabeth is figure. is Moreover, be she also an evil noted, can read as a monster. Gothic in doubles double Evil Francoise's the text. characters. stock are constructedas Interestingly, Elisabeth progressively `disappears'from the text as Francoisejettisons Elisabeth in further duo be (The Franroise her fine moral scruples. explored : will ChapterThree.)48 The fear and horror evoked in the climactic moments and elsewherein L'Invitee, is characteristic of the Gothic. The effects produced, Francoise's dread and her feelings What Freud's light in best the the uncanny. of of notion understood of revulsion, are happensin the night-club is a good illustration of this; what is horrible and dangerousis hidden behind Xaviere's smile: `Il recelait quelquechosed'horrible [...] Derriere ce jamais definitif danger tour que ceux avait qu'elle menacait,plus rictus maniaque,un imagines' (p. 354). Francoiseis horrified that somethingthat shehas known and feared d'en `il be is to avait plus moyen n'y revealed: since shewas a small child now going eviter le devoilementterrifiant; jour apresjour, minute apresminute, Franroise avait fin le danger,mais c'en etait fait, eile 1'avait enfin rencontrecet infranchissableobstacle (p. depuis des formes incertaines sa sous plus enfance' petite pressenti qu'elle avait 363). What should have remainedhidden is about to be exposed,the repressedto return. The fact that the dangeris undeterminedheightensthe senseof mystery and fear. These Gothic defining fords be Botting to the of characteristics one of episodesepitomisewhat texts, namely `a senseof a grotesque,irrational and menacingpresencepervading the 49 The its decomposition' senseof something strangeand everydayand causing 48In L'Invitee there is a whole cast of minor Gothic figures: ghosts,pp. 147,179,359; puppets,pp. 153, 179,335 (associatedwith death), et al.; Francoiseis describedas `une vieille machine ddrdglde' p. 434, Paule dances`la dansedesmachinespp. 182-83; Xavi6re is describedas a monk, a Gothic figure connectedwith mystery and evil, p. 481. Conventual imagery is typically Gothic; note the use of the term `cloitrde' associatedwith XaviBre. 49Botting, p. 160. 59 threateninghidden behind everydaynessis somethingthat recurs throughout L'Invitee 5° juxtaposed. banal and the sinister are where the As the novel reachesits climax, Francoise'sdistressis heightenedas `derriere chacunde cesmeublesfamiliers, quelquechosed'horrible guettait' (p. 498). This Elisabeth's experienceduring her quarrel with Claude when shewas aware that recalls `dans1'ombrequelquechosed'horrible menacait' (p. 100). This, in turn, recalls Francoise'smemory of an incident during her chidhood when shehad found herself alone in her grandmother'shouse: `c'etait dröle et ca faisait peur; les meublesavaient 1'air de tous lesjours, mais en memetemps ils etaienttous changes:tout epais,tout loürds, tout secrets;sousla bibliotheque et sousla consolede marbre stagnaitune ombre epaisse.' (p. 146).The idea of someoneor somethinglurking in the shadowsrecurs as the novel reachesits culmination when we read: `cetteconsciencevorace qui avait attendudans1'ombrele moment de 1'engloutir' (p. 500). An atmosphereof mystery and secrecypervadesthe text which fosters Questions have Words, uncertain are sentences, or multiple meanings. ambiguity. events a distinguishing feature of the text. The words `mystere', `mysterieux', `secret' constantly reappear.There are `mysterieusesperturbations' when Francoiseknocks at Xaviere's door (p. 45). When Francoiseimaginesthe cafe where Xaviere and Pierre are meeting, `tout avait revetu un sensmysterieux' and Francoisewill never know `le secret de leur tete-ä-tete' (pp. 152-53).FrancoisesurprisesXaviere looking at Gerbert: `c'6tait comme une imperieuseet secreteprise de possession'(p. 186). Xaviere enfolds Pierre's image in a `mysterieusecaresse'(p. 493). It is only natural that in this atmosphere, whispering should be a recurring motifsl 50The cigarette ashdepositedon XaviBre's burn is `le petit matelasprotecteur' (p. 354). The benign everydaynessof the object jars with sinister role it is playing here. 31See pp. 215,255,378. 60 There are repeatedreferencesto magic and the supernaturalin L'Invitee. Franroise, Pierre and Xaviere and Elisabethare all portrayed as victims of spells that have beencast over them. After the incident in the night-club, it is as if the trio have beenturned to stoneby a magic spell (p. 365 and 366). Earlier, `[Francoise] avait envie de briser ce cercle magiqueoü elle setrouvait retenueavec Pierre et Xaviere et qui la separaitde tout le restedu monde' (p. 345). After a pleasantevening spentalone with Pierre, Francoisebelieves, `enfin ce cercle de passionet de souci oü la sorcellerie de Xaviere les retenait s'etait rompu et ils setrouvaient tout males 1'un ä 1'autreau coeur du monde immense' (p. 377). (Note the contrastwith imagesof enclosurethat generally predominate.) But minutes later her hopesare dashed;Pierre seesa light under Xaviere's door and his obsessiontakesover again. Francoiseis overcomeby despair,`il lui [ä Francoise]semblait s'etre laisseeleurrer par la precaire lucidite dun fou qu'un is lain ä daps le In delire' (p. 378). these on suffisait examples, emphasis souffle rejeter Elisabeth's immobility, idea linked In an enforced case,she with weight and enclosure. believesthat a spell hasbeencastthat makesher incapableof authentic existence: `C'etait un sort qui lui avait etejete: eile changeaittout ce qu'elle touchait en cartonblames ' ) Xaviere (p. 272. pate. magic for making her destructive: `Oh! Il ya un malheur sur moi, gemit-elle passionnement(p. 130). Shefeels she is beyond help becauseshe is `marquee' (p. 132).52Thus Xaviere is portrayedas a victim of magic but, as we have seen,she is constructedas a demoniacalfigure in the text and she is also portrayed as a witch and magical powersare attributed to her. There are multiple referencesto her as `une sorciere' (pp. 190,192,298), `1'ensorceleuse'(p. 491) and Francoiseis afraid of her powers: `ce masqueattirant, c'etait une ruse, eile ne cederaitpas ä cette sorcellerie 52In the dramatic scenein Francoise'shospital room which follows Pierre's declaration that XaviBre and he love eachother, Xavibre exclaims: 'Vest un malheur,j'en Buissure,je ne suis pas de force' (p. 255). 61 [...] eile savait seulementqu'un dangerla menacait' (p. 164). Xaviere's malevolenceis its imagines in L'Invitee Francoise Xaviere, `dans the text; climax, as reaches reiterated la lumiere mortuaire de sa chambre,[...] assise,enveloppeede son peignoir brun, detail (p. The 490). of the brown dressinggown is telling, as maussadeet malefique' 53 it is habit. In a central seriesof of a monk's evocative perhapsof a witch's robe as images,Xaviere's hatred and, metonymically Xaviere herself, becomean embodiment of magic, an evil spell. Franroise is depictedas imagining, containing and controlling this spell with magic of her own. It is worth quoting a key passage in full as it contains a rich web of resonances. Est-ce qu'on ne pouvait pas contempler la haine de Xaviere en face, tout juste les gateaux au fromage qui reposaient sur un plateau? Its etaient d'un beau comme jaune clair, decores d'astragales roses, on aurait presque eu envie d'en manger si ignore leur eüt gout aigre de nouveau-ne. Cette petite tete ronde n'occupait pas on beaucoup plus de place dans le monde, on 1'enfermait dans un seul regard; et ces brumes de haine qui s'en echappaient en tourbillon, si on les faisait rentrer dans leur boite, on les tiendrait aussi ä sa merci. Il n'y avait qu'un mot ä dire: dans un ecroulement plein de fracas la haine se resoudrait en une fumee exactement contenue dans le corps de Xaviere et aussi inoffensive que le gout sur cache sous la creme jaune des gateaux; eile se sentait exister, mais ca ne faisait guere de difference, en vain se tordait eile en volutes rageuses: on verrait tout juste passer sur le visage desarme quelques remous imprevus et regles comme des nuages au ciel. (L'Invitee, p. 301.) Xaviere's pernicious spell might be shut up in a box, reducedto vapour/ fumes. There are strong echosof genieshere. Oncecontained,Xaviere's spell would be as harmless, Xaviere's head is conflated with the that is harmful, as the pale yellow cheesecakes. cakes;they are on a tray and there are clear suggestionsof beheading.(The mention of the pink decorationsaddsto the sinister overtones.) There are numerousother Gothic featuresin this passage.Like Xaviere, the cakesare not what they seem,their true nature is hidden. They may look appetizingbut their tasteis sour. The `gout aigre de 53See 481. p. 62 image disgusting is with overtonesof cannibalism and evil nouveau-ne' a repellant, 54 `un Francoise's thoughts have about The cakes already acquiredsymbolic significance; enormegateaublanc, garni de fruits et d'astragales' interrupt a story she is telling that her for her The (p. 73). to is listening to stand alienation, comes sickly cake no one directly later, image heart. The this time with connected recurs same sicknessat Xaviere: `eile remplissait la penseeaussilourdement que le gros gateaudu Pole Nord' (p. 83). The image of a crumbling building is typically Gothic and ties up with other imagesof glossy exteriors that hide rotting interiors and risk suddencollapse. Francoise'spower to contain and control Xaviere's `spell' residesin her own gazeand in her use of language.For one moment Francoiseimagines shehas succeeded,that her later lines his leave. Sixteen by is Pierre interrupted The taking have text worked. words Francoisehasto acknowledgethat sheis powerlessto resist Xaviere's evil magic, she doesnot believe her own words. The text goeson as if there had beenno interruption: `le mot magique, il aurait fallu qu'il jaillit du fond de son äme, mais son ame etait tout il le ä brouillard travers Le empoisonnait monde, malefique restait suspendu engourdie. les bruits et les lumieres, il penetraitFrancoisejusqu'aux moelles' (p. 302). This image is akin to those imagesrelating Xaviere to a shadowthat looms over Francoise's life. It is reiteratedlater, after the climactic momentsin the night-club: `ca faisait des semaines la haine, inoffensives fumees la de Francoise reduire en n'etait plus capable que tendresse, les pensees de Xaviere' (p. 364). Poison is a recurrent Gothic motif in 55 In a related image, Xaviere's hatred Xaviere. L'Invitee and one frequently linked with 56 is comparedto an acid producing noxious fumes. This image occurs after Xaviere has 54The adjective `aigre' recalls the morning when Franroise askedXavibre to come to live in Paris (p. 252). Seealso p. 192. ssSeeearlier quotations: `mille venins caches'(p. 404), `pulpe secreteet vCnCneuse'(p. 407). 56Interestingly, theseimagesare akin to imagesof unreasonthat, according to Foucault, inspired such fear in the middle of the eighteenthcentury: `Tout d'abord le mal entre en fermentation dans les espacesclos de l'internement. 11a toutes les vertun qu'on prete ä I'acide [...]. Le melange aussitöt 63 harmedherself and before Francoisesuffers her secondcrisis in the night-club: `ca la haine de Xaviere ä s'echappait en un acide, reprenait: nouveaucorrosive comme lourdes volutes; c'etait inutile de se defendrecontre cette morsure dechirante[...]' Q,. 36 1).57 Francoise'sexperiencewith the fortune teller addsto the strangeand Gothic life. She know Francoise's Gypsy in The to the all about appears novel. atmosphere takesher to one side and, in secret,tells Francoisethat she knows about the unhappiness that Xaviere has brought into her relationship with Pierre and offers to sell her a charm that will make her happy again (pp. 158-59).The whole episodeis redolent of the Gothic; the pathetic fallacy `cette bruin poisseuseavait penetrejusqu'au fond de son äme', the presenceon stageof `une grandepoupee[...] qui paraissaitpresquevivante' (p. 153), Francoisetrembles and holds out her hand `machinalement' (mechanically/without thinking), and the secrecyand magic. There is also the strange, be known. future is that the out and can mapped already unsettling suggestion The text enactsthis strangeness.Prefiguration is disturbing and unsettling. The dancethat takesplacejust before Xaviere harms herself prefigures the text and what Xaviere is about to do. The dancermimes a seductionscenewhere the woman appears to encouragethen reject her suitor before falling into his arms. Xaviere's behaviour with Pierre is brought to mind. In miming `une sorciereaux gestespleins de dangereux mystere' and `la tete folle' of a peasantwoman, the dancerseemsto presageXaviere's bouillonne, degageantvapeursnocives et liquides corrosifs [...]. Ces vapeursbrillantes s'616vent ensuite,serepandentdans1'air et finissent par retomber sur le voisinage, impregnant les corps, contaminantles Ames.[...] Par cette atmospherechargeede vapeursmalefiques, des ville entiCressont menacdes[...]' (Histoire de lafolie, p. 376). s' Poison is mentioned at other momentstoo. In her suffering, Francoisehas the impressionthat `le sang qui courait dans sesveinesitait empoisonnd' (p. 261). As the novel culminates,Franroise feels she cannot go on living in `cet air empoisonn6' (p. 491). 64 58 In dangerous has that connotations. a similar way, and mysterious such crazy gesture intensely is Francoise's Spanish symbolic, crisis and which the poem which triggers prefigures the narrative: Meme si l'on ne comprenaitpas le sensdes mots, on etait pris aux entrailles par le defigurait poeme une ardeur pathetique; cet accentpassionne,par ce visageque ä d'espoir, de travers haine de sessursautset ses et aussi peut-titre et mort, parlait feu les Le faisait ä dechiree 1'Espagne tour coeurs. presente qui se plaintes, c'etait eclatantes, les les les des le chäles chansons, guitares, et sangavaient chasse rues les fleurs de nard; les maisonsde danses'etaient effondreeset les bombesavaient la des douceur dans la de les peur soirs chaude rödaient creve outres gonflees vin; dont des la flamencos, faim. la Les on se grisait, ce n'etait vins saveur chants et les defunt. Pendant funebre d'un l'evocation yeux un moment, passe plus que fixes sur la boucherouge et tragique,Francoises'abandonnaaux imagesdesolees dans äme incantation; 1'äpre ces eile aurait voulu seperdre corps et que suscitait les dans tressaillaient mysterieusessonorites. sous ces regrets qui appels, (L'Invitee, pp. 262-63.) fire death, hatred The poem and the narrative sharea significant number of motifs; and is is Fear blood, the though apparentlymild and evening prowling around regrets. and `äpre incantation' Note terms the and mysterieusessonorites' suggestiveof pleasant. just has in Francoise later is A the novel; magic spells. comparableeffect recreated 1'epaisseur long `sourire `un Xaviere's perca chant sanglotant maniaque' when recalled brillante de l'air'. For Francoise,`cettemusiqueveule danscette solitude torride lui du bord de de [... ] [Elle] l'image eut envie s'asseoirau meme son coeur. paraissait 59 bouger' (pp. 420-21). trottoir et de n'en plus The prefiguration that occurs in L'Invitee is all the more disturbing in that it is by helplessness Freud that the unintended to the arroused sense of points recurs. 38XaviBre is associatedwith the notion `paysanne'.When she is introduced, one of the details that is highlighted is her `doigts rougesde paysanne'(p. 21) and, although since she cameto Paris, Xavibre is no longer `paysanne'(p. 227), her handsremain `rougescomme des mains paysannes'(p. 265). 59Interestingly, Paule's danceat the ChristmasEve party also prompts painful thoughts in Francoise. Paule is wearing a mask, a Gothic motif associatedwith Xavi&e, and mimes a storm, `eile 6tait ä eile seuletout un ouraganddchainb' (p. 193). There are strong echoeshere of the image of a natural disasterapplied to Xavibre: `Avec un peu d'effroi, Frangoiseconsideracette vivante catastrophequi envahissaitsournoisementsa vie; c'btait Pierre qui par son respect,son estime avait brise les digues oil Frangoisela contenait.Maintenant qu'elle Ctaitd6chainCe,jusqu'oti 9a irait-il? ' (p. 128). Seealso 'une tournade [...] secouaFrancoise',p. 210. 65 `something fateful inescapable' impression the the of and samesituation, recurrenceof (p. 237). He relatesit to the uncanny,classingit as an instanceof the phenomenonof the double. Francoiseis imprisoned in her obsessionand the text underlines how the same things recur time and time again: Depuis combien de temps durait-elle cette discussionindefinie et touj ours neuve? Qu'a fait Xaviere? Que fera-t-elle? Que pense-t-elle?Pourquoi? Soir apressoir, l'obsession renaissaitaussi harassante,aussivaine, avec ce goüt de fievre dans la bouche,et cette desolationau coeur, et cette fatigue du corps sommeilleux. Quand les questionsauraientenfin trouve une reponse,d'autres questions,toutes dira-t-elle? Que Que Xaviere? implacable: la veut pareilles, reprendraient ronde Comment?Pourquoi?Il n'y avait aucunmoyen de les arreter. (L'Invitee, p. 379.) The archetypal symbol of the circle expresses the never ending nature of the trap. It is a interpretations, `toutes finished had hoped Francoise ces ces with she recurring motif; has ' (p. 244); des heures... Pierre tourner reference pouvait en rond pendant exegesesoü Xaviere's (p. 377) de `le de been spell to where souci' cercle passionet made already holds Francoiseand Pierre; Francoise,shortly after this, will comparethe busy `lucid' les her d'angoisse is `engluee oü penseesobsedantes with room which streetoutside des `Des leur 388). She (p. treve' attentes, see out: can no way ronde sans poursuivaient fuites, toute 1'annees'etait passeeainsi. [...] Il ne restait aucun salut. On pouvait fuir, fm' fuites, d'autres d'autres bien il faudrait attentes, sans et revenir, et ce seraient mais (p. 438). Textual parallels also produce an uncanny effect whilst adding to the intensity of the text. The text duplicates the trap where Francoise is caught, reproducing her never ending nightmare. If we take the three climatic momentsin the book, the parallels are insensibility, burning flesh `consumer', Xaviere's the the and verb conspicuous: use of her ecstaticresponseand the sexualovertoneswhich are connotednegatively: `un sourire voluptueux et torture de femme en proie au plaisir', (p. 354), `la jouissance 66 de folle' `maniaque'. `un (p. 363), the the of sourire and word and repetition maniaque', In the final pagesof the novel; the words that bum like a branding iron recall Xaviere's `branding' of herself with the `bout embrasede sa cigarette', and it is Francoise'sheart that is consumedby `la lave brillante' (p. 500), recalling how her thoughts `brülaient comme 60 des flammes' (p. 363) Reflections in mirrors are also connectedwith the idea of the double. Freud discussesthe figure of the double in generaland the way in which meeting one's own image unexpectedlymay be perceivedas uncannybut he is, he admits, unable to explain this (Freud, p. 236 and p. 238). In L'Invitee, the three motifs, gaze,image/ reflection, in interwined. Gothic These the their motifs acquire power quintessential and mirror, are book by force of their recurrence. One of the sinister featuresof the concluding pagesof L Invitee, is the street light that is lent the human capacityto look. `On avait cachele globe du reverberesous ä jaune lumiere de fer dentele loup Sa ressemblait noir et venitien. commeun un masque 61 is In be seen to give otherspower. un regard' (p. 500). this symbolic space,to Rememberhow Xaviere bewitched Francoise:`fette sorcieres'etait emparede son image et lui faisait subir ä son gre les pires envoütements'(p. 298). Fear of being gazed upon and having her self stolen from her explainswhy, faced with Xaviere's version of events,`eile aurait voulu cachersa figure' (p. 490). Francoiseis clear that she must defendher `image': `Il y avait longtempsqu'on essayaitde la lui ravir' (p. 500). Her `image' is far more than simply her reflection. It is her self / who she is. The idea that can reduceus to an image is introduced very early in the text: other consciousnesses 60Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick considersrepetition as the temporal metaphor of doubleness 139. Repetition p. will be examinedmore fully in ChapterFour. 61In his discussionof the ending of L'Invitee, Maurice Merleau-Ponty points out that `once we are aware of the existenceof others,we commit ourselvesto being, among other things, what they think of us, since we recognize in them the exorbitant power to seeus'. `Metaphysicsand the Novel', in Critical Essayson Simonede Beauvoir, ed. by Elaine Marks, Boston: Hall, 1987,pp. 31-44, p. 41. 67 `C'est terrifiant: on a 1'impressionde ne plus etre qu'une image dans la tote de Others d'autre' (p. 18). act as our mirror, showing us reflections of ourselves quelqu'un that threatenour senseof identity. In destroying Xaviere, Francoisedestroysher `criminelle figure' that Xaviere reflects back to her. Francoiseturns away from the gazeof the streetlight to be met by her reflection that springs up in the mirror. ('Son imagejaillit soudainau fond du mirroir' p. 500.) This is a Gothic moment. As Franroise's identity disintegrated,we read: `[eile] n'avait image' (p. 364), la d'une and shewas reducedto a ghostly consistence que pale plus presence:`une vaguephosphorescencequi trainait ä la surfacedes choses,parmi des Thus `image' denotes des de feux follets' (p. 365). also milliers vain milliers et Francoise'sloss of self, loss of identity. When Franroise looks hard at her reflection (`Elle fixa l'image', p. 500) sheclaims back her self. It is a moment of reintegration. Significantly, Francoise'searlier moment of triumph had also beenmarkedby her looking in the mirror (p. 467). Francoise'sdefiant gesturewhen she staresat herself in the mirror in the in her is the the noted reluctance view of of moments novel, all more potent culminating to look at herself at all, although, it must be said, this reluctanceis not completely borne out by the text where numerousexamplesof Francoiselooking in mirrors can be found. Xaviere saysthat Francoisenever looks at herself (p. 179 repeatedp. 183) and Francoise agreesthat shetreatsher face like an `objet etranger'. What is important is that when Francoisedoeslook at herself sheseesa blank, an absence.Her lack of a face is her lack of self, of identity. `Jene suis personne,pensaFrancoise.[...] eile toucha son visage: ce have blanc' (p. 184). Pierre's Francoise gaze could given qu'un n'etait pour eile masque a shape,an identity but he is looking at Xaviere, not at her, she is part of him and invisible to him. Franroise blamesherself for her loss of identity: `Il n'y avait personne 68 " is It figure' de (p. 216). d'etre [...] eile avait cesse quelqu'un; eile n'avait meme plus before Just Xaviere's. Francoise's to with attitude mirrors revealing to compare face in her for the decides ill to is a walk she glancesat Francoise taken seriously and go la devant de le il etait tete disait comme `C'etait sur colle rien; qui ne un visage mirror: de Xaviere, Le Miquel. un Francoise c'etait contriare, etiquette: au visage une intarissablechuchotement,c'etait sansdoutepour cela qu'elle se souriait si how Francoise However, too (p. 215). daps les at smiles note miroirs' mysterieusement her reflection as sheresignsherself to defeat(p. 417). Reflections in mirrors suggesta senseof alienation and unreality. As she leaves hei hospital room after weeks of confinement,Francoise'sexperienceis comparedto 1'au-delä' dans `un ä (`penetrer voyage travers une glace') and going through a mirror instead is Francoise's is of Once (p. 239-40). alienation capturedwhen she well again, living her life, she watcheswhat is happeningin a mirror behind the bar in the cafe (p. 300-301). Elisabeth had a similar experience,watching the trio living their apparently happy lives in the mirror whilst shesuffers in an `enfer sordide' (p. 104). Gothic. further is the in L'Invitee is of Hell a recurring motif manifestation and a is It hell. harms herself Xaviere terminateswith an evocation of The incident when dans `Inferno': `On tout Dante's tourner autour en rond ne pourrait que suggestiveof (p. that takes 355). Xaviere's eternelle' the place of episode assessment une exclusion Xaviere Spanish listening to the the trio when poem and are shortly afterwards,when herself is in a trance like state,is ominous: `On etait au fond de 1'enfer,je croyais qu'on `c'etait for is jamais' (p. 366). Francoise that the trio, un noir afraid n'en sortirait plus is life Franroise's depiction (p. 397). The les reminiscent of a of attendait' enfer qui 62Seealso p. 348. `Francoisese sentaitpar contrastelisse et nue comme cestotes sansvisage destableaux de Chirico. ' 69 il de epave, `Elle laissait flotter hell: comme une mais y avait se passivement vision of d'elle flottait 1'horizon; ä ecueils tout autour s'etendaient eile sur un oceangris, noirs des eaux bitumeuseset soufrees[...]' (p. 236). Black ('noirs' and `bitumeuses')and is depression. is here, This Grey hell. of a suggestive also motif sulpher suggest (p. faisait 418). heart `il in later; Franroise's touj ours gris' reiterated Francoise'sliving hell is reproducedin the text. One feature of this symbolic spaceis fire and fire and burning are motifs that appeartime and time again. In the in flesh is burning fire Xaviere's there the and not only poem speaksof passagesquoted, the episodesin the night-club, Francoise'sthoughts also `brülaient comme des flammes' (p. 363). As the novel culminates,the burning motif that has accumulatedthroughout the text reachesits crescendo:`les larmesbrülaient sesyeux [...] les larmesbrülaient, les brülait le de Gerbert les brülaient fer [... ] Dans tenebres, visage comme un rouge. mots d'un feu noir, et les lettres sur le tapis etaientnoires comme un pacte infernal.[...] Une lave noire et torride coulait danssesveins' (p. 499). With the repetition a few lines later: `Les larmescoulaient, la lave brillante coulait et consumait le coeur' (p. 500). Francoise'sexperiencehas an hallucinatory quality. There are distinct echoesof Marlowe's The Tragical History of Dr. Faustus, reinforced by mention of a `pacte infernal' 63 Francoise'sordeal is almost Faustian.Faustianin the sensethat Francoiseis now to pay the price for her black soul. Shehad welcomed the black and bitter hatred for felt Xaviere almost as a release(p. 445, `delivrance' in French,which is a word she with religious overtones),and when shelearnsthat Pierre no longer valueshis Xaviere, `Frangoise la joie accueillit sans mauvaisequi with scandale relationship 63Marlowe, Christopher, The Tragical History of Dr. Faustus, ed. by R. G. Lunt. London: Blackie & Son, [n.d.]. 70 de lui 1'äme trop cher vouloir coeur; ca coüte naguere se garder son avait envahissait pure' (p. 466). Pierre speaksof Xaviere's self-inflicted burns as sacredand interpretsher `une brülure `une brülure sacree', expiatoire' (p. 357). This is as gesture expiation: anotherinstanceof distorted religion, the blasphemoussubstitution of an idolatrous diabolical creedfor genuine faith. L'Invitee is a dark book. In the final pagesthe predominenceof the colours red and black is clear (`fer rouge', `feu noir', `noires comme un pacte infernal', `lave noire'). Thesecolours occur in the black hair and red comb and shawl of the Spanish dancer(p. 353) and `la bouche rouge et tragique' of the Spanishwoman declaiming the poem (p. 363) at the other climactic momentsin the book. Due to their repeated appearancesthroughout L'Invitee, the colours red and black gather symbolic weight, adding to the doom laden, Gothic atmospherein the text. Black is associatedwith hell and evil. Black and red and fire are inextricably linked. And red is also related to blood, anotherrecurring motif. Thesecolours recur so very frequently they are almost a figure in in has been Often detail Black they the text. the constant. of mentioned a significant number of the quotationspreviously made,and there are many other examples:Xaviere is `une petite perle noire' (pp. 164 and 491), the future is `un noir tunnel' (p. 291), Pierre `tombait dansde noirs silences' (p. 402), the water of the Seine is 'd'un noir poli' (p. 490), when Francoiseknows Xaviere has found Gerbert's letters her love for him is `noir comme la trahison' and there is `devant eile et en eile cette nuit de bitume' (p. 497). There are splashesof red throughout the book, often with sinister Elisabeth's overtones: red nail varnish leaves`une sorte de depot sanglant' and her fingers are `doigts de boucher' (p. 85); in the cafe where Francoisegoeswith Gerbert, the singer dressedup as a soldier hashis face `peinturlureede rouge' (p. 153) and the 71 in in black dressed (p. life-size doll 158); the crimson and red and and are musicians Xaviere's bedroom a red lampshadejetait dansla piece une lueur sanglante' (p. 167); 64 Francoise'shead is filled with `un grandtournoiement rougeätreet piquant' (p. 192). Two antithetical seriesof dinstinctively Gothic imagesrelatedto the evocation inform They hellishness, the text the threat the are one seriesof as a whole. of abyss, of imagesto do with weight, immobilisation, engulfment, enclosureand suffocation and anotherto do with the void and emptiness.Thesetwo seriesare brought together as the text underlinesthe paradox of being engulfedby nothingness: C'etait comme la mort, une totale negation,une eternelle absence,et cependant par une contradiction bouleversante,ce gouffre de neant pouvait serendre present 'ä soi-memeet se faire exister pour soi avecplenitude; l'univers tout entier jamais depossedee du dissolvait lui, ä Francoise, se monde, en et s'engloutissait le image dans dont cemer ne pouvait ce vide aucunmot, aucune elle-meme contour infini. (L'Invitee, p. 364.) Spacehas becomepalpable,a masswhich will swallow up Francoise. The cluster of imagesto do with weight that characterisethe text, bring together favourite Gothic motifs. The words `ecraser'and `lourd' are repeatedvery many times. FrancoiseexperiencesXaviere as a weight in her life: `Tout prenait un tel poids quand eile etait lä, c'en etait accablant' (p. 187). Yet it will be Xaviere who releasesFrancoise from the prison of `deslourdes penseesde plomb' (p. 264). Xaviere is distressedby the `weight' of her relationship with Pierre once it has been put into words: `C'est tellement lourd maintenant;c'est comme une gangueautour de moi; eile tremblait de la tete aux pieds. C'est tellement lourd' (p. 255). Shestrugglesagainst `menacesecrasantes'(p. 255). The idea that her future will be committed to the trio fills Francoisewith dread: 64In the dark theatre in the opening pagesof the novel, the red carpet and seatsstandout. The setting of the novel (many scenestake place in Parisian cafesand hotel rooms) is not at first sight Gothic (Gothic tales typically take place in medieval castles,monasteriesor ruined houses)and yet readers may feel there is somethingGothic in the description of Francoisewalking through the dark, mysterious and seemingly labyrinthine theatre. Seepp. 12-13. 72 `[Elle] sentit comme une lourde chapequi s'abattait sur sesepaules[...]' (p. 290). The heavy. `cinq When Francoiserealisesthat Xaviere knows their ans', are pact, words of falls into Gerbert, back her she an armchair, `ecraseepar un about relationship with poids mortel' (p. 497). Beneaththis weight it is difficult to move; a group of complementaryimages found be immobilisation to throughout L'Invitee. At the climactic to are related momentsin the night-club the trio are captured,as if frozen in a tableau.Xaviere comes from d'un hold her `comme to take trance-like cauchemar' of state au sortir only round Francoiseand Pierre to take them with her `au fond de 1'enfer' (p. 366). 'Brusquement,eile leur prit ä chacunune main, sespaumesetaientbrillantes. Francoisefrissonna au contact desdoigts fievreux qui se crispaient sur les siens; eile aurait voulu retirer sa main, detournerla tete, parler ä Pierre, mais eile ne pouvait plus faire un mouvement;rivee ä Xaviere [...]. [...] les mains de Xaviere n'avaient pas lache leur proie, son visage fige n'exprimait rien. Pierre non plus n'avait pas bouge; on aurait cru qu'un meme enchantementles avait tous trois changesen marbre. (L'Invitee, pp. 364-65.) When sheis ill, Francoiseis `paralyseeentre les draps' (p. 255). In the trio, `eile avait is idea (p. down 1'impression d'etre ligotee' 290). Being bogged an absolument meme that is found repeatedly.The weight of Xaviere makesit hard for Francoiseto move forward: `Avec Xaviere les chosess'alourdissaienttout de suite: on avait 1'impression de marcherdapsla vie avec deskilos de terre glaise soussessemelles' (pp. 119-20). There are echosof this when the nightmare quality of Francoise'slife is evoked in a strange,contradictory image: Savie avait perdu toute consistence,c'etait une substancemolle danslaquelle on croyait s'enliser ä chaquepas ; et puffson rebondissait,juste assezpour aller s'engluer un peu plus loin, avec ä chaqueseconde1'espoird'un engloutissement definitif, ä chaqueseconde1'espoird'un sol soudainraffermi. (L'Invitee, pp. 481-82.) 73 This recalls an earlier evocation of an oppressiveafternoonwhen the tar on the road `une felt had become feet Francoise Francoise's in heat to she and and stuck melted the (p. 420). fade et cotonneuse' masse The atmosphereof L'Invitee is claustrophobic.The characters'world shrinks 65 is Indeed, in their the their elsewhere. world they obsession, real shut with are and it is Images becomes their their of enclosureand suffocation prison. world, obsession de lui dans etouffer `Elle ä trio en plus sur se plus ce qui refermait commencait recur. laquelle dans Pierre etouffante `L'atmosphere (p. 296). tendue, et passionnee, meme' Xaviere 1'enfermaient'(p. 340). There is the senseof a rich, vast world that exists her Francoise is the trio that the remembers past evokedwhen and confines of outside 445(pp. 437 Gerbert holiday it is (p. 377) Pierre the and with a matter of or when with 46). Or even when Francoisesimply looks out of the window to see `[la] rue affairee, lucide, oü toutes chosesavaientun air raisonnable',before turning back to her room `englueed'angoisse' (p. 388). Xaviere's hotel room is the epitomeof a Gothic space.The walls, `barioles boredom desires, de fievre' and resentmentthat encloseunsatisfied comme une vision feelings become the rank and In these the metaphor, unbreathable. an air extended make poisonous vegetation in a hothouse where the air is thick with moisture and sticks to the body. It inspires fear in Francoise. Ce n'etait pas seulementun sanctuaireoil Xaviere celebrait son propre culte: luxuriante et veneneuse, serre chaude oü s'epanouissait une vegetation c'etait une d'hallucinee dont l'atmosphere moite collait au corps. c'etait un cachot (L'Invitee, p. 342.) 65For readers,the text is renderedmore claustrophobicby the absenceof historical context from the greaterpart of the novel. As Elizabeth Fallaize points out, the historical situation of the characters only assumesimportancein the final chapterwhen the war, that formed the context of the actual writing of the book, becomesa reality. TheNovels, p. 28. 74 The word `cachot' linked with danknesscould be suggestiveof a Gothic dungeon.Be that as it may, the Gothic emphasison suffocation and enclosureis clear. Weight threatensto drag charactersdown into the abyss,into nothingness. Witness Elisabeth: `Sa tete etait toute gonflee d'eau et de nuit; eile devenait enormeet si lourde qu'elle l'entrainait vers l'abime: le sommeil ou la mort, ou la folie, un gouffre sansfond oü elle ailait seperdre ä jamais' (p. 106). And Francoise:`Des pieds ä la tete eile se sentait changeeen bloc de plomb; la separationde [Pierre] etait cruelle, mais rien bout la faire de de laquelle s'ouvrait eile ne au ne saurait glisser sur cette pente mirage savait quel ab"ime'(p. 131). On the verge of being ill, Francoiseis overwhelmedby a senseof spaceas the abyssat her feet expandsto encompassthe starsabove, (`ä sespieds ce gouffre qui se creusaitjusqu'aux etoiles'). Quite paradoxically, given the impression of weight and enclosurethat prevails, a senseof infinity and emptinessalso pervadesL invitee. This is createdby an accumulationof referencesin the text: `infini', `sansfm', `vide'. These motifs figure large in the evocation of the dangerthreateningFrancoise.`Ce n'etait aucunobjet saisissable,c'etait un incessantjaillissement et une feite incessante, transparentepour soi seuleet ä jamais impenetrable' (p. 355). The words `un incessant jaillissement et une fuite incessante'contribute to the effect of emptinessand infinity. `Francoise,äjamais depossedeedu monde, se dissolvait elle-memedansce vide dont aucunmot, aucuneimage ne pouvait cernerle contour infini' (p. 364). Spacesuggests expansionand disintegration. As Francoisechoosesbetweenher own survival and Xaviere's, spaceand emptinessis evokedby Franroise's being alone `dannun ciel glace'. It is on this immensestagethat Franroise fights Xaviere for her existencein the final pagesof L'Invitee. Xaviere herself embodiescontradiction; she excludesand encloses,is infinite expansionand pure interiority: `eile etait lä, n'existant que pour soi, 75 tout entiere reflechie en elle-meme,reduisantau neanttout ce qu'elle excluait; eile dans le sapropre solitude triomphante, eile s'epanouissaitsans entier monde enfermait limites, infinie, unique' (pp. 502-3). White and the light associatedwith it play a particular role in the dark symbolic landscapein L'Invitee. White is the colour of emptiness.Light is painful. `Avec un eblouissementdouloureux, Francoisese sentit transperceed'une lumiere aride et blanche qui ne laissait en eile aucunrecoin d'espoir; un moment eile recta immobile ä de (p. (Note 180). dans la le bout briller the sa cigarette' nuit rouge regarder lui l'avait 1'heure lumiere ä black ) `La tout ne qui penetree and red. reappearance of is du (p. White decouvert 183). the colour of the pain of self-knowledge: que vide' aväit `ce bloc de blancheurtranslucideet nue, aux aretesräpeuses,c'etait eile, en depit d'ellebrings it is Francoise's irremediablement (p. 312). Paradoxically, that emptiness meme, in book. is her illness. light/ her during long It the to silent space a white/ relief Francoiseis calm in this vast spaceout of time. (Seepp. 222-23.)66 In L'Invitee there is a Gothic emphasison death,tombs, mummies and ghosts, is There 24). (Freud, to the a constantstreamof explicit p. uncanny all motifs related death in death. during For the the to climactic moments night-club, example, references is mentionedfour times in the spaceof twenty-five lines: `le poemeparlait de haine et de mort', `ce n'etait plus que l'evocation funebre d'un passedefunt', `le scandale eclatait, aussimonstrueux,aussidefinitif que la mort', `c'etait comme la mort' (pp. 36364). Tombs also featureprominently and they are, of course,an archetypalinstanceof de love for her `comme les blanchis describes Pierre's Francoise sepulcres as enclosure. The motifs of silence, emptiness,timelessnessand calm underlined there are picked up and foregroundedagain in the final pagesof the book: `Soudainun grand calme descenditen Francoise. Le temps venait de s'arr¬ter. Francoisebtait seule dannun ciel glace. C'6tait une solitude si solonnelle et si definitive qu'elle ressemblaitä la mort' (p. 501). Freud mentions but doesnot explicate the uncanny effect of dark, silence and solitude. (Freud, 'The Uncanny', p. 246.) I am content here simply to point out the extentto which thesemotifs predominatein the final pagesof L'Invitee. 76 1'Evangile,ca flamboie ä 1'exterieur,c'est solide, c'est fidele, on peut meme but (p. 199), belles de they les contain nothing paroles' avec recrepir periodiquement but ash and dust67and shedescribeshis feelings as `desmomies', `tout embaume' (p. 68 200). Combining the motifs of deathand weight, we find the image of their love as an (`un trainons drag them avec que nous cadavre they vieux that with around old corpse flat The (p. 168). is `funebre' hotel that in Xaviere's light The 202). room nous' p. Francoiseand Xaviere share,is repeatedlyreferred to as a tomb: `les vitres bleus [...] `catafalque' (p. 490), lumiere `la (p. 484), defendre tombeau' mortuaire' un semblaient (p. 491). In a nice Gothic touch, as Francoiseruns to her secretrendez-vouswith Gerbert, `derriere le mur du cimetiere, une chouettehulula' (p. 484). A related seriesof images focuseson hidden decay.Shiny surfaceshide inner decomposition/corruption/ disintegration. The image is first introduced in connection Elisabeth discussing Francoise that : are and with actresses Les corps etaientjeunes [...] mais cettejeunessen'avait pas la fraicheur des choses les d'oie jeunesse marquait ne embaumee;ni ride, ni paffe vivantes, c'etait une ca inquietant. etait des bien que plus yeux n'en massees; cet air use autour chairs la longtemps dessous; craquät sans que ca pourrait vieillir encore vieillissait par en devenue brillante d'un jour, lustree bien coque seul coup, cette et puis,un carapace de soie tomberait en poussiere;alors on verrait apparaitre un papier mince comme ]. [... achevee parfaitement une vieillarde (L'Invitee, pp. 175-76.) This image has a number of affinities with the Gothic; the intimation of the living dead, the fact that the decayis hidden, the animal associations,the idea that the shell will one 9 image. Parallel images day crumble into dust without warning. It is an uncomfortable Pierre's Francoise to and relationship: applied are 67`Ye are like unto whited sepulchres,which indeed appearbeautiful outward, but are within full of dead men's bones,and of all uncleanliness.' Matthew 23.27. 68There are echoesof this image in Xaviere's outburst after the outbreak of war: `(a ne me suffit pas de contempler les evenementsdu fond d'un sepulcre!' (p. 483). 69A connection is madewith `des conservesde homard' and readers' uneaseincreaseswhen textual echos establisha link betweenthis image and Franroise's eating shellfish. It is another telling detail reinforcing suggestionsof cannibalism, p. 292. 77 Its avaient edifie de belles constructionsimpeccableset ils s'abritaient ä leur bien de [... ] contenir. ce pourraient sans qu'elles s'inquieter ombre, sansplus lentement de leur leur forme se vidait sa substance; amour, vie parfaite, perdre sa dans leur invulnerable la ä coque mais qui portent chenilles comme cesgrandes les de qui recurentavec soin. vermisseaux minuscules chair molle (L'Invitee, pp. 193-94.) Again, there is the disturbing allusion to hidden decompositioncombined with the living flesh. image at eating away of worms repellant The text inscribesthe body. The body in this symbolic landscapeis a site of pain is ill heroine Gothic Francoise taken the to than role of and conforms pleasure. rather in Gothic Francoise's her bed. illness is described Her terms to takes of excess. and is is into This true during her illness of course, translated physical suffering. mental pain but it is also the casebefore and after her illness. Imagesthat evoke her illness are Francoise's in to the the text, which mental and extent showing elsewhere echoed burning, become images The tearing, are violent ones of suffering conflated. physical 70 biting and stabbing.They are Gothic in their hyperbole. 70Illness: `Elle frisonna; eile devait avoir la fi8vre, sesmains &taientmoites et tout son corps br(lait. ' (p. 211.) (After the rendition of the poem in the night-club,when Xavitre takes hold of Francoise'shand `ses des doigts ) fidvreux' (p. 364). brillantes' `frissonna Francoise 6taient au contact and paumes 'Une douleur lancinantelui coupa le souffle; eile s'arreta et porta les mains ä sescotes [...] Un grand frisson la secouade la t¬te aux pieds; eile etait en sueur,sat¬te bourdonnait [...] ' (p. 217.) `Une bouffbe de sanglui brüla le visage et son coeur semit i battre avec violence [...]. ' (p. 218.) `desondesbrillantes la parcoururent' (p. 218.) `une douleur aigus lui dechira ]a poitrine' (p. 219.) 'le sol fuyait en tourbillon soussespieds, ra lui donnait la nausee.[...] la sueurperlait ä grossesgouttes sur son front' (p. 240.) `sat¬te etait vide et lourde' (p. 240.) `eile gisait paralyseeentre les draps' (p. 255.) `Francoiseavait l'impression que tout son corps allait se dissoudreen sueur.' (p. 246.) Elsewhere: `une souffrance aigue la dechira' (p. 166.) `Sa tete bourdonnait; il lui semblait que quelquechoseen eile, une artbre ou sescotesou son coeur, allait 6clater.' (p. 196.) `mille imagesdouloureusestourbillonnaient danssa t6te et lui ddchiraient le coeur (p. 261.) After witnessing Xaviere's self-harm, Francoiseis paralysedby `l'angoisse' (p. 356.) `ce goüt de fi8vre dansla bouche' (p. 379.) `sa gorge brülait' (p. 383.) `Il se fit en Frangoiseun d8chirementsi aigu qu'un cri lui monta aux 18vres,elle serrales dents mais les larmesjaillirent. (p. 433.) `le remords la dbchira [...] Elle avait mal ä la tete et sesyeux brülaient.' (p. 435.) `une morsure au coeur' (p. 488.) (pp. 260,373, et al.) 78 Referencesto the throat and heart reverberatein the text. Commonly these deep `Son Francoise's do coeur to tightness upset. express and with referencesare `Elle ä de (p. 295). de sentir nouveau ne voulait pas colere' et restait serre souffrances la le dead These (p. 437). la lui etau gorge coeur serre' and metaphors, serrer gorge' un least fifteen L'Invitee throughout and twelve times eachrespectively, at serree' recur 7' The text returns almost obsessivelyto thesemotifs which gain like a refrain. almost form Furthermore, images they They of enclosure. are consonantwith symbolic weight. become heart dense throat to the veritable the which and web of references only part of leitmotifs in the text. We have already noted the importanceof blood in Simone de Beauvoir's in is directly landscape. It times, than thirteen generally more mentioned symbolic is face. Sweat Francoise's draining from to also a or rushing connectionwith upset, Tears burning feature is are shedwith airlessness. and on when emphasis placed natural is leaky body The intersperses text. the a messy, almost monotonousregularity; sobbing vessel. Sexuality in L'Invitee is distorted in true Gothic fashion. Sex is generally is in details in is Distaste text; the when she evinced even small connotednegatively. Eloy, Franroise feels `un peu de repugnancepour ce gros petit corps si comforting Fallaize demonstrates, Xaviere's intact' Elizabeth (p. 197). As toujours triture et souvent 72 behaviour in in Xaviere's foregrounded is the text. the night-club when she sexuality deliberately harms herself, suggests a mad, masochistic sexuality; `un sourire `Son visage brülait. (p. 494.) `Tout son corps bourdonnait. Elle sentaitson coeur entre sescotes,sous son crane, au bout de sesdoigts. (p. 496.) 71Examples: `le coeur serrd', pp. 13,20,31,36,146,156,178,295,335,339,343,427,470; `la gorge serrde', pp. 37,54,78,126,143,161,173,260,316,430,437,472. n Fallaize, TheNovels, pp. 30-33. Xavi6re's ambivalenceto sexuality is related to the portrait of adolescentsexuality in `Le DeuxiBmeSexe'. Seealso Moi, Simone de Beauvoir, p. 113. 79 leeres dans `les femme de torture arrondies une moue en proie au plaisir', voluptueux et 'la jouissance (p. hysterique', dans `plongee 354), (p. maniaque' une extase coquette' 363).73 The act of burning itself is describedin sexualterms, accordingto a heterosexualimage of desire,as the openwound is exposedto receive the burning end Elisabeth's 74 is linked key, In sexuality also with self the a more minor cigarette. of harm. She relives the sexualarousalthat in the past had led her to take back her lover Claude and to stop herself repeatingthis pattern `Elisabethports vivement la main ä sa bouche et mordit son poignet' (p. 85). Sex is depictedas animal, as opposedto human. Elisabeth will not be `had' in the same way this time, she is not `a bitch on heat', `une femelle'. Her sexual liaison with Guimot is depictednegatively; during their lovemaking `une humiliation brillante la devorait' and she simply wants it to be over (p. Elisabeth, `une femme qui like be is horrified 110). Francoise to think shemay a woman idea Pierre is horrified Francoise 454). In Xaviere, that (p. the to will at relation prend' feeling 260), femme ferait her that to think of love (`Pierre p. pämee' une en with make Xaviere as `une femme sexuee'is sacrilegious.The languageusedto describe Francoise'sfeelings is laden with depreciatoryovertones:`Elle apercevaitclairement des baisers de fatal des etape caresses, caressesaux aux ce chemin qui mene chaque derniers abandons; par la faute de Pierre, Xaviere allait y rouler comme n'importe qui' (p. 260). The erotic and incestuoustendenciesof Gothic texts have beenwell documented.Francoisehas clear maternalfeelings towards Xaviere and Xaviere is Francoise Xaviere For to tenderly to example, responds as a child. repeatedlyreferred 73Xavibre inflicts pain on herself. In her dissociatedstateshe feels no pain: `Xavibre ne semblait pas souffrir de sabrülure' (p. .356). Later she says:`Jamaisje n'aurais cru que ga puisse faire si mal. ' (p. 399). 74This is one more exampleof Xaviere revealing somethingthat should have remained hidden. A point made but not developedby Moi, Simonede Beauvoir, p. 116. 80 fille desarmee' (p. 48). for her: `Ce aimante et petite qu'une n'etait who showsconcern Franroise calls her moods `desboutadesde petite fille (p. 66), and she losesher 5 feelings (p. 252). These doree' Pierre fille `petite to are maternal et soyeuse adoptive 76 desire. The their thus ambiguity about quasi-incestuous and overlain with sexual, is Francoise Xaviere also colludes, willingly promotes,and with which relationship that fosteredby the text. Xaviere liked Francoiseand herself to be taken for a couple and Francoiseenjoyed being linked with Xaviere in this way, `il lui semblait qu'on les isolait ensembledu restedu monde et qu'on les enfermait dansun tete-ä-tetepassionne' (p. 309).77 When they dancetogetheron this occasion,Xaviere holds Francoisecloser than usual. Francoise'sresponseis far from maternal: Elle sentaitcontre sapoitrine les beaux seinstiedes de Xaviere, eile respirait son haleine charmante;etait-ce du desir?Mais que desirait-elle? Seslevres contre ses levres?Ce corps abandonneentre sesbras?Elle ne pouvait rien imaginer, ce jamais ä de besoin tourne eile ce visage vers confus garder n'etait qu'un d'amoureuseet de pouvoir dire passionnement:eile est ä moi. (L'Invitee p. 310.) Francoise'sphysical responseto Xaviere and her desireto possessher have be Francoise in Xaviere's to lesbian Back room continues overtones. unmistakable `hors is is Xaviere She Xaviere. that by afraid the physical closenessof unsettled d'atteinte' and although shewants to break into Xaviere's solitude (`forcer 1'acces'),she is paralysedby `la graceintimidant de ce beau corps qu'elle ne savait pas desirer' (p. 315). On impulse, as she is leaving Xaviere, Francoisetakes her into her arms. `Xaviere Again immobile (p. 316). epaule, instant et souple' eile resta contre son s'abandonna,un Francoisewonderswhat Xaviere expectsof her: `Que Francoisela laissät aller ou 75Elizabeth Fallaize's reading of the trio as a `pseudo-oedipaltriangle' is pertinent here. TheNovels, pp. 29-30. 76JaneHeath examinesthe relationship betweenPierre and Xavibre as both paternal and sexual, pp. 3637. She also identifies maternal and lesbian feelings in Francoise'srelationship with XaviBre, pp. 3741. "I in no way wish to suggestthat lesbianismis a distorted.form of sexuality. It is only.in relation to the heterosexualnorms of the text that it should be viewed as such. 81 78 Francoiselets Xaviere go and goesback to her own room, fort? la '. qu'elle serrätplus incident have length it is inutile'. I her `tendresse this examined at as of ashamedof Francöise's feelings for in Xaviere; importance the of sexual nature considering central here her desire is explicit. However, it is not a lone incidence of Francoise'ssexual ä fits into Xaviere. It matrix of more ambiguousallusions, allusions which responseto occur from very early on in the text. Lesbian overtonesgathermomentum in Part One, ChapterTwo. Referencesto Xaviere's `tete de garconnet' and the 'visage dejeune femme qui avait charmeFrancoise' (p. 24), at first seemingly neutral, accrue dwells As text the the chapter on the number of times Francoise proceeds, resonances. touchesXaviere (touching is rather rare in L'Invitee): `eile effleura le poignet de Xaviere' (p. 39), `eile posa la main sur 1'epaulede Xaviere' (p. 44), `samain quitta l'epaule de Xaviere et glissa le long de son bras' (p. 44), `eile caressala main chaude in dans (p. 45). The chapter culminates confiance sa main' a scene qui reposait avec love: physical of romantic, redolent [Xaviere] se laissaaller de tout son poids contre l'epaule de Francoise;un long moment elles demeurerentimmobiles, appuyeesl'une contre l'autre; les cheveux de Xaviere frölaient lajoue de Francoise;leurs doigts restaientemmeles. "Je suis triste de vous quitter", dit Francoise. "Moi aussi", dit Xaviere tout bas. "Ma petite Xaviere", murmura Francoise;Xaviere la regardait, les yeux brillants, les levres entrouvertes;fondante,abandonnee,eile lui etait tout entiere livree. C'etait Franroise desormaisqui 1'emporteraitä travers la vie. "Je la rendrai heureuse",decida-t-elleavec conviction. (L'Invitee, p. 45. )79 '$ Before they go into the bar, Francoisewonders if Xavibre had been referring to her lack of physical tendernesswhen she said shehated purity. The sexual diction is clear: `ne savait-elle [Francoise] donc titre tendre qu'avec desmots alors qu'il y avait cette main veloutde dannsamain et ces cheveux $tait-ce fr6laient parfum6s qui sajoue? cela, samaladroite puret6?' (p. 309). Seealso p. 303 where Frangoiseand XaviBre hold hands. 79Seealso pp. 219,263-65,398 for romantic, sexual love scenes.Sexual and maternal feelings are blended on p. 263. Seealso p. 79. Franpoise'sphysical/ sexualresponseto Xavibre is condensedinto her awarenessof her hands;in addition to quotations already made, seep. 260 `sesmains caressantes d'homme', and p. 265 `doucesmains de femme, rouges comme desmains de paysanne'. 82 Franroise's desireto possessXaviere completely, expressedin this early chapterfor the first time (pp. 23,40), becomesa constantin the book. Francoisewants `une union 80 totale' with Xaviere (p. 398). A closereading of the text supportsthe view that Francoise'sjealousy is more directedat Pierre for his relationship with Xaviere, than it is directed at Xaviere for taking Pierre from her. Francoise'sjealousy is physical: `Elle n'avait aucuneprise sur cette petite äme buteeni meme sur le beaucorps de chair qui la defendait; un corps tiede et souple,accessibleä des mains d'homme mais qui se dressait devant Francoisecomme une armurerigide' (p. 300). The suggestionis that physical domination would be a meansto the spiritual domination that Francoisedesires.When Pierre tells Francoisethat Xaviere has spentthe early hours of the morning in his arms, Francoisereaction is telling: `ca lui etait toujours douloureux que Pierre püt etreindre ce corps dont eile n'eüt meme su accueillir le don' (p. 373). In many ways, Francoise'srelationship with Gerbert standsout in the narrative as somethingquite exceptional,somethinginnocent and pure and healthy, `legere et tendre comme le vent du matin sur les prairies humides' (p. 500), although even this be relationship can rereadas a `sordidetrahison' (p. 500). Moreover, the diction of the seduction sceneis remarkably similar to that usedin connection with Francoise'spain and suffering in the trio: `Francoisesentit un vide nauseeuxse creuseren eile' (p. 446); `un desir etouffant' (p. 446); `eile allait rever, regretter et souffrir vainement' (p. 447); `il s'etait fait en eile une explosion de lumiere si violente qu'elle craignait qu'elle ne fut visible du dehors.[...] cettejoie indecentequi venait d'eclater en eile' (p. 451); `Elle idee aucune n'avait plus en tete, seulementcette dure consignequi lui barrait l'estomac. [...] Elle n'avait plus qu'une envie, c'etait de se delivrer de cette obsession.[...] Son 80See also p. 186: `Si je pouvais l'avoir ä moi, je l'aimerais'. 83 81 Interestingly, (p. Francoise'sfeelings for Gerbert are battait ä 456). tout rompre' coeur tinged with incest too: `C'etait indeniable,eile avait des sentimentsmaternelspour Gerbert; maternels,avec une discretenuanceincestueuse'(p. 51-2).82 Just as in the Gothic tradition, uncertaintiesto do with sexuality are linked to in L'Invitee, in disintegration, the turmoil the trio's lives is related to threats so of wider 83 in Second World War. Francoise'sfeelings are the turmoil the wider context, to the international `Tout devenu etait tensions: si complique on a par with explicitly placed les la 1'Europe' (p. 236). In a metaphorreminiscent of war, sentiments, vie, maintenant, Francoiseis drifting like a wreck at seaand on the horizon are black reefs/ dangers('de noirs ecueils') (p. 236). At an earlier point in the narrative, Francoiseequatedthe effect Xaviere would have on her future with the outbreakof war, taking advantageof ambiguity/ Pierre's misunderstanding('cette equivoque') to seemingly talk about one images 291-92). The (pp. talking the of war actually about other most powerful whilst occur in Part Two, ChapterThree where Gerbert is the focalizer. Theseimageshave imagery in with common attachedto Francoise'semotional distress.In the much following example,the animalisation of a hidden dangerechosimagery linked with Xaviere and other motifs, funeral, engulfment,black, sticky, weight, exploding light, are ones that resonate throughout the text: [La guerre] etait lä, en effet, tapie entre le poele ronflant et le comptoir de zinc aux reflets jaunes, et ce repasetait une agapemortuaire. Des casques,des tanks, des uniformes, des camionsvert-de-gris,une immensemareeboueusedeferlaient sur le monde; la terre etait submergeepar cette glu noirätre oü l'on s'enlisait, avec sur les epaulesdes vetementsde plomb ä l'odeur de chien moui ll tandis que des , lueurs sinistres eclataientau ciel. 81See 435- 36: `eile la reconnaissait p. cette dure barre de fer qui lui coupait 1'estomac'. 82Toril Moi's discussionof Francoiseand Gerbert's first kiss is pertinent here. She arguesthat Francoise is unintentionally cast as a maternal figure in relation to Gerbert when she offers her lips for a kiss and tells him `Eh bien, faites-le, stupidepetit Gerbert' (p. 460). Simonede Beauvoir, p. 141. Whether or not this is unintentional, it reinforces the incestuousundercurrent. 83The poem that prefigures the text, evokesSpain torn apart by war (p. 363). Elizabeth Fallaize offers an interesting reading of the history of the trio and Frangoise'sgrowing frustration, that ends in murder, as an expressionof the gathering senseof doom of 1937-39,and the imminent destruction. The Novels, p. 28. 84 (L'Invitee, pp. 324-25.) War is `une pluie grise [qui] allait s'abattresur 1'Europe', drowning everything, including the bright lights of Montparnasse,`les arcs-en-cielde lumiere' (p. 335), discovers in When Francoise life Francoise's Xaviere shadow. cast matching the way her Gerbert, her knows the Xaviere expressing metaphor that relationshipwith about The final frames be depiction these that the the scenes. war of reaction could so easily a le de brillante Acre `Une monde' sur venait s'abattre et nuit affinities are conspicuous: (p. 497). It is not unusualfor Gothic tales to parody the convention they embody. In L'Invitee the Gothic economy of the text is underminedby parody of the Gothic. This it frame the discomfort. They text the increases the and accept values of readers' parody Parody the into find at thrown these ambiguity to an places question. only provides, heart of the text. Simone de Beauvoir was well awareof the ambiguity producedby the Elisabeth: `l'experience from focus/ focalization, Francoise in to que shift narrative Francoisevivait sur un plan tragique, on pouvait aussi en sourire' (La Force de 1'age, p. 84 349). 1 should like to suggestthat shifts in focalization are not the only way in which humour is generatedin L invitee. Specifically, parody of Gothic conventionsintroduces its The point at which the text tips over with concomitant ambiguity. element a comic into parody is sometimesdifficult to gauge,it can be no more than a slight shift in tone Gothic is difference between the economy that a within what expected makes or nuance Elisabeth's into fantasy For parody, partly slips example, murderous and exaggeration. becauseof the skull and crossboneson the bottle of poison and partly becauseof the dramatic syntax and the use of enumeration:`La nuit se fit dannla salle; une image In fact, despitea number of humorousremarks,the chaptersfocalized through Elizabeth do not generally provide a comical vision of the trio. This is more the caseas regardsthe chapter focalized through Gerbert. 85 Elisabeth, de flacon tete avec une mort; tuer. traversa un revolver, un poignard, un Claude?Suzanne?Moi-meme? Peu importait, ce sombredesir de meurtre gonflait hightened between discrepancy tone and mundane (p. 94). The le puissament coeur' line. dividing We Xaviere's the description can only the room over of subject pushes Xaviere's hyperbolical Pierre's to Francoise packing: reaction and smile at Its resterentcloues sur place. lä dit Pierre. faites que vous -Qu'est-ce La gorge de Xaviere se gonfla. Le spectacleetait atterrant. [...] tout d'un dit-elle demenage, ton tragique. -Je de la le devastait du futile visage chambre et cataclysmequi au prix semblait Xaviere. Trois valises beaient au milieu de la piece; les placardsavaient degorge d'objets de de fripes, des de le toilette. papiers, monceaux vetements sur sol le dit Pierre fmi bientöt? severite qui regardait avec -Et vous comptez avoir sanctuairesaccage. fauteuil laissa jainais dit Xaviere; bout! tomber ä sur un se eile viendrai n'en -Je Cette doigts. tempes sorciere... entre ses et serrases (L'Invitee, pp. 117-18.) As in the first example,there are a striking number of Gothic elementsin theselines, in impression Elements to the that elsewherecontribute of awfulness, too many perhaps. A here by to full Gothic the text, comic effect. the used are the word, conveyed senseof (p. `une is `choucroute' is termed mystique' communion similar effect producedwhen a 85 228). Also at this point in the text, suspenseis built up only to end in bathos. It is to Gerbert's focalization that we owe the parodic vision of Pierre and Francoise`penches demoniacal demons (p. 320). The deux Pages tentateurs' of presence notion comme sur that is treated as sinister and threateningelsewherein L'Invitee is comical here and Gerberthad to make an `heroic' effort not to burst out laughing. Does the text also drift into parody when Francoisewards off misfortue (`le malheur') by taking off her nail varnish (p. 381)? 85Seealso p. 402: `Elle 1'aimait [Pierre] et pour sauverXaviere avec qui aucun amour n'etait possible, eile se dressaitdevant lui comme une etrangbre;peut-¬tredemain deviendrait-il son ennemi. Il allait souffrir, se venger, hair, sanseile, et meme malgr6 eile; elle le rejetait dans sa solitude, eile qui n'avait jamais souhaitdque d'¬tre unie This is a borderline case.The hyperbole, dramatic syntax, diction . and enumerationcombine to cast its statusin doubt. 86 The Gothic informs L'Invitee to a great extent. A denseweb of images,words final Francoise decides life. build Xaviere's to to the take when crescendo motifs and Simone de Beauvoir had recourseto the Gothic in order to expresswhat Jung refers to 86 de in de Simone Beauvoir La Force `the tells us as shadowside of our personalities'. 1'agethat writing the final scenesof L'Invitee was a truly cathartic experiencefor her: Il m'etait indispensablede m'arreter ä ce denouement:il a eu pour moi une valeur cathartique.[...] Il me fallait aller au bout de mon fantasme,lui donner corps sans en rien attenuer,si je voulais conquerirpour mon compte la solitude oü je precipitai Francoise. Et en effet, l'identification s'opera. Relisant les pages finales, aujourd'hui figees, inertes, j'ai peine ä croire qu'en les redigeant j'avais la gorge nouee comme j'avais vraiment charge mes epaules d'un assassinat. Pourtant c'est ainsi. Stylo en main, je fis avec une sorte de terreur 1'experience de la separation. Le meurtre de Xaviere peut paraltre la resolution hätive et maladroite d'un drame que je ne savais pas terminer. Il a ete au contraire le moteur et la raison d'etre du roman tout entier. (La Force de 1'ägep. 348-9.) The Gothic diction Simone de Beauvoir useshere is striking. The Gothic symbolic ideal for her her location the she created confrontation with provided with universe madnessand pain. Her writing invites readersto feel, prompting empathy and identification as opposedto analysis.As Elizabeth MacAndrew puts it, the Gothic 87 makesreadersexperienceideas. In L'Invitee the philosophical veneeris no more than that, a veneerplacedthere in an attemptto justify the unjustifiable. Simone de Beauvoir (our implied author) together with her alter ego, Francoise,can be read as a perfect nineteenthcentury Gothic subject,an embodimentof Botting's definition: `Gothic subjectswere [...] no longer in control of [their] passions,desiresand fantasies[...]. Excessemanatedfrom within, from hidden, pathological motivations that rationality was powerlessto control.'88 L'Invitee functions as a Gothic text, providing a structure to contain the threatsto rational and humanistvalues that it explores. 86Jung, Carl G., `Approaching the Unconscious', in Man and His Symbolsby Jung, Carl G. and M. -L. von Franz, JosephL. Hendersonet al., New York: Dell Publishing, repr. 1979, p. 51. s' MacAndrew, ix. p. saBotting, 12. p. 87 Chapter Two Continuities in Change: Imagery in L'Invitee, Les Belles Images and La Femme rompue In this chapterI want to examine Simonede Beauvoir's use of imagery in her first in developments later fiction, the in her tracing and connections and novel published imagesthemselvesand in the way they are used.I want to examinehow far what I identified as the Gothic economy of L'Invitee can be seento persist in the imagery of the later fiction, texts of a different tone, that are generally perceivedto be quite ' fiction. Notwithstanding the evident differencesbetweenthe different from her earlier had `Simone de by Beauvoir 1949 has fiction, Toril Moi late that asserted early and truly becomeSimone de Beauvoir' and that her `repertoire of themesand obsessions' is borne interesting be this It to to largely out extent what assess established. will was by a study of imagery. A close and comprehensiveexaminationof Simone de Beauvoir's imagery is important for a number of reasons.It is a soundbasis for an appreciationof her fiction literary Images to her fiction, the texts add and works. encapsulate as of richness of as de in Simone that the themes the texts, ways not necessarily of our understandingof Beauvoir anticipated. Moreover, networks of imagescontribute to the tone of the texts. Specifically, they mediatethe madnessin the texts; they are an expressionof pain and fear and a nostalgic evocation of somethinglost. Obsessiveimagery structuresan obsessivesituation. ' Elizabeth Fallaize makesthe point that Les Belles imageswas received as a radical departurefrom Simone de Beauvoir's earlier fiction: TheNovels, p. 118. She discussesthe changesthat have occurred in Simone de Beauvoir's narrative strategiessince Les Mandarins. Seealso Brosman, p. 86. 2Moi, Simonede Beauvoir, p. 6. 3Toril Moi's reading of the imagery in L'Invitde revealsthe unconsciousat work in Simone de Beauvoir's figurative language.Simone de Beauvoir, Chapter4. 88 de Beauvoir's Simone been has to this Little critical attention aspectof paid been imagery has her knowledge fiction. To my no comprehensivesurvey of Moi Toril been the it have analyses examined. of aspects undertaken,although certain imagery in L'Invitee surroundingXaviere to supporther fascinating psychoanalytical in Xaviere `family the of mother/ role plays text which the romance' as a of reading 4 Phil Powrie looks at the imagery in La Femmerompue, arguing that the monster. imagesof vision that he identifies, `form the metaphoricfabric of the failure to achieve 5 He also considersGothic imagesof an authentic mode of self-expression'. `possible he links a within to sense of entrapment writers' women which entombment in La I interesting that is It 328). agree elements and argument an mile tradition'(p. Femmerompue are Gothic but find no textual evidenceto support his assertionthat `clarity, purity and freedom are all associatedwith the male, [...] whereaswomen are body, but the the sexuality, of opacity also associatedwith opacity: the opacity of vision in La distinctions drawn is This (p. 328). gender along opposition not entombment' 6 Femmerompue His suggestionthat imagesof the sky/ clarity of vision are associated demonstrates, himself Powrie but, Phil helpful is `a as with vanishedgolden age' more 7 light is not always connotedpositively in Simonede Beauvoir's texts. One of the difficulties involved in organising a review of the imagery in L'Invitee, Les Belles Images and La Femmerompue is the need to impose a linear indeed fashion, in itself does this a that not progress progressionon a massof material 4Moi, Simonede Beauvoir, p. 110-21. 5Powrie, Phil, `RereadingBetween The Lines: A Postscripton La Femmerompue', Modern Language Review, 87 (1992), 320-29 (p. 325). 6His argument appearsto rely principally on his analysisof `Monologue'. He holds that Murielle his her father, he to the the the argument support with yet quotations gives moon of associates purity do not bear this out. Seep. 326 of his article. 7Other studiesthat give someconsiderationto Simone de Beauvoir's imagery include Anne Ophir's in Hibbs' Regards feminin, Arnaud Francoise 17-87 La Femme study: and pp. rompue readings of L'Fspace Bansles romans de Simonede Beauvoir: son expressionet safonction. 89 is The development. that material made up of resistssuch a sequential massof material images intersect. Although images that of a particular cluster overlap and clustersof in discussed be and relation to a number of other alongside placed might usefully just between inevitably be it images, in images, placed must a successionof clustersof 8 two other clustersof images. In Simonede Beauvoir's texts, the different clustersof imagesform a denseand complex web, rich in resonances.The aim of this study is to trace a pattern in the rich network of imagesshecreatesto mediatemadness. Francoise,Laurence,the unnamedwoman protagonist in `L'Age de discretion', Murielle and Monique all experiencebreakdownand loss of self and are brought face to 9 in fadewith madness.Francoise's madnessis underplayed the text of L'Invitee Nevertheless,she struggleswith threatsto her stability/ identity in a claustrophobic fiction later In too, the woman protagonistsconfront the atmosphereand closed rooms. the pain of loss and abandonmentin closedrooms. Francoise,for example,coping with intensefears and anxiety provoked by Xaviere's extremereaction to having made love busy from by feels Gerbert, the the street apparentnormality represented cut off with les `engluee d'angoisse in her her from trapped oü pensees room window and she sees 10 (p. 388). leur A treve' claustrophobicatmosphere poursuivaient ronde sans obsedantes pervades L'Invitee. In Les Belles Images, Laurence's crisis reaches its climax in a closed by disappointed from deeply her On Greece, defeated Catherine return over and room. the reconciliation of her parents,Laurenceretreatsto her room to contendwith her pain: `J'ai tire les rideaux. Couchee,les yeux fermes,je recapitulerai ce voyage [...]' (p. 153). In `L'Age de discretion', during Andre's absence,isolated in her flat ('le telephoneaux intensity, faces lesser 62), degree the to up woman, admittedly a of p. absents' abonnes 8Crossreferencesbetweenclustersof imageswill be given where appropriate. This will be discussedin greaterdepth in a subsequentchapter. 'o The symbolism of closed rooms is related to XaviBre too (see my Chapter One). The terms `cloitrer' and `se terrer' used in connectionwith Xavibre are also applied to Monique. Seebelow. 90 to her disappointmentand disillusionment, goesover the life shehas sharedwith Andre light: her. She for the too looks that to the shuts out preoccupy questions answers and `Je suis donc resteechez moi, ä ruminer. Il faisait tres chaud;meine si j'abaissais les fallait, ] J'ai Ce histoire. [... fallait [... ] Il j'etouffais. arrete. qu'il recapitulernotre stores, her New Murielle's 64-65). [... ]' (pp. takes on monologue, place crisis, c'etait reflechir. Year's Eve in her lonely flat behind closedcurtains, her telephonesilenced (p. 87). She defending herself daughter's her her the against suicide, and abandonment over goes `La Maurice in her head. In Femme hears rompue', when she accusing,mocking voices herself in her flat: `Je me suis Noellie, Monique trip shuts away with goeson a skiing (p. 221). During dans de ] thesetwo weeks [... J'ai terrer caveau' mon choisi me clöitree. drugs, Monique and goesover what alcohol when she stopseating and washing, abuses faces break Maurice in her diary, her has traces and up with relationship and she written the pain of disillusionment. It would be wrong to suggestthat the crises of the women protagonistsin the later fiction are restricted to theseepisodesin closedrooms. However, it can be argued is Murielle do breakdowns these turning their moments. that point at reach a climax/ in her delusions. The trapped the only exception as she appears permanently perhaps is has It attracted critical attention. unmistakablesymbolism of closed rooms/ spaces hard to disagreewith FrancoiseHibbs'view that `tout au long des romansbeauvoiriens le de la folie 1'etre dann theme qui menace enferme un espaceclos, retrouvons nous 11It lui-meme'. seemsclear that thesespacesare related to the unconscious. enfermesur However, I cannot agreethat thesespacesrepresent`despiegesoü la tentation de se la d'asphyxie de une menace: conscience comme menace sur soi-meme pese replier 11Hibbs, p. 47. 91 12 la folie la la dansle narcissisme, passivite, ou mort'. Rather, I read these spacesas the figuration of a confrontation with repressedfeelings; they are spaceswhere women are brought face to face with feelings that have beendenied and ignored, spaceswhere they for identity. Thus, brought to of self and me, enclosedspacesare questions address are 13 sites of possibletransformation. Powerful imagery in Simonede Beauvoir's fiction communicatesthe women protagonists' experienceof the threat of madness.There is an important cluster of imagesrelatedto the void and nothingness.Relatedimagesof falling are frequent. Thesewere key motifs in L'Invitee. For example,during Francoise'swalk in Montmartre: [Francoise]se sentit envahied'un ennui si mortel qu'elle eut les jambes coupees. Qu'est-ceque ca pouvait pour eile toutes ceschosesetrangeres?C'etait pose, ä distance,ca n'effleurait memepas ce vide vertigineux dans lequel eile etait happee.Un maelstrom. On descendaiten spirale de plus en plus profondement,il semblait qu'ä la fin on allait toucher quelquechose:le calme, ou le desespoir, n'importe quoi de decisif; mais on restait toujours ä la meme hauteur,au bord du vide. (L'Invitee, p.216.) The threat that Xaviere representsto Francoiseis evoked in a related image: C'etait comme la mort, une totale negation,une etemelle absence,et cependant par une contradiction bouleversante,ce gouffre de neant pouvait serendre present ä soi-memeet se faire exister pour soi avec plenitude; l'univers tout entier s'engloutissait en lui, et Francoise,ä jamais depossedeedu monde, se dissolvait dans dont ce vide aucunmot, aucuneimage ne pouvait cemer le elle-meme contour infini. (L'Invitee, p. 364.) 12Hibbs, p. 48. (In connectionwith the idea of the threat representedby closed spaces,FrancoiseHibbs suggeststhat in L'Invitee, Francoise`choisit d'enfermer [Xaviirre] dans sa chambreapresavoir ouvert le gaz' (p. 47). This is a misreading of the text; XaviBre shutsherself in her room, locking Franroise out (L'Invitee, p. 502).) "My disagreementwith FrancoiseHibbs may be due to the fact that our understandingof the notion of closed spacesis not the same.For example,she limits her remarks on Les Belles imagesto the mole image (seebelow) and dealsonly with `Monologue' in La Femmerompue. I remain unconvinced by Anne Ophir's suggestionthat `l'appartementclos' is a site of mauvaisefoi whereas`la chambre close est le lieu oti les personnagesfeminin regardentla realitb en face'. Regardsfeminin, footnote, p. 32. I can find no evidencefor this opposition and make no distinction between enclosedspacesalong these lines. 92 Emptinessis vast, the chasmbottomless.Vertigo/ dizziness,falling are metaphorsfor a horror it inspires is loss For Laurence the terror/ of self. senseof abandonmentand la le il death: `Et than qui glace sang, qui est pire que aussi ya ce creux, ce vide worse je? [... ] Oü ä etais `Il etre Greece: ]' (p. 85). In [... arrachee moi-meme. me semblait mort Je me disais: "Comme c'est beau!" etj'etais au bord d'un vertige, prise Bansun tourbillon, ballotee, niee, reduite ä rien' (p. 160). `Une grandefatigue me venait, dans le [... dans d'indifference [... ]. ] [... ]. (je] ä dans 1'äme mon un gouffre coulais pic corps et feelings `L'Age de discretion' jusqu'ä ]' (p. 167). In 1'angoisse [... of ennui s'exasperait loss arousedby the woman's separationfrom her son, Philippe, when he announcesthat he'is going to get married, are mediatedby an image of an abyss: `Il ya eu ce coup de le forces joues, le ä dans tendues toutes reprimer mes pour ma poitrine, sang mes gong tremblement de mes levres. Un soir d'hiver, les rideaux tires, la lumiere des lampes sur l'arc-en-ciel des coussinset ce gouffre d'absencesoudaincreuse' (p. 23). Philippe and his wife, Irene come to dinner one eveningafter their honeymoon;when they leave, or de leaves, loss is `Ce Philippe the sense of woman's renewed: vide rather when becomes falling/ diving deepens, her ' (p. 27). As a more persistent crisis nouveau... notion: `somber', `cooler ä pic', `senoyer', (p. 45). In addition, emptinessevokesthe depressionthat arisesfrom feelings of abandonment.The woman in `L'Age de discretion' suggestsher experienceof crisis ten years earlier in terms of emptiness:`Moi aussij'ai traverseune mauvaiseperiode, il ya dix ans.J'etais degoüteede mon corps, Philippe etait devenuun adulte, apresle succesde mon livre sur Rousseauje me sentais her Murielle Sylvie's death, (p. 16). As Vieillir the of relives pain m'angoissait' videe. loss, the key image is one of falling. Her senseof abandonmentis clear. Elle est morte. Pour toujours. Je ne le supportepas. Au secours.J'ai mal trop mal qu'on me sorte de 1äje ne veux pas que ca recommencela degringoladenon aidez-moije n'en peux plus ne me laissezpas Beule... ('Monologue', p. 104.) 93 Of all three stories in the collection, it is in `La Femmerompue' that imagesof falling are most profuse. Monique discoversthat Maurice has beenlying to her about how long his relationship with Noellie has been going on. Shewrites in her diary: `Chaquefois je crois avoir touche le fond. Et puis je m'enfonce plus loin encoredansle doute et le malheur' (p. 170). If shewas not altogether surprisedto learn that Maurice is des 171), (`je told the that having tombee when she nues' p. suis pas ne an affair was is her distress led her believe, has Maurice to than affair startedmuch earlier je je je fall: `Tandis Luce tombais, tombais me suis et me parlait, que as a experienced in her January, On brisee' (p. 171). thirty-first the of she writes retrouveecompletement diary: 'Je tombe plus bas,toujours plus bas' (p. 232). When Marie Lambert tells her that . On `Quelle is Monique lower, fall stupidite! peut toujours scathing: no she can descendreplus bas, et plus encore,et encoreplus bas. C'est sansfond' (p. 238). Monique's senseof self has dependedon Maurice, his eyesreflected her image back to her, he guaranteedher identity. Now she feels he is judging her and finding her wanting: `Il pensede moi des chosesqu'il ne dit pas: ca me donne le vertige' (p. 180). The is jeopardised. fear her Monique's self sense of as metaphorof vertigo communicates Monique can no longer make senseof the life shehas led, she has no more faith in her is identity is bound her Her judgment. this up with role as mother and when own She had feelings the and vertigo metaphor recurs. undermined,she experiencessimilar is by idea her daughters bringing herself that she tormented the well and on up prided her life is failure: `je le have been that croire. a ne peux pas and a good mother may not Mais des que le doute m'efeure, quel vertige! ' (p. 214). Her experienceof loss and separationis conveyedin a powerful image: `Quandca arrive aux autres,ca sembleun evenementlimite, facile ä cerner,ä surmonter.Et on se trouve absolumentseule, Bans 94 14 1'imagination (p. une experiencevertigineuseque n'a memepas approchee' 192). Her sadnessis a fall. The diary entry on Monique's birthday begins with the asyntactic sentence:`L'affreuse descenteau fond de la tristesse' (p. 203). Abandoned,Monique has an overwhelming senseof emptiness.Everything seemsa waste of time to her: `L'amour de Maurice donnait une importanceä chaquemoment de ma vie. Elle est creuse.Tout est creux: les objets, les instants.Et moi' (p. 210). Despite her disillusionment with her diary becausesherealisesthat she cannot and doesnot tell the truth of her experience,Monique beginsto write in it again to resist her consciousness of overwhelming emptiness.Shewrites: `le vide etait si immenseen moi, autour de moi, qu'il fallait ce gestede ma main pour m'assurerquej'etais encorevivante' (p. 223). The found images in all the texts, that to the are cluster of related void and nothingness, combine the motifs of the abyss,vertigo and falling. They evoke the dissolution and loss feelings the they that threaten cope with women protagonistsas of abandonment of self and loss. As they lack secureboundaries,their senseof identity is put at risk of expandingto the point of disintegration in the terrifying vastnessof the empty space hold is to them. there one or no nothing where Moving on from this imagery of absenceI want now to examinea related group of imagesof collapseand engulfmentthat also evoke the protagonists' fear and senseof loss of self. Their tenuoushold on a senseof identity, their fragile boundaries,mean that they are as vulnerable to feelings of being overwhelmedas they are to feelings of abandonment.In L'Invitee the threat to Frangoiseis frequently typified by metaphorsof engulfment, of being swallowed alive. Xaviere is representedas a natural disasterliable to overwhelm her: `Avec un peu d'effroi, Francoiseconsideracette vivante catastrophe 14This image echoesthe evocation of the dangerXavibre representedto Francoisein L'Invitee. `on ne pouvait pas s'en approchermeme en pensde,au moment oti eile touchait au bout, la penseese dissolvait [...j' (pp. 354-55). 95 qui envahissaitsoumoisemcntsavie; c'etait Pierre qui par son respect,son estime avait brise les digues oü Francoisela contenait.Maintenant qu'elle etait dechainee,jusqu'oü ca irait-il? ' (p. 128). As Laurence'scrisis reachesits climax her emotions threatento deux draps. is `Des Voici venir her; ä eile s'accroche ses she paralysed: mains submerge ce qu'elle redouteplus que la mort: un de ces momentsoü tout s'effondre; son corps est de pierre, eile voudrait hurler; mais la pierre n'a pas de voix; ni de larmes' (p. 176). Laurenceis overwhelmedas she losesany senseof boundaries,as everything disintegrates,collapsesin upon itself. Monique is also submergedby suffering. She writes in her diary: `La douleur fond sur moi' (p. 141). Her life has collapsed: `Ma vie derriere moi s'est tout effondree,commedanscestremblementsde terre oü le sol se devore lui-meme; il s'engloutit dansvotre dos au fur et ä mesureque vous fuyez' (p. 193).Natural disastersfunction as a metaphorfor the way in which her life has been transformed.During her stay in New York with her daughter,Lucienne, she tells her how she seesherself: `- Comme un marecage.Tout s'est englouti daps la vase' (p. 251) and in her diary shedescribesher senseof bewilderment and lack of a senseof identity: `Le noir et le blanc se confondent,le monde est un magmaet je n'ai plus de contours' (p. 251). The image usedto evoke the sleepof the woman in `L'Age de discretion', underlinesthe notions of blackness,thickness,stickinessand suggests drowning/ submergence:`J'avais sombredansdes epaisseursnoires; c'etait liquide et etouffant, du mazout, et ce matin j'emergeais ä peine' (p. 45).15 She opensher eyesto fmd Andre eagerto make up; she is faced with a choice: `Me raidir davantage,couler ä pic, me noyer dansles epaisseursde solitude et de nuit. Ou essayerd'attraper cette main qui setendait' (p. 45). 15Laurence in Les Belles imagesrefers to her dreamless sleep as 'ces epaisseursde nuit' (p. 71). 96 Natural disastersalso figure powerful emotionsthat shakecharacters'being and threatento overwhelm them. When Francoiserealisesthat Pierre is seriously considering going on tour with the theatrecompanyand taking Xaviere along with them, somethingthat doesnot at all fit in with her plans, `ce fut une tournadequi secoua Francoisede la tete aux pieds' (p. 210). The hyperbole in the later fiction is comparable to that found in L'Invitee. When Jean-Charlesand Laurencequarrel about Catherine,the five breakdown lui jetait he brings Laurence's (11 1'incident au that up years earlier way visage avec une especede hargne') is experiencedby Laurenceas a violent betrayal ('Quelle trahison!' p. 133). She goesagainstthe code of behaviour instilled in her since for does her Jean-Charles: `Boire anger at once, un verre not repress childhood and d'eau, faire de la gymnastique:non. Cette fois eile se donneä sa colere; un ouraganse dechainedanssa poitrine, il secouetoutes sescellules, c'est une douleur physique, mais is feelings in `L'Age de discretion' by (p. 134). The submerged se sent vivre' woman on de de been had `Soudain deferlait soupcons, repressing: ca sur une avalanche she moi, j'avais (p. 34). Her anger at Andre is `une tournadequi refoules' que malaises [1]'emporteä des milliers de kilometres de lui et d'[elle]-meme dansune solitude ä la fois brillante et glacee' (p. 40). Their quarrel is `un tourbillon fumeux' (p. 47). In `Monologue', Murielle imaginesher revengein apocalyptic terms that translatethe intensity of her rage: Le vent! soudain il s'est mis ä souffler en tournadequej'aimerais un grand cataclysmequi balaierait tout et moi avec un typhon un cyclone mourir me reposeraits'il ne restait personnepour penserä moi; leur abandonnermon cadavre ma pauvrevie non! Mais plonger tous dans le neant ce serait bien.' (`Monologue', p. 100.) In all of the texts the imagery of engulfment evokesthe characters'fears of being overwhelmed,of losing themselves.Associatedimagesof natural disasterssuggestthe 97 their them to that threaten and undermine senseof swamp also emotions powerful cohesion Imagesof engulfment intersectwith another important cluster of painful images images the cluster of relating to weight, enclosure that mediate experienceof madness,a fiction images in later Gothic These immobilisation. the typically recall the network and her Francoise's in L'Invitee images the threats to self was experience of where of such `Il barre de fer dann hard: is heavy Laurence's by ma them. cette and restait pain evoked does her daughter, feelings 45). Her (p. she not want and are petrified poitrine' Catherineto suffer the samefate: `Faudra-t-il qu'elle devienneune femme comme moi, dann la fumees de ' (p. 122). des la dans tete? des soufre poitrine et pierres avec Laurencefeels imprisoned in her life and looks on the trip to Greeceas an attempt to break out (seepp. 154 and 170). In Greece,Laurenceexchangesone prison for another; etrangere `Je ä history: by tous ces siecles feels the sens me of weight crushed she defunts et ils m'ecrasent'(p. 161). The key image of the mole (seebelow) also suggests Laurenceis trapped.In her version of the story the mole doesnot emergeinto the fresh its in it its it trapped tunnel where all tragically, remains although opens eyes, air at all; it seesis blackness(p. 169). There are also overtonesof live burial here. Laurence's is identifies in being trapped with a young as she suicide prison, underlined senseof la fenetre' barreaux de (p. freie him: `le her aux accroche onto cadavre pain projecting 85). The image of the circle usedin L'Invitee to suggestFrancoise's senseof imprisonment, (` [Francoise]avait envie de briser ce cercle magique oü elle se trouvait la de le du 345), Xaviere Pierre tout separait monde' p. et qui reste et retenueavec in banal form Images. Laurence less Les Belles in more elaborate, reappears a much is `confine daps son petit cercle' (p. 71). She is obsessed fact the that us eachof regrets by a Bunuel film, envying the characters`enfermesdansun cercle magique, des gens 98 le flu du evitaient ils leur de temps hasard et renouaient passe; un moment repetaientpar 16 (p. 153). le piege oü, sansle savoir, ils etaienttombes' Images of weight also characterise La Femme rompue. Just as Xaviere de in `L'Age (p. 255), `comme the heavy, woman une gangue' experienced the trio as discretion' imagines her future with Andre, `chacun dans sa gangue' (p. 75). Gothic images of live burial in L'Invitee find an echo in `Monologue'. Murielle is buried alive: `c'etait moi qu'on enterrait. Je suis enterree. Its se sont tous ligues pour m'enfoncer' (p. 99). The silence in her flat is the silence of death, the same silence that had characterised `la chambre mortuaire' when Sylvie died (p. 111). Looks condemned her without appeal ils `Ils is imprisoned: supprimer m'ont mise en cage. then and now she voudraient me Enfermeeclaquemureeje finirai par mourir d'ennui vraiment mourir' (p. 106). Monique is also imprisoned, buried alive. Shehas decidedto shut herself away (like Laurencein Les Belles Images,like the woman in `L'Age de discretion'): `J'ai choisi de me terrer dansmon caveau' (p. 221). Dirt is a protective shell: `La chambrepue le tabac froid et 1'alcool, il ya des cendrespartout,je suis sale, les draps sont sales,le ciel est sale derriere les vitres sales,cette saleteest une coquille qui me protege' (p. 222). The dirty is in Gothic feels Poe's dirty Monique tales Murielle's she one of moon. sky recalls trappedby `les murs de fer qui se rapprochent' (p. 242) ( seebelow). Rejected sexually by Maurice, it seemsto her that sheis `au fond d'un tombeau,le sangfige Bans[ses] dreams Gothic Her de de (p. 163). incapable bouger are nightmares: ou pleurer' veines, Souventen reve je m'evanouis de malheur. Je reste lä sousles yeux de Maurice, la douleur du J'attends toute monde. qu'il se visage sur mon avec paralysee, '6In Luis Bufluel's film, El angel exterminador, (1962), an invisible magic barrier preventsbourgeois The in from leaving dinner they the guestsregressto are room which assembled. party guestsat a primitive brutality and cannibalism; someof them become ill, one dies and two young lovers kill themselves.Only when the guestsreturn to exactly the samepositions they were in when the spell first preventedtheir leaving, is the spell broken. Shortly afterwards,the spell begins again and the guestsfind themselvesunableto leave the cathedralwhere they have gatheredfor a thanksgiving service. SeeAranda, Francisco,Luis Bunuel: A Critical Biography, trans. and ed. by David Robinson, New York: Da Capo Press,1976,pp. 206-13. 99 jette indifferent Il un regard et s'eloigne. Je me suis vers moi. me precipite je des j'etais la le dans tenebres, sentais c'etait encore nuit; poids un reveillee, je il devenait je de etroit, engouffrais, en plus corridor, m'y plus respiraisä peine; bientöt il faudrait ramper etj'y resteraiscoinceejusqu'ä ce quej'expire. J'ai hurle. Et je me suis mise ä l'appeler plus doucement,dansles larmes. (`La Femmerompue', pp. 192-93.) Shewakes in the dreamto an evenmore terrifying scene.The dream/reality boundary becomesuncertainand vague.Suffocationand live burial are familiar motifs. The cumulative effect of this cluster of imagesof weight and enclosure/imprisonment and immobilisation, that recur in all our texts, is a forceful senseof helplessnessand suffering and fear. This is amplified by the next, closely connected cluster of images I '7 images death of am going on to consider, and paralysis. 18 in later fiction. In Les Belles is in Death a recurring motif L'Invitee and the Images and La Femmerompue,deathis typified as cold, silenceand emptiness.Images return obsessivelyto death.Laurenceis hauntedby a senseof nothingnessat the heart of life, `ce creux, ce vide, qui glacele sang,qui est pire que la mort' (p. 85). Shehad known this senseof emptinessduring her breakdownfive yearsearlier. It is what drives `c'est fait froid lit le for Laurence to ce qui aux os quand on commit suicide and people recit d'un suicide: non le freie cadavreaccrocheaux barreauxde la fenetre,mais ce qui s'estpassedannce coeur,juste avant' (p. 85). It is a sensethat sheexperiencesagain as she lies in bed trying to understandwhat is happeningto her: `Voici venir ce qu'elle redouteplus que la mort: un de cesmomentsoü tout s'effondre;son corpsest de pierre, eile voudrait hurler; mais la pierre n'a pas de voix; ni de larmes' (p. 176). Laurence is paralysedas everything collapsesinto itself and sheis on the point of being suckedinto 19 the void. Nothingness,death-in-life is an experiencethat the protagonistsin La "Images of death and paralysisare also embeddedin the cluster of imagesrelatedto the void and nothingness. '8 Elaine Marks studiesthe theme of deathin Simone de Beauvoir's works in Simonede Beauvoir: Encounterswith Death, New Brunswick, New Jersey:RutgersUniversity Press,1973. "This recalls Francoise's paralysisin the night-club in L'Invitee, pp. 356 and 364. 100 Femmerompue all have in commonwith Laurenceto someextent. The woman in `L'Age de discretion' feels her life is over and, in an image reminiscent of that usedin L'Invitee to evoke Francoise'ssenseof barrenness('Ce n'etait pas vraiment un avenir: c'etait une etenduede tempsuniforme et nu' p. 291), her life is represented death (p. 68). drag herself has desert towards to through which she as a metaphorically Death dominatesher horizon (pp. 83-4). Death is also at the heart of `Monologue'. Murielle's thoughtsreturn obsessivelyto her daughter's suicide and funeral. She imaginesher own death: `Jepeux bien clameceravec mon pauvre coeur surmene personnen'en saunarien ca me fout la trouille. Derriere la porte ils trouveront une chärogneje pueraij'aurai chie sousmoi desrats m'auront bouffe le nez' (p. 96). Deprived of others' attention, her senseof self is tenuous:`Comme si j'etais effaceedu finds Laurence, Murielle je Like Comme jamais (p. 111). si n'avais existe' monde. deathitself easierto bearthan the pain of certain thoughts: `assezassezj'aime mieux fantasises She de Neures-lä' (p. 113). about committing sur que ces place revivre mourir suicide to blackmail or punish Tristan: `m'ouvrir les veins sur leur paillassonca ou les je descendrai dans j'ai des je (p. 93); son salon m'ouvrirai armes' autre chose me Yet ' (p. 118). je ils du il serai vainesquand se rameneront y aura sangpartout et morte... shewants to live: je veux vivre' (p. 96); je veux vivre je veux revivre' (p. 99). Death is a key motif in `La Femme rompue' as well. Maurice's hostility during a quarrel made Monique's blood run cold ('soudain mon sangs'est glace' p. 191), it was like a ä death: `Ensuite il dispute premonition of semblable m'a persuadee que c'etait une beaucoupd'autres.Mais le froid de la mort m'avait effleuree' (pp. 191-92).In the depthsof her depressionsheis deadin life, one of the living dead: `Maintenantje suis une morte. Une morte qui a encorecombien d'anneesä firer? Dejä unejournee, quand j'ouvre un oeil, le matin, il me sembleimpossible d'arriver au bout' (p. 251). Life is 101 Simple her in has been in is life nightmares. recurring she paralysedas she movement; front foot in her lifting like of the other presentenormous arm or putting one gestures difficulties. Alone, `[eile] resteimmobile pendantdesminutes sur le bord du trottoir, is in back Paris, Once (p. 252)20 to remain temptation the entierementparalysee' le jamais. future: `Ne bouger; Arreter door temps to the et the to pas open not paralysed, la vie' (p. 252). Death-in-life hauntsthe womenprotagonistsin all the texts. It is a image The despair heart for the the of paralysis captures a of existence. at metaphor is Although hopelessness the an of existence ending pain and wretchedness. senseof bleak. however life, them them chooses ultimately of consider,each option almost all of L'Invitee, Les Belles ImagesandLa Femmerompue are sombreworks. In the imaginary universescreatedby Simonede Beauvoir, imagesof black and night recur. In her memoirs Simonede Beauvoir usestheseimagesto encapsulateLaurence'ssituation; telling Laurence'sstory, shewished to `faire transparaitredu fond de sa nuit la laideur du monde oü elle etouffait'21 They are imagesusedby Simonede Beauvoir in into fiction La Femme transposing stories of women as well; with rompue connection `donner leur ä intention her l'ignorance', debattaient dans to `se voir nuit' was who Ignorance, depression, pain, fear; dark and night enjoy a multiplicity 22 of connotations. There are a number of series of images relating to darkness that overlap and intersect images, between I these texts. trace through connecting clusters of a pathway within and 20Readersrecall that Francoisein L'Invitee `eut envie de s'asseoirau bord du trottoir et de n'en plus bouger' (p. 421). In 'Monologue' the fact that inertia keepsMurielle in her armchair might be read as a pseudo-paralysis.Seep. 91: `Merdeje crbve de soifj'ai faim mais me lever de mon fauteuil aller ä la cuisine me tue'. Sheis still in her armchair when shemakesthe telephonecall to Tristan that will bring to an end (for now) her monologue(p. 114).(It is for this reasonthat I cannot agreewith Phil Powrie that we imagine Murielle 'pacing up and down her flat'. See`RereadingbetweenThe Lines' p. 322.) 21Tout comptefait, p. 172. 22Tout camptefait, p. 175.In `PriBred'inserer' Simonede Beauvoir wrote: 'J'ai voulu faire entendreici les voix de trois femmesqui se d6battentavec desmots dansdes situationssansissue'. Francis and Gontier, Les icrits, pp. 231-32. This suggestsa much less severejudgment of her characters. 23The cluster of imagesrelatedto darknessfollows on naturally from imagesof deathbut it also intersectswith the group of imagesthat evoke emptiness. 102 imagesof darknessand night and blindnessthat are metaphorsfor failed understanding images other with of troubled vision and opaquenessthat work in a parallel way, intensifying the resonances each cluster has in the texts. The experience of madness is conveyedby imagesthat evokethe distressof incomprehensionand epistemological insecurity and the bleaknessof depression. Imagesopposedarknesson the one hand and knowledge and clarity of vision/ an ability to seeon the other. In L'Invitee, Franroise imaginesthe future to be a dark tunnel `dont il faudrait subir aveuglementles detours' (p. 291). Her dependanceon Xaviere grows and with it her uncertainty; her lack of secureknowledge is evokedby the image of night: `Elle n'y voyait plus clair, plus clair du tout. Il n'y avait que desdebris informes autour d'elle, et le vide en eile et partout la nuit' (p. 314). Night and emptiness are intertwined. This image is echoedin a key image in Les Belles Images.Laurence who feels literally and metaphysicallycompletely empty/ emptied (shehasjust vomitted), identifies herself with a mole: Il fait nuit en eile; eile s'abandonne ä la nuit. Elle pense ä une histoire quelle a lue: une taupe tätonne ä travers des galeries souterraines, eile en sort et sent la fralcheur de fair; mais eile ne sait pas inventer d'ouvrir les yeux. Elle se la raconte autrement: la taupe daps son souterrain invente d'ouvrir les yeux, et elle voit que tout est noir. ca n'a aucun sens. (Les Belles Images,p. 169.)24 The mole inhabits a milieu where it has no need to `see', there is no light. Out of its milieu, where to seewould have somemeaning,it is unableto work out how to see. Laurence'ssituation is more tragic. Sheis trappedin a milieu where there is no needto seeand yet shedoesopenher eyesand seesonly blackness,that there is nothing to 24Simone de Beauvoir talks abouther useof this image in an interview with JacquelinePiatier, Le Monde, 23 December1966,p. 17. Of Laurenceshesays:`Elle soupconnela verite, eile la cherche, mais eile ne va pas au bout de sa quete'. Sheaddsthat sheborrowed the image from Alain Badiou's Almagestes,thus signalling, asElizabeth Fallaize points out, a connectionbetweenLes Belles images and this experimentalwork (TheNovels,p. 140, footnote 2). 103 5 It is an image that les in final `fette the the taupe novel: pagesof qui ouvre recurs see. les lui I'avance-t-il? Et Catherine? fait Refermer ä yeux. noir, quoi ca yeux et voit qu'il De ' `[... ] De les (p. 180). sortira... peut-titre eile s'en quoi? cettenuit. paupieres? clouer De 1'ignorance,de l'indifference' (p. 181). Laurenceis resignedto her fate; not seeingis the easieroption for her. But for her daughter,there is a glimmer of hope; if Laurence in her life have help her to trapped the same to then she spend will not see, maybe can dark tunnel. Theseimagespick up the notion of Laurence's blindness,first evoked during the trip to Greecewith her father: `[...] aveugleä toutes ces chosesque mon pere differentes des de Catherine: (Ses ceux visions yeux, mais colorees, me montrait. eniouvantes;et moi ä cote d'eux, aveugle)' (p. 157). Colour and light have gone out of Laurence's life. Her `blindness' makesher insensibleto beauty. In `L'Age de discretion', depressionis suggestedin similar terms. The woman asks,initially in relation to Andre and also recalling her own bout of depressionten faire decolore? ' (p. 16). her `Que le As s'est own stability quand monde years earlier, and well-being becomeincreasinglyjeopardized,her mood darkensand castsa shadow d'huile; le lourd faisait her `[... ] j'avais tristesse täche coeur et ma whole existence: over has Xaviere le (p. 32). This that the on effect assombrissait monde' recalls eile Francoise'slife in L'Invitee: `Xaviere s'obstinait ä demeurercette etrangeredont la presencerefuseeetendaitsur Francoiseune ombre menacante'(p. 420); `cettepresence ennemiequi etendaitsur eile, sur le monde entier, une ombre pernicieuse' (p. 484). 25A number of critics neglect the secondpart of this image and simply assertthat Laurencecompares herself with a mole that cannot open its eyes.See,for example, Hibbs p. 48. Her argumentthat Laurence is a prisoner of her milieu and its myths is convincing but contradictedto some extent by her identifying Laurencewith the image of the mole that emergesfrom the tunnel into the fresh air. JaneHeath readsthe metaphorof the mole in terms of ideology and false consciousness.I am somewhatpuzzled by her assertionthat the mole in the first version of the story could open its eyes and seethe light (pp. 125-26). 104 In `La Femmerompue', as Monique losesher senseof self, her identity (`j'ai perdu mon image'), darknessand blindnessevoke her senseof loss and emptinessas well as her inability to make senseof her existenceand who she is: `Il fait noir, je ne me does (p. 238). Monique to that comes realise she not even possessher past, vois plus' fully know her past: `C'est horrible de penserque ma propre histoire n'est plus derriere in dark final (p. Images 225). tenebres' the of and night are echoed pagesof the moi que story. Monique is severelydepressed,unsurenot only of who she is but how she should be (p. 251) shewrites: `Autour de moi, la nuit est toujours aussi epaisse'(p. 252). Darknessis pervasive. Troubled vision is a recurring metaphor.Threatenedby madness,the women in Simone de Beauvoir's fiction struggleto understandwhat is happeningto them, to see clearly. In `La Femmerompue' Monique is blinded (`aveuglee') by a vivid, visual image') her. been he first in love ('une he had Maurice of as with memory when was Sherealisesthat for years shehas seenMaurice as through the veil of this image. We read: `ce souvenir se superpose,commeune mousselinediaphane,aux visions quej'ai de lui' (pp. 162-63).In a moment with Gothic overtonesthis image disintegrates(`est tombee en poussiere') as it collides with reality, is mirrored, in the samehotel room where it had beengeneratedand comesinto contactwith the man of flesh and blood. The discrepancybetweenthe mood in the image and the mood in reality is too great. The image that had seemedfrozen (`figee') but still shiny and fresh had in fact decayed. The woman in `L'Age de discretion' also has a kind of double vision of Andre, her husband.Sheno longer knows who he is: Comme lorsqu'on a recu un choc sur le crane,que la vision s'est troublee, qu'on apercoit du monde deux images,ä des hauteursdifferentes, sanspouvoir situer le dessuset le dessous.Les deux imagesquej'avais d'Andre au passe,au present,ne s'ajustaientpas. (`L'Age de discretion', p. 42.) 105 A related seriesof imagesconcernopaqueness.Fog, fumes, vapoursare metaphorsfor emotionsthat hinder lucidity analogousto the way in which darkness functions in the texts. In L'Invitee Francoisewants to seeclearly what is happeningto her, `Jeveux voir clair', but sheis preventedfrom doing so; `satete etait remplie d'un grand tournoiementrougeätreet piquant' (p. 192). Her lack of lucidity is `le brouillard' (p. 193). In Les Belles Images the sameimage is usedto evoke Laurence'sfear: `autour d'elle la peur est epaissecomme un brouillard' (p. 48). This image is echoedlater in the text: `Je n'avaispas reussi ä m'evaderde ma prison,je la voyais refermer sur moi tandis que 1'avionplongeait dannle brouillard' (p. 170). The fog enshroudingParis airport suggestsLaurence's deepeningsenseof enclosureand submergence.In an interesting image, Laurenceis describedas a woman `avecdespiercesdansla poitrine et des fumeesde soufre dans la tete' (p. 122).This image is redolent of the burning fires of hell, a familiar motif in L'Invitee. In `L'Age de discretion' the sameinsistenceon rednessand opacity is found in the metaphorfor the woman's anger.It reproduces Francoise'sexperience:`II y avait soudaindes fumeesrougesdansma tete, un brouillard rouge devant mes yeux, quelquechosede rouge qui criait dansma gorge' (p. 40). The woman's quarrel with Andre is `un tourbillon fumeux, de la fumee sansfeu' (p. 47); its very lack of lack of substancemakesit hard to clear up (`se dissiper'). Alone in their flat, the woman sinks into depressionand obsession.Shemanagesto steady herself: `je m'arrachais ä cesbrumes' (p. 58). Monique in `La Femmerompue' discoversthat life is opaque,that we do not know anything about anyoneincluding ourselves(p. 248). The accumulationof imagesof vision overarchedby imagesof darknessin all the texts conveysthe women protagonists' painful struggle to make sense of existence. 106 There are two other key clustersof imagesthat centre on darknessin the texts. Firstly, black is the colour of the future, evocativeof hurt and loss. The imagesof L'Invitee reappearin the later fiction but are understated,more restrained.`La fenetre etait noire' (La Femmerompue', p. 127).This image opensthe diary entry that Monique home late one eveningto an empty writes on returning 26 flat Ostensibly before she finds herself being Maurice she nevertheless comparing the of unfaithful, suspects presentwith before, `- avant quoi? -' she asksherself. The image of the dark window is in final It diary Monique's the and abandonment. echoed senseof aloneness evokes `La her flat Maurice has that to the out: where she records return now moved entry fenetre etait noire; eile seratoujours noire' 7 (p. 252). The lonely future threatening Monique, symbolisedby a dark window, is depictedin a Gothic image; the future is `Une fermee, door: lurking behind porte quelque chose menacing a closed something la [... ] Il derriere. [... je derriere C'est l'avenir. ] n'y a ce qu'il ya porte. qui guette verrai fear, Monique's derriere' (p. 252). Repetition underlines que cette porte et ce qui guette communicatesher anxiety. The suspensecreatedis also a feature of the Gothic. The images detachment black is Francoise's that the communicate of on remindful emphasis in the face of the ominous future sheapprehends: [... ] eile se laissait flotter passivement comme une epave, mais il y avait de noirs ecueils partout ä l'horizon; eile flottait sur un ocean gris, tout autour d'elle des eaux bitumeuses et soufrees, et eile faisait la planche sans penser s'etendaient ä rien, sans rien craindre et sans rien desirer. (L'Invitee, p. 236.)28 26This episodeis read differently by Phil Powrie. He writes: '[Monique] rushesup the stairs to her flat, commenting on the lack of light coming through the curtains'. ('Rereading Between The Lines' p. 326.) Yet, in fact, that evening Monique walked up the stairs and openedthe door with her key. In the past, when the light coming through the curtains showedthat Maurice was at home waiting for her, shewould run upstairsand ring the doorbell, too impatient to look for her key. There is a characteristictension betweenthe imperfect and perfect tensesin the relevant passageand a striking use of rhythm to contrastpast excitementwith presentdepression.See`La Femmerompue', p. 127: 'Je montais les deux 6tagesen courant,je sonnais,trop impatientepour chercherma c16.je suis montde sanscourir, j'ai mis la cle dans la serrure'. 27This image is a reversal of the image in L'Invitee, where, in the middle of the night, Francoise seesone lit up window in the dark theatre: `une vitre rose dansune facadenoire' (p. 13). 28Paralysisis also underlined here. 107 When Xaviere quarrelswith Pierre and the trio is destabilised,Francoisebursts into tears at the prospectof the future, `un noir enfer' (p. 397). The image.of night is usedto knows Xaviere has her letters dismay Francoise's that terror she when read and evoke from Gerbert and to convey her dreadof the future: `Une nuit acre et brillante venait de de bitume' (p. The 497). ] le [... Devant en eile cette nuit eile et s'abbatresur monde. horizon is dark for the woman in `L'Age de discretion' too. Sheknows what horrendous things the future holds but not how to cope with that knowledge: Ne pas regarder trop loin. Au loin c'etaient les horreurs de la mort et des adieux; c'etaient des räteliers, les sciatiques, les infirmites la sterilite mentale, la solitude dans un monde etranger que noun ne comprendrons plus et qui continuera sa course sans nous. Reussirai je ä ne pas lever les yeux vers ces horizons? Ou apprendrai-je ä les apercevoir sans epouvante? (`L'Age de discretion', pp. 83-4.) The horrors enumeratedare intimate and ordinary and all the more threatening. The final cluster of imagesto do with darknessconstructsblack as the colour of Elisabeth's long in her L'Invitee idea hatred. In term to the of pain relation pain and `comme il devait faire dans Claude Francoise to son noir prompts exclaim, affair with is frightened by Laurence ' 31). In Les Belles Images (p. the vehemenceof coeur! Dominique's reaction to Gilbert's rejection: `II fait si noir dans ce coeur, des serpentss'y 29 (p. 117) tordent' Emphasison black in all the texts contributesto the pervasiveatmosphereof in is despair. dark but it is Light the texts to opposed and and opaqueness not pain benign. Hope is a light that piercesFrancoise'sblack dismay and terror but it is a hope 29Dominique is constructedas a quasi-demoniacalcharacter,reminiscent of XaviBre. (The name Dominique suggests`dominer'.) Laurencehas always felt slightly afraid of her mother and since her parents' divorce `il y avait toujours eu autour de Dominique une espbcede halo malefique' (p. 52). The sinister flowers in Dominique's lounge are emblematic: `bans un vase,un enorme bouquet de fleursjaunes et aiguesqui ressemblentä de mCchantsoiseaux' (p. 49); `Laurencerevoit les fleurs qui ressemblaientä de m6chantsoiseaux' (p. 100). (After the reconciliation betweenLaurence's father and Dominique, theseflowers will be replacedby `des fleurs printani6res' p. 176, a further sign of Dominique's duplicity as far as Laurence is concerned.) 108 that Xaviere has taken her own life (L'Invitee, p. 497). Similarly, what shinesthrough Laurence's fear is hatred: `autour d'elle la peur est epaissecomme un brouillard; mais lumineuse,dure, une evidencepercecestenebres:«je le hais!»' (p. 48). Light is associatedwith pain. This has alreadybeendiscussedin relation to L'Invitee where the is lucidity light the to of and self knowledge: `Avec used evoke painfulness metaphorof un eblouissementdouloureux, Francoisese sentit transperceed'une lumiere aride et blanche qui ne laissait en eile aucun recoin d'espoir' (p. 180). In Les Belles Images, Laurenceseesherself reflected in Lucien, her lover's eyesand, feeling endangeredby the strength of his love for her, finds the brightnessof her image almost unbearable:`Il la regardeavec sesyeux oü brille d'un eclat presqueinsoutenableson image' (p. 61). The notion of the gazehas alreadybeenassociatedin Les Belles Imageswith light that is menacing;Laurencevisualisesthe light of a boat probing the river bank: `fouillant les rives de son regardblanc' (p. 21). As the light strikes the window panesit starkly lights `eclabousser' loving The `brutalement' words and couples. add to the negative up overtonesthat clash with the overt mood of Laurence'svision. In `L'Age de discretion' the motif of the neon light that recurs a number of times, acquiressymbolic significance. During the woman's discussionwith Andre about their son, Philippe, the neon light outsidetheir window flashesfrom red to green(p. 31). As the woman comes to realise how things have changed,that shehas cherishedillusions, she sits in a cafe `les yeux blessespar la cruelle lumiere de neon' (p. 41). The sun is also cruel. Just as she is unable to enjoy her leisure time onceall her time is leisure time, the woman prefers the filtered light of the sun through the blinds: `il m'aveugle si je l'affronte dann 30 sa crudite torride' (p. 58) Light aswell as darknessis associatedwith blindness and 30The harshness light underlined here, of recalls the image Laurenceapplies to her husband: `auprbsde Jean-Charlesil est toujours midi: une lumibre dgaleet crue' (Les Belles Images, p. 59). 109 failure to comprehend.As she facesup to the reality of her relationship with Andre, the long climb in the sun symbolisesthe painful struggle to self awareness:`Le soleil me les [... ] (p. 70). blessait [... ]. La lumiere les tempes yeux me vrillait In contrastto bright light, the dimmer light of the setting sun and moonlight are j'aimais `Des depicted They in ont text. the chosesque as gifts: are connotedpositively disparu.Beaucoupd'autres m'ont ete donnees.Hier soir, je remontaisle boulevard Raspail et le ciel etait cramoisi [...]' (p. 17). (Significantly `les arbrescachaientle for ) They d'une are unanticipated,unsought pleasures: enseigneau neon'. rougeoiement `Clairs de lure et couchersde soleil, odeur de printemps mouille, de goudron chaud, lueurs et saisons,j'ai connu des instants au pur eclat de diamant; mais toujours sansles in Andre The (p. 58). takes with place woman's reconciliation avoir sollicites' by tone the a apparently reinforced romantic moonlight, a conventional romantic setting, 31: `La lone brillait ainsi que la petite etoile qui from Aucassin Nicolette et quotation 1'escortefidelement et une grandepaix est descendueen moi' (pp. 79-80). Shetakes baignes de lone' (p. 80). de de in `des tuiles, toits clair gazing at gratuitouspleasure However, the moonlight suggeststhat the woman is failing to seeher situation clearly. It is as if shehas failed to absorbthe lessonof her experience,to take in the messagethat things change.Her words here are a direct echo of her words at the very beginning of the story: `Le monde se cree sousmes yeux dansun eternel present;je m'habitue si vite A ses visages qu'il ne me parait pas changer' (p. 11); `La perpetuelle jeunesse du monde donnaient `Et (p. haleine' 17); tient une et cette permanence me cette renaissance en me impressiond'eternite. La terre me semblait fraiche comme aux premiers Ageset cet 31Phil Powrie discussesthe significance of this quotation and the unintentional irony produced by the comic context of Aucassinet Nicolette in Rereading BetweenTheLines, pp. 323-24. His argument is ambiguous;although the irony may be unintentional on the part of the character/narrator, there is no evidenceto suggestthat it is unintentional on the part of the implied author. It would not be inconsistentfor Simone de Beauvoir to undercut the reconciliation betweenthe woman and Andre. 110 instant se suffisait' (p. 80). The woman's belief in permanencyand perpetual 32 juvenescenceis unshaken. Imagesof light and the moon reappearin `Monologue'. Significantly, Murielle has drawn her curtains againstthe bright Christmaslights. Shetells how she clung to the je `[... ] death: Sylvie's the n'osais plus sortir the sun after walls and avoided shadowof de chez moi je me faufilais le long desmurs le soleil me clouait au pilori' (pp. 112-13), in by The being if the symbolic role a special sun. moon plays accused as she were `Monologue'. Murielle identifies with the moon. Traditionally a feminine symbol and a lost in it takes this on connotations of purity and story also symbol of madness, innocence.`Je1'aimaisla lune eile me ressemblait;et ils l'ont salie comme ils salissent tout c'etait affreux cesphotos; une pauvrechosepoussiereuseet grisätre que n'importe is Murielle too fouler (p. 89). the shares moon's victim status,she aux pieds' qui pourra trampled underfoot: `une femme seuleils se croient tout permis c'est si lache les gens Murielle, (p. 93). But, ils to etes ä she,unlike terre according vous pietinent' quand vous the moon, remains pure and innocent: `J'etais propre pure intransigeante' (p. 89); `je from is different (p. 105). She blanche' `je (p. 90); trop trop suis propre suis propre' 106). (p. il blanc: le blanc. `je Pauvre est seul au monde' merle everyoneelse: suis merle The purity of white is opposedto the black and dirt of guilt that Murielle projects onto others. Violent, cruel imagespredominatein all three texts. Different clustersof these imagesmediatethe suffering of madness.They are hyperbolic. Many of the images in L'Invitee Violence far have where and are common a edge. pain so violent considered imagesforeground biting, tearing, burning and squeezing.Violent imagesalso 32This cluster of imagesof positively connotedlight could equally be placed with the clusters of positive imagestreatedat the end of this chapter;the evocation of glittering moments and the womans feelings of plenitude and well-being, together with the fact that the reconciliation takes place in an elevated position, are details that cut acrossthe imagescollected together as clustersof `happy' imagery. 111 characteriseLes Belles Images. Strangulation:`1'horreurprend Laurenceä la gorge, 1'horreurde ce qui s'estpasseen Dominique pendantcesquelquesinstants,de ce qui se passeen ce moment.' (p. 124). Murder: Moi aussij'etais possedeepar cetteenfant que la musiquepossedait.Cet instant passionnen'aurait pas de fm. La petite danseusene grandirait pas; pendant 1'eterniteeile tournerait sur eile- memeet je la regarderais.[...] Petite condamneeä mort, affreusemort sanscadavre.La vie allait l'assassiner.Je pensaisä Catherine qu'on etait en train d'assassiner. (Les Belles Images,p. 158.) Laurencerealiseswhat the treatmentshehas agreedto meansfor Catherine.( `Sous pretexte de guerir Catherine[...] on allait la mutiler' p. 159.) Cure is mutilation. Rape: `[...] discuter en public le cas de Catherine.Une trahison, un viol' (p. 173). In `L'Age de discretion' a violent image of strangulationis usedto describethe woman's repressionof fond memoriesof her son: `Tant de souvenirsemouvants, boulversants,delicieux se levaient en moi. Je leur tordrais le cou' (p. 37). Torture, a key image in L'Invitee, (in the trio `leur amour ne leur servait qu'ä se torturer les uns les autresp. 397), is picked up again in La Femmerompue. Murielle in `Monologue' fantasisesabout telling her son how Tristan has tortured and hit her (p. 93) and complains of `deja cinq ans de ce supplice' (p. 106). It is as if she is being killed slowly and painfully: `J'ai mal j'ai trop mal ils me tuent ä petit feu' (p. 118). She imagines taking her revenge,forcing God to do her will so that she can enjoy her sadistic pleasure:`Eux tous ils setordront Bansles flammes de 1'envieje les regarderairötir et gemir je rirai je rirai [...]' (p. 118). This image is reminiscent of imagesof burning and hell in L'Invitee which are associatedwith Francoise's shameand suffering when her relationship with Gerbertis discoveredby Xaviere. Monique accusesMaurice of torture: `On m'a envoyeechez le psychiatre,on m'a fait reprendredes forces avant de m'assener 112 le coup definitif. C'est comme cesmedecinsnazis qui ranimaient les victimes pour Tortionnaire! (p. lui 241). les Je ä torturer. ai crie: «Nazi! »' qu'on recommence In L'Invitee, Francoise'semotional and physical suffering was evokedby images images in is One later fiction biting burning, the tearing, major series of stabbing. and of to do with sharpness,cutting, stabbingand breaking. A recurring image is of splintered, `Ah! is in Laurence images. Dominique As throes the of anguish, exclaims: shattered toutes les imagesont vole en eclats,et il ne serajamais possible de les raccommoder' (p. 124). When Laurencegoesto seethe psychiatrist who is treating Catherine,we read: `J'etaissur la defensive:herisseede fils de fer barbeles' (p. 171). The pain of Laurence's `Pointe feu le de ä is by images travers thoughts stabbing: of suggested and emotions Les Belles Images final (p. ). 135). In Anxiete, the of when chapter remords' coeur. Laurencetakesto her bed theseimagesgathermomentumas her breakdownand pain ideas, language. They Laurence to to are and realisesthat climax. related words reach a her holiday with her father is almost over and that shehas not got to know him any better: `cettepenseequeje retenaisdepuis...quand?m'a soudaintranspercee'(p. 167). Then, [...] terrasseepar une galopaded'imageset de mots qui defilaient dans sa tete, se battant entre eux comme des kriss malais dansun tiroir ferme (si on louvre, tout est en ordre). Elle ouvre le tiroir. Je suis tout simplementjalouse. [...] Le tiroir est referme, les kriss se battent. (Les Belles Images,p. 179.) When Laurencenamesher pain: `J'ai ete decue.Le mot la poignarde' (p. 179). One of the most violent and disturbing imagesin Les Belles Images is the metaphorfor from her image Catherine, down/ the preventing seeing; of mutilating nailing protecting/ `lui les if her Laurence she should clouer wonders paupieres?'. The image shut eyelids; 33 is of a sharpnail piercing a child's eyes vivid and repellent 33There is a link here with the cluster of imagesrelated to `not seeing' discussedearlier. 113 We have seenthat light can be painful. The action of light is associatedwith `Le forehead: discretion' de the `L'Age In the woman's sun pierces metal and cutting. in `La is image Femme Cutting (p. 70). les that tempes' an recurs soleil me vrillait de `Les Monique's premiers mensonges to and present: past pain, rompue' evoke Lucienne et de Colette m'ont scie bras et jambes' (p. 134) finds a direct echo in: `On me Monique's fines' (p. 141). The dents le tres of remnants scie aux scie coeur avec une hope are representedmetaphorically as sharp,painful splinters: `Ah! cesechardes d'espoir qui de temps en temps me traversentle coeur, plus douloureusesque le desespoirmeme' (p. 197). In a Gothic image Monique seesherself as a characterin one her heart: knife Poe's to tortured, tales, trapped penetrate about and a of Je penseä la nouvelle de Poe: les murs de fer qui se rapprochent,et le pendule en forme de couteauoscille au-dessusde mon Coeur.A certainsmomentsil s'arrete, de il jamais Il ma peau. centimetres quelques qu'ä ne remonte. n'est plus mais ('La Femmerompue', p. 242.34 After a conversationwith Diana aboutNoellie, a sort of `characterassassination', Monique imagines: `ca ressemblaitä un envoütementmagique: lä oü on plante des epingles, la rivale seramutilee, defiguree,et l'amant verra sesplaies hideuses' (p. 154). Cruel words are so many pins stuck in Noellie's image/ effigy. Monique herself is identified with a bull pierced by banderillas(barbeddarts): 'Avant d'en venir ä un aveu 35 le (p. fatigue 184) When shewakes il taureau' complet, m'a «fatiguee»comme on 36 from her nightmaresshe is broken, `brisee' (p. 193) 34Poe, Edgar Allen, `The Pit and the Pendulum', (first published in `The Gift', 1843), in Tales of Mystery and Imagination, new edn, London: Dent, 1993,pp. 239-53. (Translatedinto French by Charles Baudelaire as `Le Puits et le Pendule' in Nouvelles Histoires Extraordinaires, OeuvresCompletes, Paris: Louis Conard, 1933,pp. 117-38.) 35The role of the banderillero (bullfighter) is to tire the bull by thrusting banderillas (barbed darts) into its neck. 36Theseclustersof violent imagesthat concretisemental suffering as physical pain intersectwith clusters of imagesrelating to the body (seelater). 114 Violence and cruelty recur too in incidents of self harm that typify madness. Xaviere's deliberateburning of herself in L'Invitee was discussedin the last chapter. Murielle pinches herself to make sureshe exists (p. 111) and hits her headagainstthe `Ah! j'ai fort in je me suis fete le despair trop and anger: cogne wall a paroxysm of cranec'est sur eux qu'il faut cogner.La tete contre les murs non non je ne deviendrai pas folle [...]' (p. 118). In related images,the `double vision' of the woman in `L'Age de discretion' is presentedas the result of a blow on the head,and in `La Femmerompue' Monique's being trappedin her obsession,trying to understandwhy this is happeningto her, is suggstedin the image of her knocking her head againstthe walls of a dead-end (p. 223). Xaviere escapedfrom the pain of her existenceby smelling ether,Dominique in Les Belles Images and all the women protagonistsin La Femmerompue abuse alcohol and/ or drugs. In all three books, violent, cruel imagery epitomisesthe acute suffering of madness. As the woman protagonistsin Simonede Beauvoir's fiction face madnessand their personality disintegrates,they searchhopelesslyfor a senseof who they are, a senseof identity. Imagesare closely relatedto the question of identity and the self. Mirrors/ imagesthrow into questionthe distinction betweenthe real and the imaginary and delusional. In Les Belles Images,as in L'Invitee, mirrors, reflections, images,and the gazeof others form a densenetwork of symbolisation. The text is a `jeu de miroirs'. Laurencewonders: `Derriere les imagesqui virevoltent dansles miroirs, qui se cache? Peut-etrepersonnedu tout' (p. 17). Imagesare associatedwith `illusion' (p. 33), `mirage' (p. 33), `faux' (p. 108), `mensonges'(p. 168), 'disillusions' (p. 168), and ultimately `rien' as Laurencelosesher senseof identity: `Jen'etais pas une image; mais pas autre chosenon plus: rien' (p. 170). Laurence'slooking at herself in a mirror punctuatesthe text. In a bar with Lucien sheobservesherself: `bans la glace eile sejette 115 delicatement jolie d'oeil. Une femme gaie, un peu capricieuse,un peu coup un Pour Jean-Charles ca Lucien eile est plaisait. me voit. me mysterieuse,c'est ainsi que de beaucoup faux Mais ä limpide. C'est Agreable loyale, oui. aussi. regarder, efficace, femmessont plus belles' (p. 108). Again when she is out shoppingfor Christmas presentswith Jean-Charles: Elle incline la tete pour qu'il puissede nouveauassujettir le collier: parfaite image du couple qui s'adoreencoreapresdix ans de marriage. Il achetela paix conjugale, les joies du foyer, l'ententel'amour; et la fierte de soi. Elle se contempledans la glace. je Buisfolle dejoie. d'insister: Mon tu as eu raison cheri, (Les Belles Images,pp. 140-41.) At the Chrismasparty, dancing with Dufrene, Laurenceacceptshis compliments but: `Elle s'apercoitdansune glace. [...] Elle setrouve quelconque' (p. 143). In the final lines herself looks in L'Invitee, Francoise in Laurence, at the of a way reminiscent novel, of in the mirror as she determineshow shewill go on: 'Laurence brossesescheveux, eile jeux faits, les dans Pour d'ordre sont pense-t-elleen moi son visage. remet un peu leur les image les Mais traits tires. chance' auront enfants son un pale, peu regardant (p. 183). Laurencewho until this point has lacked an inner conviction of who she is, has her find her In in Laurence in her to that self. others see an attempt reflection the sought final gesture,it is as though Laurencetruly seesher/ self for the first time. Others also act as mirrors throughout Les Belles Images. It is in their eyes that Laurenceseesher image, her reflection and searchesfor her self. Thesemirrors can be false reflectors. She usesLucien as a mirror: `Et puffssous son regard eile se sent ä laisse hornme: On ä Precieuse: tient tenir avoir, eile aussi. on eile se croit un precieuse. illusion de liberte, des (p. 33). d'imprevu, ä We de ä ou mirages' soi, une une certain Laurence'sprecarioussenseof self meansthat sheis easily unsettledby reflections of herself. Threatenedby the intimacy his love holds out, the image of herself she finds in 116 Lucien's eyes is almost unbearable:`Il la regardeavec sesyeux oü brille d'un eclat is insoutenable image' 61). It if looks (p. Lucien too closely and seestoo as son presque much. Similarly, Laurenceis troubled by the honest gazeof her daughterCatherine, `cet impitoyable regard des enfantsqui nejouent pas le jeu' (p. 29). She is afraid of what Brigitte's `Debout devant in her is of especially aware gaze: will see and moi, others Brigitte m'examinait, sanseffronterie, mais avecune franchecuriosite. J'etais un peu gene. Entre adultes,on ne se regardepasvraiment. Ces yeux lä me voyaient' (p. 53). Laurenceis also unsettledby Mona's gaze;Laurencehas shown her round her home and as she leaves, `eile jette autour d'elle un dernier regard que Laurencedechiffre mal: en tont cas ce n'est pas de 1'envie' (p. 70). Dominique consults her mirror, the gazeof others,in desperation:`Dominique s'approchedu miroir. [...] Dans le miroir Laurenceexaminesa mere. La parfaite, l'ideale image d'une femme qui vieillit bien. Qui vieillit. Cette image-lä, Dominique la refuse. Elle flanche, pour la premiere fois' (p. 16). Sheis horrified, panicked at the idea of ageing.And when Gilbert leavesher shetells Laurence: `Meme avec un nom une femme sanshomme, c'est une demi-ratee,une especed'epave...Je vois bien comment les gensme regardent:crois-moi ce n'est plus du tout comme avant' (pp. 142-43). (One of her vivid childhood memoriesis of being staredat. Shetells Laurence: `Tu ne sais d'etre des toisee par copinesaux cheveuxbien laves [...]' pp. 21-2.) At ce que c'est pas the end of the novel, Laurenceappropriatesthe power of the gazeto which she has been subjected:`Elle regarde[Jean-Charles],droit dansles yeux, il detournela tete' (p. 182). Laurencehas defeatedJean-Charles,her gazesignifies her triumph. Image is opposedto real in the text. Laurencelives her life at a distance,with a senseof unreality, as if she were in a glossy photograph.This was true during her childhood and adolescence.It is also true in the present. Sitting at her desk at home in 117 the evening, she imagines herself and Jean-Charlesare figures in an advertisement.The boundarybetweenreality and image/ imagination becomesblurred, Laurenceis line invents in (p. 21). `Regardattentif du man, the story she observerand participant joli sourire de la jeune femme. On lui a souventdit qu'elle avait un joli sourire: eile le into her image: `Elle Dominique ete levres' (p. 22). toujours made an a une sur ses sent image. Dominique ya veille [...]' (p. 21). Jean-Charlesalso reducesher and her daughtersto an image: `[...] furieux si nous derangeons1'imagequ'il se fait de nous, foutant de femme fille, jeune se ce que nous sommespour de bon' exemplaires, petite (p. 133). Early in the novel, Laurenceidentifies with Midas, the king whose touch turned everything, including his daughter,into gold: `Tout ce qu'elle touche se change 37 bring fords By (p. 21) image' to to the the the up strength she refuse end of novel, en Catherinein the sameway that shewas brought up (p. 132) and tells Jean-Charles: `Elever un enfant, ce n'est pas en faire une belle image...' (p. 182). For all their associationwith the unreal, imagesare powerful, powerful even to the point of devastation.Laurence,prostratein her room, `terasseepar une galopade d'images et de mots' (p. 179), determines,`je recapitulerai ce voyage image par image, mot par mot' (p. 153). As shereviews the trip and eventssince her return, painful imagesthreatento engulf her. Sheremembersthe family dinner when she felt excluded and alone: Et de nouveaufond sur eile l'image qu'elle refoule avec le plus de violence, qui surgit des que savigilence sereläche:Jean-Charles, papa,Dominique, souriant comme sur une affiche americainevantant une marque de oat-meal. Reconcilies, s'abandonnantensembleaux gaietesde la vie de famille. (Les Belles Images,p. 175.) 37This recalls Elizabeth in L'Invitee: `C'6tait un sort qui lui avait etejete: eile changeaittout ce qu'elle touchait en carton-pate' (p. 272). 118 This image crystallises for Laurence,her abandonmentand utter isolation: `Elle seule est differente; rejetee; incapablede vivre; incapabled'aimer' (p. 176). It is at this point in the text that she experiencesa feeling of total collapse. The imagery of mirrors, reflections and imagesthat forms such a densenetwork in Les Belles Images is also found in La Femmerompue. In this collection too, these imagesencapsulatethe women protagonists' unstable senseof self and the fragile boundary betweenreality and delusion. When the woman in `L'Age de discretion' wakes from heavy sleep,it is the reality aroundher that seemschimerical, dreamlike: it is `l'envers illusoire et chatoyantdu neantoü j'avais plonge' (p. 57). It is as if she finds herself through the looking glass. 8 Reflections and echoesare connotedpositively at first: Reflets, echos,se renvoyant ä l'infini: j'ai decouvertla douceur d'avoir derriere long un passe.Je n'ai pas le temps de me le raconter,mais souventä moi l'improviste je 1'apercoisen transparenceau fond du moment present;il lui donne sa couleur, sa lumiere comme les rochesou les sablesserefletent dansle chatoiementde la mer. (`L'Age de discretion', p. 17.) Later, the woman's optimism is replacedby disillusionment: Je m'etais plus ou moins imagine que ma vie, derriere moi, etait uii paysagedans lequel je pourrais me promenerä ma guise, decouvrantpeu ä peu sesmeandreset sesreplis. Non. [...] de loin en loin, ressuscitentdes imagesmutilees, pälies, aussi abstraitesque celles de ma vieille histoire de France;elles se decoupent arbitrairement, sur un fond blanc. (`L'Age de discretion', p. 65. ) Transparencyand movement give way to lifeless, two-dimensional pictures. In contrast, an image of Philippe is real and painful: `Philippe... avec quelle douleurje le regrettais! J'ecartais son image, eile me faisait venir les larmes aux yeux' (p. 64). Like Laurence, the woman can be hurt by images. 38SeeL'Invitee, p. 239. Francoiseleavesher hospital room for the first time: `c'etait presqueaussi 6trangeque de pen&trerä travers une glace' (p. 239). 119 In `Monologue', Murielle is preoccupiedwith her image. She fantasisesabout la `la life her telling the verite vraie', world story, writing 39 and about how otherswould dans les imagines her (p. 90). She [sa] [son] `en vitrines' et photo nom voyant gripe `Je je les donnerai Tristan triumph: chez couturiers retournerai as a reconciliation with des soireesdes cocktails on passerama photo dans Vogueen grand decolletemes seins [... ]' baises de la Murielle? Its salement » seront ne craignent personne.«Tu as vu photo (p. 97). Murielle's image/ photo is one more weapon in her all consuming quest for it As be be in be She to to the to the seen rehabilitated. pictures, woman wants revenge. is, photos have the power to hurt her. At a harrowing point in Murielle's monologue, directly: daughter by her is tears to she addresses whom photos of she moved J'ouvre 1'album de photographiesje regardetoutes les Sylvie! ce visage d'enfant fille de dix-sept la d'adolescente. A hagard ans qu'on m'a ce visage secret un peu des Tu la je dis les daps les ete meres. meilleure yeux yeux: «J'ai assassinee m'aurais remercieeeplus tard.» ('Monologue', p. 114.) Murielle's monologue itself acts as a distorting mirror where values are inverted and in best herself image Murielle the to as mother of attempts constructa positive where the world. In `La Femmerompue' Monique losesher senseof self and with it her image: Un homme avait perdu son ombre. Je ne saisplus ce qui lui arrivait, mais c'etait terrible. Moi, j'ai perdu mon image.Je ne la regardaispas souvent; mais, ä l'arriere-plan eile etait lä, teile que Maurice 1'avait peinte pour moi. [...] II fait noir, je ne me vois plus. ('La Femme rompue', p. 238. ) Shehas dependedon Maurice to know who sheis, just as Francoisein L'Invitee 0 dependson Pierre. Ostensibly cooperatingwith her psychiatrist but almost defiantly, 39An interesting echo of the words of Louise in Les Belles imageswhen she is seekingreassurancethat her sister loves her best: `-C'est vrai? c'est vraiment vrai? ' (p. 81). aoMonique's experienceconvergeswith Francoise'sin a number of repects.Both characterslose their senseof self and wonder who they are. Monique asks,`est-cequeje sais qui je suis?' and loses her `image'. Franpoiseconcludes,`je ne suis personne' and discoversthat her face is `un masqueblanc' (p. 184), then, as her plight worsens,that `eile avait cessdd'6tre quelqu'un; eile n'avait m¬me plus de 120 Monique looks at herself in the mirror in an attemptto find herself: `«Collaborez», demandele docteur Marquet. Je veux bien. Je veux bien essayerde me retrouver. Je me Laurence's Francoise's ]' 240). Her la [... (p. devant and action recalls glace suis plante in letters Monique to When attempt make sense an old rereads gestures. corresponding love it is becomes the Maurice, that her memory of convinced she relationship with of that has replacedthe real love they had; like an echo, the auditory equivalent of a his Monique And has their things recalls, own. yet, given a ring not reflection, memory `(Oh! interrupts lament Her had been different. looks the text: si no smiles and her (p. her delirium )' 224). In je as seulement retrouvais ces regards et ces sourires! free-floating: become disembodied, have if it is deepens, as reflections, echoes crisis Ces sourires,cesregards,cesmots ils ne peuventpas avoir disparu. Its flottent dansl'appartement.Les mots souventje les entends.Une voix dit ä mon oreille, il les Les distinctement: regards, sourires, tres «Ma petite, ma cherie, mon cheri...» faut les attraperau vol, les poserpar surprisesur le visage de Maurice, et alors tout serait comme avant. ('La Femmerompue', p. 237.) In summary,in all the texts, images,reflections and echoesfigure the frail line that divides the real and the illusory and the fragility of the women's senseof self. Closely body. images the them to of of are clusters related My starting point is that the body is a metaphorfor the self and is intimately tied L'Invitee, bodies. In identity. We the onto our of our selves questions project with up body is a site of pain; as we have seen,Franroise's physical pain and emotional pain are is body The images burning, biting by tearing, stabbing. and of conflated and evoked 1 is body in The Les Belles Images La Femme too. and rompue manifestly a site of pain figure' (p. 216). Both characterswonder what others seewhen they look at them. In a moving moment in L'Invitee, Frangoiselooks to Pierre to find herself but he is looking not at Francoisebut at XaviBre. The paragraphbreak marks the blow: `Elle tourna les yeux vers Pierre, mais Pierre ne la ]' [... (p. 184). Xaviere II past regardait regardait 41It is appositethat clustersof imagesof the body in eachtext be examined in this section of my chapter as they are related to questionsof identity and overlap with imagesof mirrors and reflections. Clearly, they also intersectwith clustersof imagesthat evoke cruelty and violence (see above). 121 it importance in books is three true to say that the texts inscribe the and all of central body. It is a key elementof their imagery, their symbolic framework. Les Belles Images insofar from the texts other as it incorporatesa cluster of positive images standsout related to the body. The body can expresspleasureand through pleasureconnect Laurencewith her self, the real. When she first knew Jean-Charles:`Soudain,un soir, au retour d'une promenade,dansla voiture arretee,sa bouche sur ma bouche,cet des jours des Alors, ce vertige. pendant et semaines,je n'ai plus ete une embrassement, image, mais chair et sang,desir, plaisir' (p. 22). She experiencedthe samepowerful feelings in the early days of her relationship with Lucien: `De nouveau,il ya dix-huit feu dans le dans Lucien; mes os cette exquisedeliquescence' möis, avec mes veins, et (p. 22). The notions/ lexis associatedwith loss of self ('vertige', `feu', `deliquescence') reappearhere. It seemsas though in theseboundary softening moments,Laurence fleeting fulfilment a of her desirefor oneness,a senseof onenessshehad experienced known with her father. Indeed, shebegins to make the connection,though the idea is not j'ai `Et retrouve aussicette douceurplus secretequej'avais connuejadis, pursued: de dans la ' (p. 22). (Ultimately, tenant mon pere ou sa mienne... assiseaux pieds main Laurenceis threatenedby the intimacy that Lucien offers her. It holds out the promise of repossessinga lost closenessbut is experiencedby Laurenceas engulfing, like an overpowering perfume in a closedbedroom: `la voix nostalgique [de Lucien] fait lever en eile comme un echo brouille de quelquechosevecujadis, dansune autre vie, ou peut-etre en ce moment sur une autreplante. C'est insinuant et pernicieux comme un parfum, la nuit, dansune chambrefermee- un parfum de narcisses'(p. 60).) Although Laurencecomplains that love making has become `lisse, hygienique, routinier' (p. 27), she continuesto enjoy sex with Jean-Charles.At Feuverolles,Laurencegoesup to their room to wait for him to join her: 122 Dans un instant Jean-Charlesseralä: eile ne veut plus penserqu'ä lui, ä son profil eclaire par la lueur dansantedes flammes. Et soudain il est lä, il la prend dans ses bras, et la tendressedevient dans les veins de Laurenceune coulee brillante, eile levres leurs joignent. de desir tandis se que chavire (Les Belles Images,p. 101.) The way imagesforeground movement and light, flames and burning is striking. More frequently the body is a sourceor expressionof pain. As Elizabeth Fallaize inscription leads [... ] [Laurence's] in it, feelings her `repression to the of so aptly puts 42 body', thus, as for Barthes,the body here is a text. Pain is associatedwith hardness in it is in L'Invitee, is L'Invitee. And the throat tightness, as as a recurring motif. and Pain is also concentratedin Laurence's chestfor emotion stops her breathing. 3 When is Gilbert has learned leave is leaves Dominique, her that to going who and who she terribly distressed,she can find no compassionfor her mother: `Quelque chosese (p. de 52). 1'empeche dans sa et respirer' poitrine convulse We have already image: `L'horreur Laurence ä la the prend gorge' (p. 124). Laurence considered violent is distressedwhen Jean-CharlesdiscussesCatherineduring a family dinner: `La gorge de Laurencese contracte.[...] Une sorte de honte 1'etouffe [...]' (p. 173). Laurenceis a her (p. la 122); its daps des `avec as crisis poitrine' reaches climax `son pierres woman corps est de pierre' (p. 176). But it is on eating, or rather the rejection of food and vomiting, that the text focuses.Thesetake on explicit symbolic significance as the text develops into inability Lack to eat and then a rejection of food an of appetite progresses. her her Laurence's through this world and of self. a rejection upset is centeredin her and 42Fallaize, TheNovels, p. 135. 43The suffocation motif in Simone de Beauvoir's fiction, recalls her words in the preface she wrote to Violette Leduc's La Bätarde, Paris: Gallimard, 1964. She saysof Leduc's texts that they might all be called L'Asphyxie: 'Vest le symbole d'un confinement plus profond: eile s'etiole dans sa peau' (p. 18). "It is not always the casethat Laurenceremainsdetachedfrom her mother's suffering. Seep. 115: `Laurencea un Can vers [Dominique]'. Shetries to comfort her, calling her `Dominique cherie'. It is true that Laurencenever calls Dominique `mother' and that she shies away from physical contact with her (seepp. 52 and 124-25),yet I cannot agreewith Brosman who assertsthat Laurencethinks of Dominique as a stranger.Simonede Beauvoir Revisited,p. 89. 123 learning he is Gilbert After that and about to reject Dominique, `Elle meeting stomach. est en sueur soudain, eile a envie de vomir' (p. 48). The following weekend `Laurencea 1'appetitcoupe' (p. 98). When shewas afraid that Lucien might leave her: `C'etait plutöt de bouche des la envies vomir' (p. 65). When she learnsthat päteuse, sordide: Dominique has written to Gilbert's new partner,Patricia, telling her about her mother's affair with Gilbert: `un spasmelui dechire l'estomac,eile vomit tout le the quelle vient d'absorber;ca ne lui etait pas arrivee depuis des annees,de vomir d'emotion. L'estomac lui her des (p. 121). After tordent spasmes encore' quarrel with Jean-Charles`(eile vide, a dit quelle avait mangeavec les enfants,eile ne pouvait rien avaler)' (p. 137). It is after the trip to Greecethat Laurence's anorexiais exacerbated.It is relatedto her is discussed During dinner Catherine the and when no one, not when powerlessness. even her father, supportsher, `Laurences'estobligee ä manger,mais c'est alors quelle a eu le premier spasme.Elle se savait vaincue' (p. 175). Three days later, Laurencelearns that her father and mother are going to live togetheragain: `Le soir eile avait vomi son diner; eile ne s'etait pas levee le lendemain;ni le jour suivant [...]' (p. 179). Prostrate,in her darkenedroom, Laurenceconfronts her pain, going back over the trip to Greece, `image par image, mot par mot' (p. 153). Her body is the site of her pain: `Je n'ai pas de mots pour me plaindre ou pour regretter.Mais ce noeud dansma gorge m'empechede (p. Emotional 153). pain is reified. When sheremembersBrigitte and the manger' friendship her entourageseemsdeterminedto deprive Catherineof, `le noeud se resserre dans [sa] gorge' (p. 172). Sherepeatsthe acceptedwisdom that shewill soon get over it, but at the idea that Catherinewill not be allowed to spendEasterwith her friend, she contradicts this analysis: Done A Päques - eile sera guerie, bien sOr, c'est l'affaire de quelques jours, on se degoüte de manger pendant quelques jours et forcement ca finit par se tasser ils emmeneront Catherine i Rome. L'estomac de Laurence se crispe. Elle ne pourra peut-etre pas manger avant longtemps. 124 (Les Belles Images,p. 175.) Laurenceseemsto derive some satisfactionfrom the idea that she may not be able to eat for sometime. Her passivity is conspicuous.Her sister,Marthe, interrupts Laurence's thoughts and persuadesher to try to eat some soup (`un bouillon'), she has made: Pour leur faire plaisir Laurencel'avale. Deux jours qu'elle n'a pas mange.Et apres?puisqu'elle ea pas faim. Leurs regardsinquiets. Elle a vide la tasse,et son coeur se met ä battre, eile se couvre de sueur.Justele temps de se precipiter ä la salle de bains et de vomir; comme avant-hier et le jour d'avant. Quel soulagement! Elle voudrait se vider plus entierementencore,se vomir tout entiere. Eile se rince la bouche, sejette sur son lit epuisee,calmee. [...] Maintenant quelle a vomi eile se sent bien. (Les Belles Images,pp. 168-69.) Laurence's vomiting signifies a rejection of her self; sheis emptying herself, ejecting 45 her self. Moreover, her repeateddenialsthat she is making herself ill deliberately, her 46 for do her idea be to that the resist, not ring true. a way eating may of not rejection She comesto seeher refusal to eat as an expressionof her revolt; she refusesto seethe doctor, to be manipulated:`Ils la forceront ä manger,ils lui feront tout avaler; tout quoi? tout ce qu'elle vomit, sa vie, celle desautresavec leurs faussesamours, leurs histoires d'argent,leurs mensonges.Its la gueriront de sesrefus, de son desespoir' (p. 180). Her leads, life her the she a rejection of the of rejection vomiting expressesmetaphorically fate does lives. Laurence in Catherine to the as same not want suffer world which she herself: `Qu'a-t-onfait de moi? Cette femme qui n'aime personne,insensible aux beautes 7 de femme je (p. 181). Shetells du monde, incapablememe pleurer, cette que vomis' 45Laurence's refusal to eat doesnot appearto be an instanceof anorexianervosawhich is characterised by a refusal to maintain a normal body weight and a distortion in the perception of body shapeand size (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth ed., Washington DC: American Psychiatric Association, 1994,p. 539). For an interesting discussionof anorexia nervosa and gender, seeEvans, Fits and Starts, pp. 229-33. 46SeeLes Belles images,pp. 170 and 175. 47Laurence echoesElizabeth in L'Invitee here. Elizabeth tells Francoise`[Claude] s'imagine qu'il peut me faire tout avaler' (p. 58). 125 je C'est de `Je me et qui me rendez malade, vous Jean-Charles: ne veux pas medecin. (p. 181). je pas' cederai vous toute Beuleparce que ne guerirai In `L'Age de discretion' too, emotional pain is inscribed in the woman's body. The terms usedto describeher pain are hyperbolic. After her quarrel on the phone with The (p. 35). brisees' jambes les je tremblante, Philippe, me suis assise,en sueur, in Belles Images, Les in L'Invitee reappears and present suffocation motif, so common here. The woman writes: `Toute la nuit la rancunem'a etouffee' (p. 37). Her emotional illness, is Andre bitterness expressed metaphorically as a physical against upset/ evoquant `A in illness L'Invitee: Francoise's son visage, chaque seconde, remindful of forge dans Comme voix, devastait. j'attisais oü on ces maladies une rancune qui me sa les dechirant inspiration vous et cependant poumons, vous chaque sa propre souffrance, etes oblige de respirer' (p. 41). Pain makes her body stiff and hard. When Andre douleur, `Cette ce things through cette talk they colere, she refuses: suggests is body Her (p. 42). briseraient' les de contracts, mots s'y mon Coeur, raidissement hai, le d'Andre, `Le cette contradiction aime, autre, meme, un sa voix; visage paralysed: de dans dans espece une descendait mon corps; mes nerfs, mes muscles se contractaient 48 (p. 45). [sa] Bans fer barre de is `cette Her (p. 44) poitrine' tetanos' pain In `La Femmerompue' the body is presentin the symbolism of the text in a is difficulty linked Nevertheless, still with emotion painful powerful more muted way. in breathing. When Monique fords out about Maurice's seeingNoellie, her angerwakes her early and she leavesthe flat, obsessedby the words `il m'a menti': `Jene voulais pas In (p. 133). la je »' souffrir, ne souffrais pas,mais rancuneme suffoquait: «Il m'a menti! Monique's far but understated, the more to other women protagonists' a way similar 48The reconciliation is presentedas a loosening: `de nouveaunous pouvions nous parler et quelque chose (p. 79). dinou6 en moi' s'est 126 During is as pain. a weekendaway metaphorically physical emotional pain represented d'aigu: bonheur `j'ai Maurice, Monique chose senti au coeur quelque un says: with douloureux tant il est devenuinsolite' (p. 161). Even happinessis painful. Like Laurence,Monique suffers from loss of appetite: `Parfoisj'avale un toast, pour avoir la `Dimanche decembre. '). (p. 193. 6 Her les bouchees Mais weight pas' ne passent paix. loss is emblematic of her suffering (Diana: `Oh! comme vous avez maigri! ' p. 233). Not until months later doesMonique note in her diary, `j'arrive ä manger un peu' (p. 239. `23fevrier'). More foregroundedin the text is Monique's constantbleeding that lasts sometwenty-three days.The bleeding is noted in a restrainedtone, gathering its jours from `J'ai ä quinze plus saigner ce matin, reiteration: recommence symbolic power tot queje ne l'aurais dü' (p. 233. `31janvier. '). It is a metaphor for her loss of self, analogousto Laurence'svomiting: `Je continue ä saigner.Si ma vie pouvait s'echapper de moi sansquej'aie le moindre effort ä faire pour ra! ' (p. 235. `6fevrier, puis sans date.'); `Je continue ä saigner.J'ai peur' (p. 237). Monique's self is seepingaway. Not for `L'hemorragie do diary February the the twenty-third s'est we read: entry until of arretee' 49 (p. 239) In `Monologue', the body is an expressionof Murielle's hurt, the site where she projects her anger and disappointment. And for Murielle, the body equates with Murielle's is images Sex to obsessively sexuality. monologue returns of sex. perverted consistently associatedwith dirt and disgust. The text is as much an instanceof in filth), dung/ (morbid pleasure as a caseof coprolalia (obsessiveuse of coprophilia is for `Monologue' its language). the shocking obscenity and violence of obscene language.The whole text is hyperbolic, excessive.It confutes Murielle's claim to have 49This metaphorof bleeding as loss of self is taken up and developedby Marie Cardinal in Les Mots pour le dire, Paris: Grasset,1975.Her heroine's bleeding stops as she rebuilds her personality/ self in psychotherapy. 127 je je jamais barree ices `ca suis ne pense plus sex: ne m'interesse plus renounced Sex Murielle (p. 105). lä the seessex story. permeates meme en reve' choses pas lens is filtered her One through the sordid of earliest childhood memories everywhere. that distorts all Murielle's perceptions;sheremembersone fourteenth of July: `Papa feu je le d'artifice la epaule Nanard et grande restais qu'il voie moi pour sur son perchait de juste la hauteur de leur daps l'odeur de leurs ä terre sexe entre corps sexe pressee par cette foule en chaleur [...]' (p. 88). Sex is animal. Murielle is deprived of the light/ joy/ excitementthat her brother is lifted up to see.Murielle's disgust is focusedon her her She accuses of incest with Nanard: `Elle le prenait Bansson lit le matin je mother. lei entendait se chatouiller [...] eile sebaladait ä travers son bordel de chambreä moitie Apoil dans son peignoir de soie blanchetache et troue de brülures de cigarettesil se collait ä sescuisses' (pp. 88-9); `quandeile faisait semblantde se doucherc'etait pour montrer son cul ä Nanard. Son fils son gendre:ca donneenvie de degobiller' (p. 106). Murielle is also convinced that her mother seducedMurielle's first husbandand manipulatedher into marrying him: `eile assuraitsesplaisirs et mon malheur' (p. 105). Shevisualisesthe sex act in violent terms, preoccupiedby animality and filth: C'est eile qui l'a harponneau cours de gymnastiqueet eile se fest envoyecrado comme eile etait ca n'avait Tiende ragoütantde se la farcir mais avec les hommes qui lui etaientpassessur le corps eile devait en connaitredestrues et des machins c'etait le genreä se mettre ä cheval sur le mecje la vois d'ici c'est tellement degueuxla facon dont les bonnesfemmesbaisent. ('Monologue', p. 105.) Murielle is reluctant to namethe female genitalia although shemight have chosenfrom an available repertoire of obsceneterms. Instead,they figure as an empty space,a filthy gap: `fette momie ca donne le frisson d'imaginer son entrejambeseile degouline de parfums mais par en dessouseile sent [...] eile ne se lavait pas [...]' (pp. 105-6). The term `momie' addsovertonesof putrefaction. The sameemphasison animality and filth 128 in infidelity: `Il dansait Murielle's Albert's Nina ä of sexe recollection avec sexe recurs le dessous de etalait sentait en odeur ses gros seins parfum mais on une eile eile puait bidet et lui qui tremoussaitil bandait commeun cerf (p. 91). Such is Murielle's in imagines is in in the the the the she present as scene party obsession, past reenacted the flat upstairs: Je les vois d'ici c'est trop degueuxils se frottent Fun contre 1'autresexeä sexeca les fait mouiller les bonnesfemmeselles se rengorgentparce que le type a la queueen l'air. Et chacunseprepareä cocufier son meilleur ami satres chere arnie ils le feront cette nuit meme dansla lalle de bains meme pas allongesla robe retrousseesur les fessessuantesquandon ira pisser on marcheradansle foutre comme chez Rose la nuit de mon eclat. ('Monologue', p.91.) Mizrielle's hurt and senseof betrayal is evident in her bitter irony, `satres chere arnie'. In Murielle's delusion, Sylvie's suicide must also be linked in someway to what she defines as pervertedsex. She suspectsSylvie of having a sexualrelationship with her S° teacher,a woman, conjecturesthat shemay have beenpregnantor that `eile etait tombee dansles pattesd'une gouine ou sur une bandede debauchesquelqu'un abusait d'elle [...]' (p. 113). For Murielle, the `salehistoire' behind the suicide can only be sex. Murielle's needto sleepand the fact that shemust take her sleepingdrug in suppository form make up a constantrefrain in the story. The imagesusedto express this are sexualand obscene.Sheaccusesthe doctor of sadism: `Jene peux pas me bourrer comme un canon' (p. 88). This is an appropriation and reversalof a phallic image. Murielle's obsessivethoughts of sex are matchedby her equally obsessivefears of contamination,abhorrenceof dirt associatedwith physicality. Sheaffirms her purity in the face of accusationsthat sheherself is corrupt: `ignoble' (p. 89); `«Tu as de la boue dansla tete.»' (p. 106); 'Ils me couvraient de boue [...]' (p. 114). Risks of soSee`Monologue', La Femmerompue, pp. 98 and, especially, 113. 129 contamination, infection are everywhere;Murielle's thoughts slip naturally from being sickenedto being sick: Its me rendentmaladej'ai la bouchepäteuseet ca m'epouvante ces deux petits boutons sur ma cuisse.Je fais attentionje ne mangeque desproduits de regime des de des il tout tripotent gens qui avec meme mains plus ou moins ya mais l'air ä l'hygiene terre sur cette est pollue pas seulement propres ca n'existe pas causedes autos et des usinesmais ä causede cesmillions de bouchessalesqui l'avalent et le recrachentdu matin au soir; quandje pensequeje baigne dansleur haleinej'ai envie de fuir au fond du desert;comment se garderun corps propre dansun monde aussi degueuxon est contaminepar tous les pores de la peauet pourtantj'etais sainenetteje ne veux pas qu'ils m'infectent. ('Monologue', p. 95.) Sherefusesto travel: `Des draps douteux des nappessalesdormir dansla sueurdes autresdansleur crassemanger avec des couvertsmal laves il ya de quoi attraperdes is la les font (p. 107). The sordid: verole et odeurs vomir' ou me picturesque morpions `de la crassequi pue du linge saledestrognons de chou' (p. 107). Excrement is the faeces (p. in foulness her Murielle: that corpse covered preoccupies shepictures ultimate 96); shetells othersthat `ils pataugentdans la merde' (p. 106); `les femmesc'est toutes des furriers' (p. 106); it is an obstacleto her being away from home: je me constipe ä les la le fraternitb de la bloque tout chiottes oü que monde chie parce ca me mort net; is (p. Her 107). tres all contamination obsessionwith peu pour moi' merde encompassing:`Si j'etais la terre ca me degoüteraittoute cette vermine sur mon dos je la secouerais'(p. 103). It is not surprisingthat Murielle's fixation should be accompanied by compulsive cleaning. She is concernedthat Tristan and Francis will messup her lounge during their visit (p. 92) and her thoughts return automatically to her obsession: je descendraiacheterdespetits fours que Francis ecraserasur la moquette il casseraun de mes bibelots il n'est pas dressecet enfant et maladroit comme son pere qui foutra de la cendrepartout [...]' (p. 101). For Murielle, the cleanlinessof her flat is the outward sign of the inner purity shepretendsto: `Il est impeccableen ce moment ce salon net 130 lustre brillant comme la lure d'autrefois' (p. 101). Sheand her flat are identified with the former untaintednessof the moon. Clusters of imagesrelating to ageingbodies can be found in all the texts under fiction, bodies de Simone Beauvoir's In ageing are connotednegatively, consideration. it is disgust. This distaste the case when particularly and evenrepulsion/ associatedwith 51 her She faces dread. L'Invitee, Dominique In to studies old agewith comes sexuality. her deterioration disturbed by for the eyesand she sees around signs of ageing, mirror Gilbert's in Faced (p. Her her 16). text. the with weight acquires symbolic neck neck on becomes he is Dominique the that to twenty a year old, and news marry rejection hysterical: `Elle eclatede rire, la tete renverseeen arriere, appuyeecontre le dossier du fauteuil; eile rit, eile rit, l'oeil fixe, toute blanche,et sousla peaudu cou de grosses cordessaillent, c'est soudainun cou de tres vieille femme' (p. 114). Dominique's neck condensesher ageand everything that means.It is a motif repeatedwhen Laurencegoes to her mother after Gilbert's physical abuse,when `comme 1'autrejour, la tete renversee (p. les des yeux au gonflent son cou aux cordes raidies' plafond, sanglots en arriere, 123). The idea of growing old alone horrifies her: `Vieille et seule:c'est atroce' (p. 115). It is a theme that is developpedin `L'Age de discretion' and `La Femmerompue'. The women protagonists' relationship with their ageingbodies is problematical. The woman in `L'Age de discretion' acknowledgesthat sheno longer has the sameeasy relationship with her body, and is seeminglyuntroubled by this: Et voila! Moins je me reconnaisdansmon corps,plus je me sensobligee de m'en occuper.Il est ä ma chargeet je le soigne avec un devouementennuye,comme un vieil ami un peu disgracie,un peu diminue qui aurait besoin de moi. (`L'Age de discretion', p. 21.) s' In her very stimulating article `Transgressingthe (In)cont(in)ent Boundaries:The Body in Decline' (Yale French Studies,72,1986 pp. 181-200),Elaine Marks arguesthat, in Simone de Beauvoir's writing, `sexuality emergesthrough discourseson ag[e]ing and that the uncontrollable body in decline is a body manifesting its sexuality' (p. 183). 131 Her attitude to sex is ambivalent; sheappearsto despiseIrene for being `capablede dechainements'but is forced to reassessher own situation: `La sexualitepour moi n'existe plus. J'appelais serenitecetteindifference; soudainje l'ai compriseautrement: c'est une infumite, c'est la perte d'un seas;eile me rend aveugleaux besoins,aux douleurs, auxjoies de ceux qui le possedent'(p. 27). When they quarrel over Philippe, the fact that she and Andre no longer have a sexualrelationship proves to be a further fougueuses; `[... ] jadis lit des to their making up: obstacle nous avions au reconciliations dans le desir, le trouble, le plaisir, les griefs oiseux etaient calcines;nous nous de face Pun de 1'autre, joyeux. Maintenant etions ce en neufs et prives retrouvions nous in begins (p. 48). Paris, Alone to reassesswhat growing old means the woman recours' to her. Shehas always beenflattered when people told her how young shewas; now she seesit as a double edgedcompliment, `qui annoncede penibles lendemains': `Je ne suis finie' jeune, je bien different. Bien tres suis conservee, c'est conservee, et peut-titre pas (p. 62)52 The revelation that sheis old is devastating:`Inutile. Les Grecsappelaient leurs vieillards des frelons. «Inutile frelon», se dit Hecube dansLes Troyennes.11s'agit de moi. J'etais foudroyee' (p. 63). When the woman joins Andre in Villeneuve, her down her body is hesitatingly follows fearfully, Andre transformed; awarenessof she the slopeto the pool where he swims; shedeclinesto swim, reluctant to exposeher `old woman's body' even to Andre; and when it comesto climbing back up the slope in intenseheat, she strugglesto catchher breath and make her legs obey her. Alone in her room later, sherevisesher position: J'avais dit ä Andre: «je ne vois pas ce qu'on perd ä vieillir. » Eh bien! maintenant, je voyais. J'ai toujours refuse d'envisager la vie ä la maniere de Fitzgerald comme «un processusde degradation. [...] Mon corps,je ne m'en inquietais pas. [...] Quelle illusion! [...] Mon corps me lächait. [...] [La degringolade]etait amorce.Et maintenant,ce serait tres rapide et tres lent: nous allions devenir de grands vieillards. 52In L'Invitee, the notion of well preservedwomen has pejorative overtones.Seep. 176. Yk 132 (`L'Age de discretion', pp. 71-2.) In `Monologue', Murielle's disgust at sexuality which is focussedon her mother is magnified by her mother's age.Murielle believes, in line with popular prejudice, that fifty. indulge in She imagines her after sex mother may have gigolos and no one should finds the idea of her making love repugnant.53 She is repelled at the idea of her mother's body: `fette momie ca donne le frisson d'imaginer son entrejambes [...]' (p. 105). According to Murielle's dementedlogic, her mother's age was related to the fact that shehad to palm her lover off on Murielle: `Elle etait trop vioque pour le gardereile s'est ils de moi servie ricanaient dansmon dos [...]' (p. 105). Monique is awarethat her body is ageing but is not unduly concerned.She incident in Greece happened beach that two years earlier. Maurice the remembersan on had told her: `«Achete-toi dons un maillot d'une piece.» Je sais,je savais:un peu de cellulite sur les cuisses,le ventre plus tout A fait plat. Mais je pensaisqu'il s'en fichait' (p. 191). He defendedthe right of older women to feel the sun and fresh air on their bodies and Monique felt that what shewas doing did not bother anyone; shedid not buy the one piece swim suit! She is shockedbut also somewhatdetached/indifferent when she seesherself in the mirror somemonths later: `[...] queje suis laide! que mon corps est disgracieux! Sur mes photos d'il ya deux ans,je me trouve plaisante. Sur celles de Fan dernierje n'ai pas 1'air si mal, mais ce sont des photos d'amateur. Est-ce le malheur de ces cinq mois qui m'a changee?Ou ai-je commenceä degringoler depuis longtemps dejä?' (p. 240). Monique encountersimagesof her ageingbody as shemight encounter in de `L'Age discretion' says,'comme un vieil ami un peu the woman a stranger,or, as disgracie' (p. 21). 53Dominique in Les Belles imagesbelieves she is suspectedof having gigolos (p. 178). 133 In summary,the body informs all the texts. A metaphor for the self, the body is generally a site of pain where the mental and emotional suffering of madnessare reified. Physical symptomsare badges/tokensof disintegration and loss of self. Ageing bodies in the later fiction can exemplify this process.Body imagery is hyperbolic in keeping with the intensity of the women protagonists' distress. The texture of all the books is sombre.Imagery of pain and distressforms the denseweave of the texts. Yet running through them, in the weave, is a thread of fleeting lost, imagery. images These the something a evocation of of are poignant moment of joy or of somethingout of reachand their effect is poignant. They provide the measureof the characters'presentunhappiness.Light and water are common motifs. dance in Xaviere Franroiseexperiences club: a of oneness with anunexpected sense Et brusquement,Francoisese trouva comblee,eile aussi;eile n'etait plus rien, qu'une femme noyee dansune foule, une miniscule parcelle du monde, et toute entieretenduevers cette infamepaillette blonde dont eile n'etait meme pas capable de se saisir; mais danscette abjection oü elle etait tombee,voila que lui etait donne ce qu'elle avait souhaiteen vain six mois plus tot, au sein du bonheur: cette musique,cesvisages,ceslumieres se changeaienten regret, en attente,en amour, ils se confondaientavec eile et donnaientun sensirremplacableä chaque battementde son coeur. Son bonheuravait eclate,mais il retombait tout autour d'elle en une pluie d'instants passionnes. (L'Invitee,p. 314.) Francoiseexperiencesa boundary softening moment that deepensrather than threatens her senseof self. It is a fleeting fulfilment of her desirefor oneness.Light and water figure prominently. The glittering sequin that represents the promise that Xaviere holds for Franroise is matchedby the shardsof glass,the metaphorfor Francoise's shattered happiness,catching the light as they fall like raindrops, beautiful but with the power to wound. The moment is brief. Francoisewould like to hold on to it but doesnot know how. (The idea of separatingfrom Xaviere fills her with anxiety. Back in Xaviere's hotel room their leave-takingis awkward: `- Je vais vous laisser,dit Francoise.Elle se 134 leva, sa gorge etait serree,mais il n'y avait rien d'autre ä faire: eile n'avait rien su faire d'autre' (p. 316). As she reachesthe door she impulsively takes Xaviere into her arms in what she comesto think of as `un gestede tendresseinutile'. ) In Les Belles Images Laurencehas an experiencesimilar to Francoise's.She feels an unexpectedsenseof onenesson a balcony, high up, overlooking Paris: Laurences'immobilise; le temps soudains'estarrete.Derriere ce paysageconcerte, avec routes, sesgrandsensembles,seslotissements,les voitures qui sehätent, quelque chosetransparait,dont la rencontreest si emouvantequ'elle oublie les fin. les intrigues, nest tout: qu'une attente sans commencement ni eile plus soucis, L'oiseau chante,invisible, annoncantle lointain renouveau.Une roseurtrain ä l'horizon et Laurenceresteun long moment paralyseepar un emoi mysterieux. (Les Belles Images,p. 126.) Characteristically,positive momentsin the later fiction are encounteredwhen images in Belles Les find in Positive themselves an elevatedposition. protagonists 54 Laurence's Images are generally associatedwith childhood. Light is a dominant motif. As Laurence,Jean-Charlesand the children drive away from Feuverollesone evening, Laurenceexperiencesa senseof well-being: `Une odeur de feuilles mortes entre par la fenetre ouverte; les etoiles brillent dansun ciel d'enfanceet Laurencese sent soudain tout ä fait bien' (p. 19). The smell of deadleavesis evocative, adding to the nostalgia evinced. Colour, light and movementare combined in an image of a kaleidoscope('un cylindre de carton, cercle de rayuresbrillantes, qui ressembleä un sucrede pomme geant'), that excites a childlike senseof wondermentand pleasurein Laurence: `enchantementdes couleurs et des formes qui se font, se defont, papillotent et se multiplient dansla fuyante symetrie d'un octogone' (p. 37). When Laurencegoesinto Louise's bedroom and finds her drawing at her desk, childhood is exemplified in a I have read with interestTilde A. Sankovitch's work on Simone de Beauvoir's memoirs. In the chapter on Simone de Beauvoir, entitled `The Giant, the Scapegoat,the Quester', she examinesthe myths that inform her autobiographicalwriting. The myth of the questershe identifies is the `desireto recapture childhood and its innocence'. French WomenWriters and the Book. Myths ofAccess and Desire, Syracuse,New York: SyracuseUniversity Press,1988,pp. 101-21 (p. 117). 135 juste lampe les `La sombre, avec une petite allumee, piece poignant recollection: journee de le longue derriere de petits et pailletee plaisirs, une moi crayons couleur, (pp. light 56-57). The immense dehors, motifs of and colour are et mysterieux' monde found once more. And minor delights typified as glittering sequinsrecalls Frangoise's father her Laurence's in Light joy L'Invitee. when expresses pleasure anticipation of `fette joie feu d'artifice' (p. 152). `La holiday together: they comme un go on suggests is is like dream invitation Laurence's joie ]' (p. 153). His de [... true; she come explosion lost finding holds ' The is beau... (p. 152). it `trop the trip again a out promise of afraid intimacy/ onenesswith her father. The fact that he promisesnot to changehis mind `comme quand eile etait petite' (p. 152) is suggestive.At first during the trip Laurence doesknow unity but then comesseparationand loss. Laurencehas a feeling of wellbeing as the plane leavesParis: L'avion pique brutalementvers le ciel, je 1'entendscrever les murs de ma prison: j'ignore Les d'autres, dont des tout. etroite grands millions vie cemeepar mon les je les toutes clötures, sauvee survole maisons s'effacent, petites ensembleset de la pesanteur;au-dessusde ma tete s'eploie l'espace infiniment bleu, sousmes Je de blancs suis pas. qui et n'existent qui m'eblouissent paysages pieds s'etalent ailleurs: nulle part et partout. (Les Belles Images,p. 154.) The image evokesher senseof spaceand her momentary loss of boundaries,her is Her oneness. regression suggestedby her enjoyment of experienceof unity/ imaginary landscapesformed by the clouds. This regressionis underlined in Laurence's in her father: `[... ] She delights her dependence days the trip. the on of early accountof inscrits fronton des bätiments: les traduisait au entree,sortie, poste. caracteres et papa J'aimais retrouver devant cet alphabetle mystere enfantin du langageet que, comme is filled lui' She (p. 154). des le des with a chosesme vint par mots et autrefois, sens senseof wholenessand congruity: Sur la place qui a 1'air d'une immenseterrassede cafe papa a commandepour moi fraiche, legere, boisson la ä aigrelette, delicieusementpuerile. Et j'ai su cerise, une 136 ce que voulait dire ce mot qu'on lit dannles livres: bonheur. [...] cet accord d'un ciel bleu et d'un gout fruite, avec le passeet le presentrassemblesdansun visage le de je l'ignorais ä travers tres souvenirs. sauf vieux cette en Cheret paix moi, bonheur: comme une raison que la vie sedonneä elle-meme. (Les Belles Images,p. 155.) However, Laurencecannot maintain this symbiotic/ regressedposition. Her critical face itself separationand anguish. and she must asserts sense For Murielle in `Monologue', happinessis situatedfirmly in the past when her father was alive and she was his favourite, his `sacreepetite bonne femme' (p. 88). She has never recoveredfrom this first loss: `Mon pere m'aimait. Personned'autre. Tout est lä' is for deprived de (p. 90). Happiness She Murielle. of the out of reach was venu light/ joy of the fireworks. Whilst her brother was lifted high to seethe light, shewas trappedon the ground, closed in by `cettefoule en chaleur' (p. 88). The lost purity and innocenceof that time is symbolisedby the moon, now soiled and trampled 55In a perversion of the imagesof plenitude/ unity experiencedby Laurence underfoot. is `happy' in Murielle's La Femme the vision rompue, other women protagonists and looking down on those whom sheholds responsiblefor her plight, moaning as they in hell. roast Two of the happiestmoments in `L'Age de discretion' (which recall Laurence's experienceon the restaurantbalcony) occur when the woman standson the balcony of her flat to gazeat the view. Her appreciationof what she seesis childlike: Je suis resteeun long moment sur le balcon. De mon sixieme,je decouvreun grand morceaude Paris, l'envol des pigeonsau-dessusdestoits d'ardoise, et ces faux pots de fleurs qui sont des cheminees.Rouge ou jaunes, des grues- cinq, j'en dix, dix barrent le de leurs bras fer; ä droite, de compte ciel neuf, mon haute de heurte ä muraille une percee petits trous [...]. regard se ( `L'Age de discretion', p. 11.) ssAnne Ophir suggeststhat Murielle adoptsthe moon as a `feu d'artifice-ersatz' and tracesthe moonfireworks link. Regardsfeminin, p. 49. 137 Note how chimneysare flower pots, the counting out loud of the primary coloured is little holes. The literalness humanised, the the effect of wall with cranesthat are le balcon. long je ] later: `[... sur un moment suis encorerestee repeatedseveralpages J'ai regardetourner sur le fond bleu du ciel une grue couleur de minium. J'ai suivi des (p. 17). large ecumeux 1'azur dans insecte et glace' tracait sillon un noir qui yeux un Here the effect is more self-conscious,strainedalmost. The precise, adult term used for the red of the cranes,the poetic terms usedto describethe plane's vapour trail clash is (This innocent fresh/ the impression of world. the vision of a somewhatwith formed by in imaginary landscapes Laurence's the childlike pleasure comparablewith in for by Happy the the )56 cut grass woman smell of the clouds. memoriesare prompted jardin, l'odeur dans le `En Martine: friend, her entrant to the park when she goes meet d'herbe coupeema prise au coeur: odeur des alpagesoü je marchais, sacau dos, avec Andre, si emouvanted'etre l'odeur desprairies de mon enfance' (p. 17). The smell takes further back to (note in back still and to elevation) the woman walks mountain pastures her childhood. The text goeson to evokethe pleasuresof memory in an image that du fond [mon `j'apercois light transparence au passe]en and colour: combineswater, les les lumiere donne il lui se sables ou roches comme sa couleur, sa present; moment is joyfulness impression The la (p. 17). le de Bans of mer' chatoiement refletent defunts des jours `1'ombre by the the addendum: woman's poignancy of undermined disturbing. here Not Clashes the emotions, only are mes plaisirs'. mes veloute death but light, the and thick velvet that association of also opposition shadowand in Movement the the of rhythm transparency replicated and movement. contrastswith 56A similar techniqueis used to evoke the woman's delirium as, alone in her flat, sheconfronts the depressionbrought on by a definitive (for now) separationfrom Philippe after an angry quarrel: `Un foulard d'un Rencontre fascinait, rouge et d'un coussin violet: quand ai-je vu m'obsedait. rien me pour la derni6refois des fuchsias,leur robe d'dv¬que et de cardinal, leur long sexe fr¬le? le volubilis lumineux, la simple eglantine, le chCvrefeuilledchevelb,les narcisses,ouvrant dans leur blancheur de 138 beginning of the quotation contrastswith the slow, insistent rhythm of its final words. Progressively,the discrepancybetweenthe woman's myth and her experience,hinted at 57 impose itself. When the womanjoins Andre in Villeneuve, sheresponds here, will bleu, de its `eau landscape, to the to and smells, odeur sights verte, ciel wistfully maquis' (p. 69), as if she were apart from it, an outsider. She realisesshewould have beenbetter off there if only Andre had wanted her there; it is as if the landscapemirrors and embodiesthe distanceshe feels has come betweenherself and Andre. She excludes herself from the happinessrepresentedby the greenpool where Andre swims freely and 58 (p. 69). unselfconsciously Transparencyreappearsin `La Femmerompue' in evocationsof joy. Unexpectedly,at a New Year's Eve party, Monique feels lighthearted and happy: `La je facilite du ä de fair, fluidite transparence temps, n'en une respirer; une gaiete: une demandaispas plus' (p. 218). Her momentarycheerfulnessone evening is expressed is her But transparency. of well-being ephemeral;she moment as metaphorically imagine doubt the tries to anguish she what Maurice thinks of of self as reexperiences her. Happinessin `La Femme rompue' is representedmetaphorically as a blue sky. When Maurice tells Monique there is anotherwoman in his life, the dialogue is interrupted by a vivid memory of the moment when they promised they would be faithful to eachother: `(Tout etait bleu au-dessusde notre tete et sousnos pieds; on apercevaitä travers le detroit la cote africaine. [...])' (p. 131). The samemotif recurs,the grands yeux etonnes,quand?' (p. 57). This description of flowers suggestsa drug induced obsession with detail. 57Smells are powerful vehicles for emotion in `L'Age de discretion'. The changein the woman's frame in library is full images Early is figured by the the two of roses. of the scent opposing story, of mind of `un gros bouquet de rosesfraiches et naives comme des laitues' (p. 11). Later, in the garden in Villeneuve, `les rosesmeutries par le soleil exhalaientune odeur poignante comme une plainte' (p. 66). s$Anne Ophir offers an interesting reading of this image, suggestingthat the pool is a symbol of the maternal and that Andrd undergoesa form of rebirth in the pool. Regardsfeminin, p. 31. Ellen Moeurs exploresthe feminine symbolism of landscapesin Chapter 11, `Metaphors: A Postlude', in Literary Women,pp. 243-64. 139 lost, leave Monique Maurice to join Noellie for the watches of something as evocation faisait interrupted `Il by Again a memory: un tendre ciel d'ete, au-dessusdes weekend. derniersfeuillages d'automne. (La pluie d'or des feuilles d'acacia, sur une route rose et grise, en revenantde Nancy) (p. 150). The small wooden statuettethat Monique and Maurice had bought together in Egypt, comesto symbolise the happiness/love that Monique has lost. Devastated,shesobswhen Quillan, a man shecontemplateshaving a sexualliaison with, accidentally/ symbolically breaksthe statuettein two (p. 170). Later her feelings `Je the statuette: onto regardema statuetteegyptienne:eile s'est sheprojects tres bien recollee.Nous l'avons acheteeensemble.Elle etait toute penetreede tendresse, dü bleu du ciel. Elle est lä, nue, desolee.je la prend dansmes mains et je pleure' (p. 232). `Monique has a dream at the height (depth?) of her breakdown/ crisis in which the colour blue figures her lost happiness:`L'autre nuit, en reve,j'avais une robe bleu ciel et le ciel etait bleu' (p. 237). There are childlike overtonesin the simplicity of the syntax here. (Readersare reminded of the blue sky at Sylvie's funeral in `Monologue' (p. 99). The blue sky/ sunshinethrow into relief Murielle's misery.) There is a further cluster of imagesthat intersectswith the seriesof poignant imagesjust examined.They are imagesof danceand performancethat figure moments when charactersare open to surgesof semiotic energy and an experienceof merging but 59 balance far integity is the tips too the and when of their personality endangered. Potentially positive momentsin the texts shift to negative. One of the central images in Les Belles Images is that of the little Greek girl's dance.Significantly, the dance is performed in a cafe overlooking a valley, under a vast, starlit sky. Laurencewatchesthe little girl: `eile tournait sur elle-meme,les bras souleves,le visage noye d'extase, l'air. tout A fait folle. Transporteepar la musique,eblouie, grisee,transfiguree,eperdue' (p. 59For an explanation of `semiotic energy', see my Introduction and ChapterThree. 140 158). The child is ecstatic,carried away by the music. The term `folle' (repeatedlater `1'enfant folle de Laurence the as remembers child musique', p. 174) has when inescapableconnotationsof madnessas well as extravagance.For Laurenceit is a boundary melting moment; sheidentifies with the dancer: `Moi aussij'etais possedee instant la Cet de fin' (p. cette enfant que musique possedait. passionne n'aurait par pas 158). She experiencesa moment out of time. In a suddenshift in the text the little girl is transformedin Laurence's imagination: `Petite condamneeä mort, affreusemort sans cadavre.La vie allait l'assassiner' (p. 158). Laurenceidentifies the little dancerwith her daughter, Catherine. As Elizabeth Fallaize argues, the little dancing girl represents Laurence's `dim perception of a different way forward for Catherine'.60A future where feeling and self expression,however risky they may be, are nurtured not repressed. This danceat the heart of Les Belles Imagesthat is connectedto Laurence's senseof identity, is a point of intersectionwith L Invitee. Dance in particular and is in in Invitee key book. Dancing L that also linked to performancegenerally are motifs momentswhich weaken boundaries,when charactersare subjectto powerful feelings. There are the two key performancesin the Spanishnight-club, the danceand the poem, during which Xaviere deliberately burns herself and entersa trance like stateand during which Francoiseexperiencesthe horror of engulfment and loss of self (pp. 353-55 and 362-65). Theseincidents are foreshadowedearly in the novel as Francoiseand Xaviere (`fascinee') watch the dancerin the Moorish cafe (pp. 21-22) and when later, in a nightclub, Xaviere herself dances`la tete un peu rejeteeen arriere, le visage extatique' (p. 36). Francoise'sexperiencein the Spanishnight-club is foreshadowedwhen, during Paule's first performanceat the Christmasparty, she comesto the shocking realisation `- Je ne suis personne' (p. 184). Her senseof identity is precarious,her boundary 60Fallaue, TheNovels, 134. p. 141 tenuous: `fette femme eile 1'avait laisseepousserau hasard,sanslui imposer de is in by Francoise dances Paule (p. When torn 184). the that again, recognition contours' her relationship with Pierre shehas not the symbiosis she desires.Again, during Paule's just in in be be Xaviere trance, the to an ecstatic as she will appears performance, 61 Spanishnight-club JaneHeath arguesthat the performancesin the Spanishnight-club in it is Kristevan the each performance semiotic; rhythm and of are characteristic 2 in be dance The the to that same argument can applied prompts a response. movement Les Belles Images.Exposureto the forces of the semiotic is destabilising. In my view, the significance of thesemomentsresidesin their power to remove protective barriers. Charactersare open to experiencesof merging/ onenesswhich can endangertheir sense desire for fulfilment fleeting their them than unity. of a allow of self rather The imagery in L'Invitee, in Les Belles Images and in the stories collected in La Femmerompue, is an imagery of madness.Clustersof imagesform a rich symbolic landscapethat transmits the women protagonists' experienceof madness.To a large extent, the imagery accountsfor the tone of the texts, a tone at once sombreand hyperbolic. Running through the bleak, desperatelandscape,a streamof nostalgic imagesevoke a senseof the well-being and happinessthat now eludesthe women. There is a notable affinity betweenthe symbolic landscapesof the early and later fiction. Imagesfirst found in the extravagantGothic text of L'Invitee, persist in the later fiction. Embeddedmore sparselyin the text, they neverthelessretain traces of excess. Simone de Beauvoir's imagery voices the inexpressiblepain and isolation of madness. 61It is worth noting that Francoise'sexperienceof onenessdiscussedaboveoccured while she watched Xavibre dance.Interestingly, Francoiseclaims not to enjoy dancing herself and early in the novel is reluctant to dance(seepp. 34 and 37). Shedefines herself as `une femme qui ne sait pas danser' (p. 180). As the novel progresses,her determinationnot to dancerelents. For other instancesof the dancing motif in L'Invitee, seealso pp. 179-80,185-86,277-79,302,310-12,339. 62Heath, pp. 31-32. 142 Chapter Three Instability and Incoherence This chapterwill examine the textual strategiesthat disrupt and unsettlethe narrativesof L'Invitee, Les Belles Images and La Femmerompue. The disruption and instability in in its is It the way specifically the text which subvert coherenceconstitute madness. discourse (the that is text the the the telling of stories, of a quality of madness which ' tells the story), that is my subjecthere. I want to look at how Simonede Beauvoir's texts duplicate the `dedoublement' brink by disintegration the of madness on characters self experienced of sense of and function, Character identity fixed how not and stableare undermined. as notions of and in I interest. In the be way the centre of particular, shall explore characteras such,will doubles I that textual strategies other consider shall also are used. character which introduce instability into the narrative and unsettlemeaning. I shall then go on to incoherence introduce fiction disrupt the that textual the and strategies analyse particular into the narratives.Firstly, temporal incoherenceand the distortion of time will be interruption fragmentation Focus textual then to and and will shift considered. 2 incoherence.Finally, I shall treat disrupted syntax. Julia Kristeva has identified a number of featureswhich disrupt and destabilise the text under the influence of semiotic drives. Shearguesthat semiotic energy is language A in number of affecting rhythm, and meaning. ways expressed a variety of I am adopting the definitions proposedby Shlomith Rimmon-Kenan. I understand`story' to be a is here) (not `Narration' discourse treated `Text' that the tells to the story. refers successionof events. the processof production of the text. SeeNarrative Fiction, pp. 3-4. 2Although theseaspectsof Simonede Beauvoir's writing practice might be illustrated by a close reading of all the texts under consideration,the textual strategiesbeing presentto a greater or lesserextent in L'Invitee, Les Belles images,and in the three stories in La Femmerompue, in each caseI have opted to considera particular feature in just one, two, or sometimesthree, texts that best exemplify it. I do not discuss'L'Age de discretion' here but the disruptive textual strategiesin question are by no means absentfrom the leasttransgressivetext of my corpus. 143 the `mad' textual strategiesI am concernedwith in this chaptercoincide with-these features.Deviations from conventional syntax which disrupt the signifying order are in breaks Ruptures, symbolic language of such absences and writing. characteristic irregularity, in Likewise, text. tension any modulation or rhythm a reveal semiotic is disrupts the text the of evidenceof semiotic activity. In anticipated structure which this connection,Kristeva mentionsthe use of exclamationmarks, ellipses, and surgesin In lack breathlessness or acceleration. addition, an apparent of energy evoking panting, logical construction is, as Toril Moi points out, evidencethat the semiotic has broken through `the strict rational defencesof conventional social meaning'. Kristeva also is inclusion to text that the within a signal meanings semiotic energy of plural considers 4 disrupting the text The into is by disrupted texts also called question reader'sposition that refuse to corroboratetheir position as unified, masterful subjects. Notwithstanding Simone de Beauvoir's rejection of her ideas, Helene Cixous' theories on ecriturefeminine intersectwith Simone de Beauvoir's writing practice. A in Simone de Beauvoir's the textual that the strategies of constitute madness number fiction correspondto aspectsof feminine writing. It is possibleto read her texts as a challengeto the `rules of (linear) logic, objective meaning,and the single, selfreferential viewpoint decreedby masculinelaw'. Simonede Beauvoir's writing can be describedas `feminine' to the extentthat it `deconstructsthe `all-powerful, all-knowing "I"' and calls into question conventionalnotions of characteras a stable,unified construct 7 3Moi, SexuaVTextual Politics, 11. p. `This aspectof Simone de Beauvoir's writing practice will be treated in depth in ChapterFour. It is relevant here insofar as ambiguousnarrative situations and multiple focalisation generateplural meanings. This is discussedin relation to languageand meaning in ChapterFour. 6Sellers, Susan,Language and SexualDifference.- Feminist Writing in France, London: Macmillan, 1991, p. 144. 7Sellers,Language and SexualDifference, p. 145. 144 To begin then, I will considerthe treatmentof identity in Simone de Beauvoir's fiction. Conventional definitions of identity as fixed and stableare called into question. Characterswho find themselvesat the limits of sanity are threatenedby a loss of identity as their personalitiesdisintegrate.This processand the `dedoublement'they experience,is duplicated on a textual level. One of the ways in which the integrity of 8 is in is doubles, character undermined the text the use of character mirrored characters. In L'Invitee readersencounteran interlacing of mirrored characters.Although the narrative foregroundsthe unity of Francoiseand Pierre, this is constantly undercut (in many ways Francoiseand Pierre are a pseudo-duo)and the text substitutesthe 9 Elisabeth Fräncoise/ pair. Simonede Beauvoir draws our attention to her use of Elisabeth, in doubles between Francoise and, particular, to the connection character and in her memoirs. Shenotes: Je remarqueque dapsla plupart de mes romansj'ai place ä cote des heroiines centralesun repoussoir:Denise s'opposea Helene dansLe Sang des autres, Paule ä Anne dansLes Mandarins. Mais la relation de Francoiseä Elisabeth est plus etroite: la secondeest une inquietantecontestationde la premiere. (La Force de 1'äge,footnote 1, p. 350.) Elisabeth is more than a foil to Francoise.Elisabeth representsa challengeto Francoise in as much as `eile [Francoise]voyait en eile comme une parodie d'elle meme: mais par $Of course,the text doesnot simply presenta pre-existing fixed identity but charactersconstruct themselves/are constuctedby their narratives.In `La Femmerompue', Monique writes her diary precisely in order to forge an identity, to discover who she is. Aware that her diary is not a repository of absolutetruth, she continuesto keep it all the same:`J'ai repris mon stylo non pour revenir en arri6re mais parce que le vide btait si immenseen moi, autour de moi, qu'il fallait ce gestede ma main pour m'assurer quej'6tais encorevivante' (p. 223). The processof characterconstruction is referred to explicitly in the text. Monique's psychiatrist insists that shewrites her diary and she is in no doubt as to his reasoning: `il essaiede me rendre de 1'intbretpour moi-m@me,de me restituer mon identit6' (p. 239). In L'Invitee, Francoise'sidentity dependson her grasping narrative supremacyand eliminating Xavi6re and with her 'cette femme detesteequi dtait ddsormaisFrancoise' (p. 500), jalouse, traltresse,criminelle' (p. 500). Frangoiseclaims the right to determinewho she is, to tell her own story. Harold WardmandiscussesFrancoise'sdesire `to be the omniscient narrator of her own life and of the lives of others' in `Self-Coincidenceand Narrative in L'Invitee', EssaysIn French Literature, 19,1982,87-103. 9JaneHeath discussesthe relationship betweenPierre and Francoise,arguing convincingly that Pierre acts as a mirror for Frangoise.Heath, p. 26. 145 10 lui (p. 350). At question sa semblait en propre verite' mettre cette caricature moment Elisabeth Francoise de Beauvoir the sametime, Simone and affirms that are essentially different in that, unlike Elisabeth,`il etait rare que Francoises'inquietät de ce vide installe au coeur de toute creaturehumaine' (p. 350). Theseassertionsappearto be increased imprecision is because of the proliferation of and contradictory somewhat third personpronouns in the last but one quotation. We know that Simone de Beauvoir I I in de 1'äge La Force in She deal herself Francoise. tells that she also us of put a great Elisabeth: `Elle ä j'avais herself important to cedait ce vertige que connu aspects of gave A cote de Zaza [...]; la verite du mondeet de son titre meme appartenaitä d'autres: ä Pierre, A Francoise' (p. 350). There are distinct echoeshere of the interpretation Simone de Beauvoir gives of the murder. Shetells us that Francoise(like Simone de Beauvoir herself) is threatenedby the dangerthat `autrui pouvait non seulementlui voler le Despite (p. 347). de 1'ensorceler' etre this essential et monde, mais s'emparer son In focus de Beauvoir's Simone them. on what separates attention memoirs affinity, Elisabeth, it is if de between Simone Beauvoir differences Francoise the and as stressing fords for is, in herself (that to the she acceptable) what sought preserve positive Francoise (her alter ego) whilst distancing herself from the negative that is projected 12 Elisabeth: onto 10Brosman also refers to the fact that Simonede Beauvoir calls Elizabeth a challengeand a foil, `un Elizabeth interpretation I Brosman's the that of challenge repoussoir'. cannot agreewith representsto Francoise.Shewrites: `[Elizabeth] is the portrait of a failure - what the heroine doesnot want to become.An aspiring painter, Elizabeth is unconvincing as a potential artist, either becauseBeauvoir wanted to portray failure or becauseshewas unable to draw the portrait of any artist except herself, projected onto Francoise. [...] In a classicillustration of bad faith, she attemptsto fool herself into believing that her lover, Claude,who no longer even desiresher, will divorce his wife'. Simone de Beauvoir Revisited,pp. 53-4. This interpretation is basedon a misreading of the text. Elizabeth is in fact a successfulartist. The fact that shecannot enjoy her successis part of her tragedy, seepp. 88, 237,271. Elizabeth doesnot persist in her hopesthat Claudewill leave his wife, seebelow and p. 271. "In La Force de 1'Oge,Simone de Beauvoir writes: `J'adoptai d'ordinaire le point de vue de Frangoiseä quije pretai, ä travers d'importantes transpositions,ma propre experience' (p. 347); and explaining why Pierre is not, perhaps,a fully rounded character.`J'ai mis en Frangoisetrop de moi-meme pour la Tierä un homme qui We-at 6t6 Ctranger[...]' (p. 351). 12Inher discussionof the amoureuse,Toril Moi points to Simone de Beauvoir's efforts to distance charactersresembling herself from madness.Simonede Beauvoir, p. 218. 146 Elisabeth bearsthe burden of Francoise's darker side. She is the I As shall show, in her Francoise's image Francoise, to evil opposition as constructed of negative mirror double. Furthermore,Francoise's`madness'(that is, the way in which her psychic Elisabeth. is her in It is is text the onto threatened) and projected underplayed stability is However, Francoise's that at the sametime as they are underlined. not mauvaisefoi, by level imagery lexis intimately textual they a shared and connected on are opposed, fails. In Francoise two the to constructing and the characters attempt separate and Elisabeth as characterdoublesthe text underminesthe demoniac/benign dichotomy. For if Elisabeth is constructedas demoniac,textual inter-referencesand interferences blameless The image Francoise it impossible the to sane/ as victim. of sustain mike insanedichotomy is also undermined.Elisabeth's emotional and mental instability is 13 in have Francoise images by that, textually common. she and speaking, evoked Textual parallels exposeFrancoise'smauvaisefoi that otherwise remainsunnamed. Theseargumentsfind support in an analysis of the network of sharedimagesand lexis connectingthe two characters.Firstly, I shall deal with imagesand lexis that evoke Elisabeth's is is Xaviere that distress. When Francoise that tells she problem emotional `tout affolee quand eile regardeau-dedansd'elle-meme parce qu'elle ne trouve que du herself (p. be du 171), Francoise too. At the creux' speaking might well of vide et Chrismasparty for example: `Avec un eblouissementdouloureux, Franroise se sentit transperceed'une lumiere aride et blanchequi ne laissait en eile aucunrecoin d'espoir' (p. 180). She is no one: `La lumiere qui 1'avait penetreetout ä 1'heurene lui avait Elisabeth heart The decouvertque du vide' (p. 183). of existencethat emptinessat the 13Elizabeth is portrayed asmad. Gerbert explicitly questionsher sanity, `de temps en temps il avait l'impression qu'elle dtait un peu folle' (p. 331), `peut-¬tredtait-elle vraiment en train de devenir folle' (p. 333). His judgment is upheld throughout the text. 147 Elisabeth's is by Francoise. (p. 271) also experienced and Francoise'spanic experiences is evoked in analogousterms: SoudainElisabeth eut un eblouissementde souffrance;eile vit son atelier vide, oü le dans la loge du de telephone attendu, casier vide ne serait plus aucun coup impossible, les C'etait le eile ne voulait pas rues vides. concierge, restaurantvide, le perdre [...] eile avait besoin de lui pour vivre. , (L'Invitee, p. 103.) L'angoisse qui la [Francoise] saisit soudain etait si violente qu'elle eut presque brusquement le fat il de se c'etait comme si monde vide; n'y avait crier; envie ä Il ä aimer. n'y avait absolument rien. plus rien non plus craindre, mais plus rien [... ] si 1'amitie de Pierre et de Xaviere n'etait qu'un mirage creux, l'amour de Francoise et de Pierre n'existait pas davantage [... ]. (L'Invitee, p. 159.)14 Elisabeth's mental and emotional distressis repeatedlyevokedby imageswhich match those associatedwith Francoise.Compare:`Elisabethfut traverseed'une douleur aigue' (p. 89); `eile allait souffrir tout ce soir encore,eile prevoyait, les frissons, la fievre, la 1'avance' les bourdonnements dans la etait ecoeurree ä des tote, eile en mains, moiteur (p. 90) with the evocation of Francoise'smental and physical suffering that become conflated: `Satete bourdonnait' (p. 196); `Elle frissonna; eile devait avoir la fievre, ses la `ce de fievre dans brülait' (p. 211); etaient tout goüt moites et son corps mains 15 (p. bouche' 379). Echoesin the text establishthe correspondencebetweenthe two Elisabeth's `eblouissementde souffrance' (p. 103) is echoedby the `explosion women. de souffirance'that Francoisesuffers when sherealisesthat her `hypocrite lächete1'avait Elisabeth's in du (p. 359). This ä tout' turn echoes realisation that conduite n'etre rien shehas nothing to hope from Claude: `la verite lui etait apparueclansson intolerable Elisabeth's de lächete (p. 271). crudite: c'est par qu'elle s'etait nourrie vain espoirs' experienceof time - `il n'y avait que desminutes qui s'egouttaientlentement; la journee s'etait passeedansl'attente de cesheureset cesheuress'ecoulaient a vide, eile 14Seealso Elizabeth doubtsthe reality of her love for Claude. 89-90 where pp. 13The representationof Francoise'ssuffering is discussedin detail in Chapter One. 148 indefiniment [... ] leur etait ä tour attente. on qu'une rejete dans1'avenir, n'etaient plus des qu'il devenaitpresent,il fallait fuir [...]' (p. 92) - will find a striking echo in the des fuites, `Des 1'annee Francoise's toute attentes, existence: s'etait passee of evocation fuir, il faudrait bien On [... ] Il mais aucun salut. pouvait revenir, et ce ne restait ainsi. Elisabeth's fuites, fin' (p. d'autres 438). `enfer sordide' d'autres sans attentes,et seraient (p. 104) is matchedby Francoise's`noir enfer' (p. 397). At different points in the text, both characters'alienation is suggestedby their looking at reality in a mirror. Elisabeth, when she is in the Pole Nord with Claudeand desperatelyunhappy, watchesthe apparently happy trio `au fond du mirroir' (p. 104) and later, studies her own flat in the by (p. Francoise, feeling it 271). excluded mirror where somehowseemsmore real Pierre and Xaviere, watchesthem laughing and talking in the mirror behind the bar in the cafe (p. 300), `separeede Pierre, et du plaisant decor dont la glace lui renvoyait le Elisabeth by haunted Francoise d'elle-meme' (p. 301). Both the and are reflet, separee sensethat they are shut out of a secret.FrancoiseimaginesPierre and Xaviere together: [Elle] evoquales banquettesde cuir avec leurs gros clous cuivres et les vitraux, et les abat-jour a carreauxrougeset blancs,mais c'etait en vain: les visageset les voix et le gout des cocktails ä l'hydromel, tout avait revetu un sensmysterieux qui le dissipe Francoise füt la ] [... Jamais, si eux, avait pousse porte. se meme pas par secretde leur tete-ä-tetene pourrait etre devoile. (L'Invitee, pp. 152-53.) When they are on holiday together,ElisabethwatchesFrancoiseand Pierre from the doorway to the garden: [Elle] restaclouee sur place: desqu'ils l'apercevraient,ils changeraientde visage, il ne fallait pas se montrer avant d'avoir dechiffre leur secret. (L'Invitee, p. 46&)16 is to make it impossible to dissociate The cumulative effect of thesecorrespondences Francoisefrom the madnessthat threatensElisabeth. Their mental and emotional 16Seealso 87: `Francoisene livrait pas son vrai visage [...). Ici, c'&tait la p. vraie figure de Francoise qui avait laissesa trace, et cette trace 6tait inddchiffrable', and p. 93: `jamais les amis de Frangoisene se Elizabeth ä montraient sousleur vrai jour'; `tous les secretsde Francoisedtaient bien gardes'. 149 instability coincide despitethe fact that Francoise'sstability is never overtly questioned. This network of sharedimagesand lexis meanthat readers' confidence in Francoise's stability and reliability as focaliser is undermined. In a similar way, readers' faith in the image of Francoiseas innocent victim of Xaviere's wiles is put into questionby a sharednetwork of imagesand lexis that Elisabeth's Elisabeth her demonisation. is clearly demoniacalin her with connect delirium fantasises harming the trio: as she about and madness Est-ce un jour ils n'allaient pas descendreeux aussiau fond de cet enfer sordide? Attendre en tremblant, appelerau secoursen vain, supplier, rester seul dansles l'angoisse et un degoüt de soi sansfin. Si sirs d'eux, si orgueilleux, si regrets, invulnerables.Ne trouverait-on pasun moyen de leur faire du mal, en guettant .bien? (L'Invitee, p. 104.) Her jealousy sustainsher desireto make them suffer: `Quelquechoseä faire; un acte ferait couler de vraies larmes' (p. 283). She seesit as a way of feeling authentiquequi truly alive. Her evil is underlined. In the scenewhere shemanipulatesGerbert,using him to upsetwhat shetakesto be the harmony of the trio, she is an Iago figure (pp. 33335). In contrast,it is Francoise'shigh moral standardsthat are highlighted in the text. Admittedly she talks of jettisoning them: `Il ne se passeraitpeut-titre plus longtemps avant qu'elle s'en affranchisse' (p. 444), and when shelearnsthat Pierre no longer loves Xaviere `Francoiseaccueillit sansscandalela joie mauvaisequi envahissaitson coeur; 17 lui de 1'äme ca avait coüte trop cher naguere vouloir se garder pure' (p. 466). Yet shortly after this Francoiseassertsthat `c'etaient les vieilles vertus dedaigneesqui remportaientla victoire' (p. 467). Sheinsists that her affair with Gerbertwas an innocent, bucolic idyll and in order to maintain this version of eventsshe will kill Xaviere. On one level the text vindicates Francoise.At the sametime, on anotherlevel, 17Even this is echoedby Elizabeth. `Observerdes rbgles,jouer loyalement le jeu, c'6tait idiot, personne ne vous en savait gre' (p. 105). 150 Elisabeth's demoniacalstatus.A web of textual connectionsconstructs Francoiseshares her as Elisabeth's counterpart. Elisabeth's ambivalent desireto either becomeor destroy Francoise(p. 87), is her desire Xaviere's Xaviere, to Francoise's towards annex attitude reminiscent of Elisabeth's her hatred her to murder. of to recourse own and, ultimately, existence Claude (pp. 102-103,270-71) is echoedby Francoise'shatred of Xaviere (pp. 313, 18 445). Elisabeth's parodical fantasymurder foreshadowsFrancoise'smurder of Elisabeth, image `une lights down, traversa Xaviere. As the theatre un revolver, un go Claude? Suzanne? Peu flacon de Moi-meme? tuer. tete avec une mort; poignard, un importait, ce sombredesir de meurtre gonflait puissamentle coeur' (p. 94). Francoise Elisabeth looks Just final fantasy in her the the at as of novel. pages own will act out herself in the mirror as shedeterminesto act and compel Claude to choosebetweenher decisive her Francoise Suzanne, his at moments: at reflection gazes so wife, and Elisabethj eta un coup d'oeil dansune glace et eile vit sescheveuxroux, sa boucheamere;il y avait en eile quelquechosed'amer et de fulgurant, sa decisive. etait cette soiree serait prise, resolution (L'Invitee, p. 93.) Francoisese regardadapsla glace. [...] - J'ai gagne, pensa Francoise avec triomphe. (L'Invitee, p. 467.) Sonimagejaillit soudaindu fond du miroir. [...] [Francoise]fixa l'image. [...] C'est eile ou moi. Ce seramoi. (L'Invitee, pp. 500-501.) 19 demoniacal Both charactersappear asthey stareat their reflection. Likewise, both of them shareFaustianovertones.There is not only Francoise'sFaustianordeal once her 18It is interesting to note the textual correspondencethat connectsFrancoiseand Elizabeth in terms of their attitude to Xaviere. Compare: `une moue de Xavibre comptait plus que tout son ddsarroi ä eile' [Francoise] (p. 195); `la moindre de ses[Xaviare] humeurs comptait plus que tout le dentin d'Elizabeth' (p. 276). 19This defiant gestureof Francoiseis discussedin detail in Chapter One. 151 betrayal of Xaviere has been discovered,when in her paroxysm `les lettres sur le tapis Elisabeth's (p. 499)20 infernal' etaientnoires comme un pacte torment as she leaves Pierre is also marked by Faustianovertones.As Marlowe's Dr. Faustus,on the brink of Elisabeth is by Mephistophilis21, Lucifer from hell, was prevented too and so repenting her brother (p. 472-73). In towards turn, to to a gesture or make sincerely unable speak this recalls Francoise'sreaction to Xaviere's distressearlier in the novel: `eile aurait facile, de loin' (p. trop trouver eile ce n'etait pas revenait un mot, mais un geste, voulu 132). There is one final textual echothat should be pointed out in relation to Francoise's Elisabeth Elisabeth's doubles. construction as evil experiencesa senseof calm and and is Francoise Pierre face She in to to the goodbye and at the say of war. about plenitude le horizon: `Tout etait looks holiday the their calme; monde entier when she at end of Elisabeth dans etait en suspenset se sentit accordeesans cette attenteuniverselle, feelings by Her (p. 470). desir l'immobilite du ä the are echoed soir' crainte, sans impressionsFrancoisehas as shedecidesto kill Xaviere: `Soudainun grand calme descenditen Francoise.Le temps venait de s'arreter. Francoiseetait seuledansun ciel lexis leads images This (p. 501). and me to arguethat shared complex network of glace' 22 into it is not only the murder that unexpectedlyturns Francoise a monster. The textual Elisabeth her doubles demoniacal that construct and as allow readersto parallels glimpse a Francoisewho does not conform to the image of innocent sufferer. Francoisealternately recognisesher resemblanceto Elisabeth and acts in opposition to her, constantly projecting what she fords unacceptablein herself onto Elisabeth. Sherecognisesfor examplethat in loving Pierre `au fond eile ressemblaitä , Elisabeth; une fois pour toutes eile avait fait un acte de foi' (p. 157). She is dauntedby 20SeeChapter One. 21`Oh, he stays my tongue! I would lift up my hands,but see,they hold them, they hold them! '. Marlowe, Movement V, lines 179-81, p. 69. 22This is contrary to what Simone de Beauvoir saysin her memoirs. La Force de 1'dge,p. 348. 152 the prospectof having to review her relationship with Pierre, `ca demandaitune force Elisabeth Later, herself to shecompares surhumaine'. again, awarethat she must face up to the truth of what is happeningbetweenherself and Pierre: ca faisait desjours et desjours que toutes sespenseesavaient un goüt aigre: ä l'interieur d'Elisabeth ca devait etre comme ca. Il ne fallait pas faire comme Elisabeth. dit Je Francoise. veux voir clair, se Mais satete etait remplie d'un grandtournoiementrougeätreet piquant. Il faut descendre,dit-elle brusquement. (L'Invitee, p. 192.) Again, although sheopposesherself to Elisabeth,she is continuing to evadethe truth. When she doesconfront her feelings and sharesthem with Pierre, she is aware of the danger:`Il allait trouver de beaux argumentset ra serait commoded'y ceder. Sementir Elisabeth, Francoisene voulait pas,eile y voyait clair; eile continua de sangloter comme avec entetement'(p. 200). In fact, Pierre doesfind clever, baffling argumentsto reassure her and Francoiseallows herself to be convinced: `Elle le croyait; mais ce n'etait pas 3A la Elle la exactementca question. ne savait plus trop quelle etait question' (p. 204). Elisabeth if is play-acting, then so too is Francoise. the text close reading of revealsthat She is awareof her own lack of sincerity: `Sesparoles,sesconduites,ne repondaient plus tout & fait aux mouvementsde son coeur' (pp. 204-205). Ultimately, Francoisehas Elisabeth. honesty integrity Francoise'smauvaisefoi is not namedin than no more and the text but is nonethelessdiscernable,pointed up by the textual parallels that construct her as Elisabeth's double. The samemirroring of charactersthat underminesnotions of identity as unified and stablecan be traced in Les Belles Images.Although less developedthan in L'Invitee, a complex web of identifications is neverthelessbuilt up through repetition 23For the sakeof argument,I am taking Elizabeth's mauvaisefoi as given here, but there is textual evidencethat she can be perfectly lucid/ honestwith herself. Indeed,this makesher suffering more acute. Seep. 271. 153 little Greek Between Catherine Laurence the girl are connected. and and and echoes. Laurenceand her daughterthe connectionis explicit. Laurence's father tells her that of her two daughters,`c'est Catherinequi to ressemblele plus', prompting Laurenceto In )' (pp. 104-105). ]. [... (Me je lui `Oui ressemblera-t-elle? ai ressemble, wonder: Greece,watching the `enfant folle de musique' dancing, Laurenceidentifies with her then identifies her with Catherine,as thejoyful, life-affirming danceis transformed into la j'etais death: `Moi dance cette que par enfant musique possedee aussi of a macabre La ] ä [... Petite sans cadavre. vie allait affreuse mort mort, condamne possedait. 1'assassiner.Je pensaisä Catherinequ'on etait en train d'assassiner'(pp. 158,174). Jean-Charles'sbetrayal of Catherineis also a betrayal of Laurence.When he discusses Catherineat the dinner table Laurenceis appalled: La gorge de Laurence se contracte. Jean-Charles n'aurait pas dü, le lendemain, discuter en public le cas de Catherine. Une trahison, un viol. Quel romantisme! Mais une sorte de honte l'etouffe, comme si elle etait Catherine et qu'elle eüt surpris leurs propos. (Les Belles Images,p. 173.) The word `trahison' and the violent imagery are a direct link with Jean-Charles'searlier betrayal of Laurence,when, during an argumentover Catherine,he brings up her breakdownthat he refers to as `une crise de mauvaiseconscience',and `throws it in her face', confuting the sympathy and understandinghe had feigned: `Laurencese sent 24 ' (p. The 133). [... ] Quelle 1'avait trahison! cumulative effect giflee. palir: comme s'il is little Greek Catherine between links Laurence to subvert the textual girl and and of in duplicating Laurence's identity, boundaries the text. thus experience of solid I have shown that networks of sharedimagesand lexis construct charactersas doubles and have arguedthat the use of mirrored charactersis one way in which the text 24As JaneHeath argues,Laurence's identification with CatherineheightensLaurence's desireto protect Catherinein that 'Catherine's escapeis to some extent Laurence's too' (Heath, p. 133). 154 by disintegration identity that threatened the characters madness of reproduces experience.I have also suggestedthat this underminesthe notion of a stable,unified identity which is further put into questionby the instability that is inherent in the je/ eile in Images. in Les Belles the narrative split One of the most unstableand unsettling aspectsof Les Belles Images is the way the narrative voice shifts from `je' to `elle'25 This split, that is at the heart of the loss feelings level, Laurence's duplicates, textual of of unity and psychic on a narrative, from First third only alternate not paragraphto and person narratives alienation. paragraph but also within paragraphs and even within sentences. Let us consider the indicators first least, in The the to the only person, at seems open novel opening scenes. les ('Qu'est-ce first in the que autresont que the person origin of narrative voice are of 26 je n'ai pas?' `Pourquoi est-cequeje penseca?'). Then, after the first, long, fragmentedparagraph,the narrative shifts to the third person(`Laurencea proposele 27 test du passeur[...]' p. 8), before shifting back to the first personwithin a sentence: `Elle s'est beaucoupdepensee,c'est pour ca que maintenanteile se sent deprimee,je first in the (p. 8). As the third the person, narrative continues,mainly suis cyclique' it. Laurence interposes on makes a self-conscious a commentary personnarrative fait. dis Je Gilbert ('(Ce the to ca pour reply she n'est en of witty gave pas vrai, revision etre dröle.)' p. 12). Subsequently,her unspokenresponseto the effusive terms her sister father breaks up the third person narrative once more: their to of uses speak Laurence se penche sur les dahlias; ce langage la gene. Bien sür, il a quelque je je (mais les qu'ont-ils que n'ai pas non autres n'ont pas, que n'ai pas chose que dann la les dahlias jaunes, ). Roses, eile serre main oranges, rouges, plus? magnifiques. 25Strictly speaking,narration as such doesnot fall within the terms of referenceof this study. Comments on the narrative situation in Les Belles imageswll be restrictedto a considerationof how the text is unsettled/ disruptedby shifts in narrative voice. 26Thesemight well, of course,be taken for first person interpolations in third a personnarrative. Z' The psychological test, le test du passeur (the ferryman's test) is describedby Elizabeth Fallaize in The Novels, p. 141, footnote 21. 155 (Les Belles Images,p. 14.) Then Laurence's looking out of the window and seeingJean-Charlesflirting with Gisele Dufrene seemsto be narratedin the first person(p. 17). Here, as in the first paragraph, this is what the only indicators imply. The narrative shifts to the first personagain as Laurencerecalls her breakdownof five yearsearlier and tries to convince herself that she is not about to be ill again: 'Maintenantje n'ai pas de raison de craquer.Toujours du travail devant moi, des gensautour de moi, je suis contentede ma vie. Non, aucun danger.C'estjuste une question d'humeur' (p. 19). Theseshifts and ambiguities present in the opening sectionof the novel, are replicatedthroughout the text. However, by the final chapter,the balancehas shifted. Here, the first personnarrative is much stronger,more sustainedand it is the third personnarrativethat appearsto intrude. Laurencedetermines:`Jerecapitulerai ce voyage image par image, mot par mot' (p. 153). She engageswith and tells her own story in the first person.The third personbreaksinto the text in the presentmoment when Laurencebreaksoff her retrospectivenarrative to drink the soup Marthe has brought her and to speakto Jean-Charles(pp. 168-70),and again, very briefly, at the point in the narrative when Laurence gets back from the trip. Her alienation is perfectly conveyedby the shift as Jean-Charlesmeetsher at the airport (p. 170). From this point `eile' erupts in the the most painful momentsof Laurence's story, when, during the family dinner, Jean-CharlesdiscussesCatherine(p. 173) and when Laurencebecomes awareof her utter isolation (pp. 175-76).Although Laurence's finding out about her parents' reconciliation from Dominique is narratedin the first person,her painful meeting with her father, where he confirms it is true, is narratedin the third person. So, too, is Laurence'staking to her bed. As Laurence's anguishreachesits climax, and as 156 text-time and story-time reconverge,(story-time and narrative moment coincide), the `eile' between and `je'. narrative voice oscillates Je Buisjalouse mais surtout, surtout...Elle respiretrop vite, eile halete. [...] Ce il de decouvrir, tout su qu'apres se n'avoir pas peut-etre secretqu'elle reprochait depuis la Grece. le J'ai ete decue.Le mot I1 n'existait pas. n'existait pas: eile snit la poignarde.Elle serrele mouchoir contre sesdentscomme pour arreter le cri decue. de 1'etre. incapable de Je J'ai suis raison pousser. qu'elle est (Les Belles Images,pp. 179-80.) Laurence's battle to face up to her pain is reproducedin the text as je' and `eile' is from he When Laurence up again other. picked as wakes each narrative succeed exhaustedsleep,the first personvoice fadesonce more and the narrative revertsto `eile' for the final three pagesthat relate Laurence'stalk with Jean-Charles.The first person je je bon, de Si `il itself tiens queje craque nouveau. once; n'a envie only pas asserts gagne' (p. 182). The intermittency of the first personvoice at the end of Les Belles Images contributesto readers' lack of confidencein Laurence's stability and senseof self. The je/ eile split that clearly unsettlesthe text has been addressedand understood differently by a number of critics. It is clear that Laurenceis both characterin, and at times, first personnarrator of her story. Doubt arisesover the user of the third person also presentin the text. I believe this too can be taken to be Laurenceas, alienatedfrom herself, shewatchesherself act and speaklike shewatchesthose around her, `soudain indifferente, distante,comme si elle n'etait pas des leurs' (p. 19). She is divided against herself and, struggling to hold on to her senseof identity, incapable of sustainingher `I928 The fact that the first personvoice is more sustainedin the early sectionsof the final chapter,togetherwith the pattern of third personerruptions into the narrative, add support to this reading as it makespsychological sense.Laurencerelives the trip and her 28JaneHeath also arguesthat Laurence occupiesboth the first-person and third-person narrative positions. SeeHeath, p. 128. 157 homecoming not distancedfrom herself. As she saysof the trip: `Tout ce qui m'arrivait etait vrai' (p. 155). Laurence's `I' is stifled in momentsof overwhelming pain as if she withdraws and has recourseto the third personin order to protect herself. The dominant her in the the third accords with overriding senseof person narrative present of use alienation. An alternative explanation is that the user of the third person is an external narrative agent.In this version of the narrative situation, we are dealing with two is it not just Laurence's`I' that emergesonly intermittently, it is narrative agentsand her voice too. This is the view of Elizabeth Fallaize who arguesthat `though Laurence's is the consciousnesswhich the narrative draws on, her voice is intermittent, fading for long stretchesof the narrative in which the characterapparentlyretrenchesbehind her social persona,and re-assertingitself at momentswhere the characterseemsto approach 9 Thesedifferent readings are not mutually somethingresemblingself-awareness'. exclusive. What is of crucial importanceis precisely the ambiguity of the narrative situation, the fact that it is fluid, impossibleto pin down. The je/ eile split unsettlesand destabilisesthe text and enactsits madness. Before leaving the narrative situation in Les Belles Images,I want to address briefly the related questionof focalization.30 The narrative is always focalized through Laurence. 1 At times she is both focalizer and focalized, focalizing herself from within. 32 focalized from Others are without. Laurenceis generally speakingan internal (character)focalizer in that `the locus of [...] focalization is inside the represented 29Fallaize, TheNovels, p. 120. 30Whereasthe narrative agentis the voice in the text, the focaliser is the agentwhose perception orients the text. SeeShlomith Rimmon-Kenan,Narrative Fiction, pp. 72 and 74. 31I am adopting the classification of focalizers put forward by Shlomith Rimmon-Kenan, Narrative Fiction, pp. 71-77. 32There is one notable exception when the focalizer appearsto penetrateDominique's feelings and thoughts : `Dimanche A Feuverolles,eile est rest6 enfermeedans sa chambre en prdtextant un mal.de tete, ravagdepar l'absencede Gilbert, pensant:«I1ne viendra plus jamais.»' (p. 72). 158 3 However, the situation is renderedmore complex in retrospectivesectionsof events'. the narrative as the focalizer can be either the experiencingcharacter(Laurenceat the time the narratedeventswere happening)or the narrator (Laurencelooking back on the 34 is focalizer. (narrator) latter Laurence In In the external an case, events). narrated ChapterFour of Les Belles Images, for example,Laurenceknows the outcome of the 35 it. is begins Focalization is telling she generally synchronouswith when story she focalization internal but from to external are a sourceof shifts representedevents during instability in For father Laurence's the text. the trip, example, and ambiguity makesgenerouscommentsabout Dominique and we read: `Je ne 1'ai pas contredit; je ne d'amitie des bribes lui (p. The 157). qu'il accordait' ma pauvre mere voiilais pas priver focalizer can either be Laurencein Greeceor Laurencenarrating the incident in the full knowledge of her mother and father's reconciliation. In the latter casethe tone is 6 ironic. Likewise, there is no indication whether the angry interjection `Du cheval! ca ' formidable; Remplacer idee amie cheval! une par un meme affectivement. c'etait une (p. 172), betraysthe awarenessof Laurenceat the time of the quarrel or of Laurence it is impossible distinguish discusses Catherine it. Jean-Charles And to when recalling between Laurence's synchronous response and her retrospective understanding: `Une trahison, un viol. Quel romantisme!' (p. 173). Unstable focalisation introduces inconclusivenessinto the text, unsettling meaning and thereby introducing madnessinto the text. I now want to go on to read the incoherencein Simone de Beauvoir's fictional texts as madness.For, as PeterBrooks has argued,`mental health is a coherentlife 33Shlomith Rimmon-Kenan,Narrative Fiction, p. 74. 34If the narrator is not Laurencebut an external narrator then we must neverthelessposit the existenceof two different levels of focalization and distinguish betweeneventsfocalized at the time they took place and other eventsfocalised subsequently. 35Up to p. 179, that is, when story-time and text-time reconverge. 36Irony is discussedin detail in my ChapterFour. 159 37 is faulty narrative' Nothing is meaningful in itself. We create story, neurosis a meaning by organising our experience.Now, insofar as the text resists order and logic, insofar as it tendstowards meaninglessness (which is the meaning of the text), then the text is mad. In the mad textual universeSimone de Beauvoir creates,readersare disorientatedand sharethe helplessnessof characterstrying to make senseof their lives. I am going to begin by looking at temporal confusion and incoherencebefore going on to deal with textual disruption and fragmentation. Simonede Beauvoir's later texts, Les Belles Images and La Femmerompue, refuse to convey a senseof chronology, a senseof linear logic. Readershave to work to impose a sequentialpattern on events.I want to illustrate this by briefly analysing `Monologue', `La Femmerompue', andLes Belles Images.In `Monologue', readersare drawn into Murielle's madnessand obsessionas they attempt to make senseof her monologue at the sametime as they are repelled by the vulgarity and sordidnessof her delusion.They are confusedby the non-linear structureof the story. No concessionsare made; readerspiece together Murielle's history, learning a little of the puzzle at a time. Readerslook in vain for linear logic in the text; incidents are related in disorder, by prompted seemingly inconsequentialdetails. An associativelogic carriesthe narrative forward. The past intrudes in the presentand the presentdisrupts the narration of past events.Quoting a fairly lengthy passagein full will allow me to demonstrate this. It occurstowards the beginning of the narrative: ca devait arriver ils dansentau-dessusde ma tete. Alors lä ma nuit est foutue demainje seraien morceauxje devrai me doper pour voir Tristan et ca foirera. 11 ne faut pas! Salauds!Je n'ai que ca dannla vie le sommeil. Salauds.Its ont le droit de me pietiner ils en profitent. «L'emmerdeused'en dessouseile ne peut pas gueuler c'est le jour de 1'an.» Rigolez je trouverai un moyen de vous avoir eile jamais je ne me suis laisse pietiner. Albert etait vous emmerdera1'emmerdeuse furax: «Pasbesoin de faire un eclat!» bien si justement! Il dansaitavec Nina sexe 37Brooks, Peter, `PsychoanalyticConstructionsand Narrative Meanings', Paragraph, 7,1986,53-76 (pp. 53-54). 160 A sexeeile etalait sesgros seinseile puait le parfum mais on sentait en dessousune odeur de bidet et lui qui se tremoussaitil bandait comme un cerf. [...] Its wont crever le plafond et me degringoler sur la gueule. Je les vois d'ici c'est trop deguexils se frottent Fun contre l'autre sexea sexeca les fait mouiller les bonnesfemmeselles serengorgentparce que le type a la queueen 1'air. Et chacunseprepareä cocufier son meilleur ami satres chere amie ils le feront cette la les la de bains dans pas allonges robe retroussee sur meme salle nuit meme fessessuantesquandon ira pisser on marcheradans le foutre comme chez Rose la nuit de mon eclat. (`La Femmerompue', pp. 90-91.) In terms of eventsthat make up the story, it emergesonly gradually that Murielle's exhusband,Albert, was unfaithful to her, with her best friend, Nina, at a party given by Rose and that Murielle, when she found out, made a scene.Sheis reliving those events in the present,imagining the sameevent taking place again, (only this time multiplied, her `chacun' is betray to their at upstairsneighbour's about partner), as every guest, it is is be (If this there sequenceof eventscan worked out, a noisy party going on. where fantasy impossible distinguish ) The text presents to and reality. virtually nevertheless readerswith a baffling, disorderedseriesof statements,an extremely convoluted narrative. The dancing in the presentgives rise to Murielle's insistancethat shewill not in incident be herself (`pietiner') the to trampled which prompts memory of an on allow the past when Albert might have thought he could trample on her but when sherefused to acquiesce.This memory in turn moves Murielle to imagine the presentsceneupstairs until her lurid, delusionalvision of the presentgives way once more to the painful incident in The the the of past. past and presentcoalesce.A successionof recollection textual echoesservesas a narrative thread providing hinges on which it pivots: `ils dansentau-dessusde ma tete' -'Il dansaitavecNina' -'Ils `Ils ont le droit de me pietiner' -j amaisje ne me suis laissepietiner'; `Il dansaitavec Nina sexeä sexe' seins' - vont crever le plafond'; `ils se frottent Pun contre 1'autresexeä sexe'; `eile etalait sesgros `elles serengorgent'; `il bandait comme un cerf - `le type a la queueen 161 l'air'; `une odeur de bidet' - `dansla salle de bains' - besoin de faire un eclat!»' - `on marcheradansle foutre comme chez Rose la nuit de `les fessessuantes'; `<<Pas is It eclat'. accordingto this associativelogic that the narrative progresses. mon Disrupted chronology is characteristicof the text as a whole. Present,past and future jostle in the text, within the sameparagraphand even within the samesentence: `Si je pouvais donnirje n'ai pas sommeil l'aube est encoreloin c'est une heure lugubre et Sylvie est morte sansm'avoir compriseje ne m'en guerirai pas' (p. 104). Although it is far from being as disrupted as `Monologue', the secondtext I want to examinein terms of temporal incoherence,`La Femmerompue', is not a simple linear/ chronological narrative either. The past disrupts the presentto a lesser,though into degree involuntarily Monique's thoughts. For erupt nonethelessreal as memories example,as Monique imagines Maurice's presentwith Noellie, evoking intimate details of their sharedlife, a memory, an image of Monique and Maurice's sharedlife obtrudes: 11se rase,il lui sourit, les yeux plus sombreset plus brillants, la boucheplus nue sousle masquede mousseblanche.Il apparaissaitdans 1'embrasurede la porte, avec dansles bras, enveloppede cellophane,un grand bouquet de rosesrouges: est-cequ'il lui apportedes fleurs? ('La Femmerompue', p. 141.) At this point in the text, the detail slows the paceof the narrative to such an extent that it almost stops,as if Monique were paralysedby this vivid, painful memory. Sometimes the past intrudes, breaking into the narrative, breaking up the text with brackets.When Maurice first tells Monique about his relationship with Noellie, their dialogue is interrupted by a parenthesis(eight and a half lines long) as Monique relives, in the space of an instant, the moment when they swore to be faithful to eachother (p. 131). Noting in her diary how shewatchedMaurice leave to join Noellie for the weekend,Monique's narrative is interrupted by a memory: `Il faisait un tendre ciel d'ete, au-dessusdes derniers feuillages d'automne. (La pluie d'or des feuilles d'acacia, sur une route rose et 162 [... ]' (p. 150). Such la dans ) Il de Nancy. voiture est monte grise, en revenant interpositions unsettlethe narrative and disorient readers. Temporal confusion and incoherencealso characterizethe text of Les Belles Images.It is neither a straightforwardretrospectivenor a presenttensenarrative. Much into (le but tense the is in it there past passe compose'), tense38 are shifts the present of for examplewhen Laurencerelatesher first meeting with Brigitte and her conversation in disorient Shifts (pp. 52-57). Catherine readers. perspective narrative afterwards with With no typographical indication of a break in the narrative, we read: `C'etait hier. Et Laurenceest preoccupee'(p. 57). Readersare disconcertedby the apposition of past and Laurence's linear instance occurs after Another the text chronology resisting of present. is bouquet delivery The the Catherine. Jean-Charles of roses red of over quarrel with into to tense the (p. 136), in the then past shifts tense narrative the present recounted `ils in from home the Jean-Charles' where marchent,rue present a point coming recount Faubourg Saint-Honore, par un beau froid sec' (p. 137).The trip to Greece is also intensity intrudes, the in translating tense the of tense the present although past narrated Laurence's impressions as the plane takes off and she experiences a moment of le [... ]. Je brutalement `L'avion ciel suis time vers pique and space: plenitude, outside in is from The the (p. 154). trip present a narrated point et part partout' ailleurs: nulle interrupts The brink in bed the is Laurence the present of madness. on when is Laurence for Breaks readers. are abrupt and confusing retrospective narrative. `typical' in her father had how restaurant, small eaten a one evening she and recollecting intrudes: Marthe's voice when Je mangeaisavec appetit et indifference... La voix de Marthe: il faut Laurence! tu quelque chose. que manges absolument 38One effect of the use of the presenttenseis to reinforce the inference that Laurence is alienated from herself and watchesherself live. 163 dors, laisse-moi. Je bouillon. Je bouillon. Au to un vais preparer moiresun Elle m'a derangee.Oü en etaisje? La route de Delphes. (Les Belles Images, pp. 156-57. ) The past and presentoverlap. The narrative is interrupted again as Marthe returns with the soup. Laurencetries to drink it but vomits and Jean-Charlesappealsto Laurenceto her in her, leave Laurence When doctor. the past tenseagain they story picks up seea (p. 168-69). At times, an associativelogic, comparableto the associativelogic at work in `Monologue', seems to operate in Les Belles Images too. The narrative thread weaves from point to point, hinging on words repeatedin the text. An impressionof her Laurence's is that to that sense chance governs corresponds created contingency for instance, Jean-Charles, `eile her Even to to s'etonne regard marriage with existence. 67). (Mais )' (p. hasard. Sans important tout speciale. est ainsi. raison et un que ce soit si One example of this hinges on the repetition `vexee' - `vexant' (p. 71). On a Sunday finish her Laurence's Mona, Laurence to at colleague, meet an urgent and morning flat. know leaves Readers Mona feels `vaguement Laurence the vexee' when project. that Laurenceand Jean-Charlesare aboutto leave for Feuverolles.There is a typographical break in the text. The next section of the narrative openswith the words `c'est vexant'. Readers' expectationsthat the narrative thread might continue by moving disappointed. logic lunch Feuverolles Associative to takesthe narrative to at are on Laurence's inability to rememberher dreams.It is probably severaldays later, the only is brief fact Dominique Feuverolles Sunday to the that a stayed reference at mention of in her room (p. 72). A further examplehinges on the repetition `belle' -'belle' (p. 39 is break is The 167). narrative ruptured though the unmarkedtypographically When 39I shall return to this rupture in the text below. 164 the narrativethread is picked up again the textual echo provides the link. The text pivots on the word `belle': l'ete. Je ce gai supposeque pays est plus de dit La Grece avec un soupcon reproche; eile est m'a papa gaffe, n'est pas belle. Les Korai etaient belles [...] (Les Belles Images,pp. 166-67.) Before concluding my examinationof temporal incoherencein the texts, I want to addressbriefly the experienceof time that is conveyed.It is typified by distortion and in is in `Monologue'. Actual is time This time the text, marked exemplified reification. in the eternal presentof an to trap the readers narrative seems moves on and yet in images the text, Words, are and echoed repeated and motifs obsession. unchanging Murielle doesnot move on. Repetition can literally stop time in the text. `J'en ai marre, j'en ai marre marre marre marre [...]' takes up twelve lines of text, making (story) time 40 `Je Likewise, fast, held Readers (p. 96). to on. veux move/ read unable are stand still in In je (p. 109) je je je text. the traps Je a readers gagner. veux veux veux veux veux' `Toute Murielle's by text the time ma own words: still, exemplifies stand making way, 41 de join' (p. 111). de l'apres-midi heures deux il un mardi vie sera I now want to addressthe incoherencethat stemsfrom fragmentation and interruption. I am going to concentrateon the most fractured text of my corpus, Les Belles Images.The first pageof the novel introducesreadersinto a disorienting textual in is fragmented is fragmented by dialogue Laurence's turn which monologue universe. by Laurence'sreflections thus bringing about what Irene M. Pagescalls a 40Elizabeth Fallaize makesthe following point: `The reader is left embarassed,bewildered, confronted with the responsibility as readerand uncertain whether to conscientiouslyread the words, contemplate them on the page or fall back on counting them (a surprisingly frequent reaction). TheNovels, p. 161. (The word `marre' is repeatedeighty-one times altogether.) "Repetition is discussedin detail in ChapterFour. 165 42 is insubstantial. She shows `desubstantificationof the real', making what real Belles Images Les first how the consistsof a monologue of paragraph convincingly 43 interrupted by direct speechand narrative comment However, there are, I believe, `outside be how is her It concrete can either reality clear not analysis. problems with it level to to the assigns within the which punctuation negatedor confirmed according (p. 138) "`empties" how Laurence the others simply of of all reality' existence story' or by commenting ironically or otherwiseon it. Desubstantification cannotbe a function of the statusof an utteranceas indicated by punctuation nor of the purport of a remark. Rather,it comesabout as a result of fragmentationand exists on a textual level. It is a function of a textual practice that deprivesboth descriptive monologue and " interpolations of coherenceand meaningfulness. This effect is felt in the shocking (from an unpreparedreader's point of view) opening paragraphand subsequently,at different momentsthroughout the narrative. In the sameway that Laurence'spersonality disintegrates,so too doesthe text. In the sameway that her senseof the real becomes level. dissolution fragile, the textual the of real on a readersexperience more Other textual strategiesunderminethe coherenceof the narrative in a similar drained Conversations interrupted dialogues Fragmented/ of sense. already are way. Laurence's As the narrative off as attention wanders. up and cut are picked underway 42PagBs,Irene M., 'Beauvoir's Les Belles images:"Desubtantification" of Reality Through a Narrative', Forum For Modern Language Studies, 11(1975), 133-41. 43Pages,`Desubtantification" of Reality', p. 137. 44There are other, more minor, problems with Pagbs'sargument.Her commentsrelate to the French text (p. its different 138). in English in her is translation with an punctuation the article quoted passage yet More seriously, there appearsto be someconfusion as to whether the different levels of narration she has distinguished are in direct or indirect speech.At first Pagessuggeststhat the descriptive part of Laurence's monologue is in direct speechand that the speechof others and Laurence's thoughts are in indirect speech(p. 137). This is not the case;the fact that both levels of narration are in direct speech actually addsto the incoherenceof the passageand the disorientation of readers.As Pagesdevelops her argument,shebegins,bafflingly, to refer to the direct speechof the secondlevel of narration. Her assertionthat `in Les Belles imagesthe dialoguesalways take place betweenLaurence and one of the characterswhose existenceis part of her own' (p. 135) is simply not true. Laurence repeatedly listens in to the dialoguesand conversationsof others(seepp. 90-94,97,99,144,145,146-47,149). 166 from Saturday Feuverolles, at one evening an excerpt recounts a conversationabout chic between interlocutor Dominique (there are no reporting and an anonymous restaurants clauses)is supersededby a snatchof conversationbetweenJean-Charlesand Dufrene before Laurence's attention is caught once more by Dominique's voice and, mid-way, her conversationbecomesthe focus of the narrative (pp. 92-93). As the guests `s'arrachentla parole' the conversationis representedwith no typographical clues that it is in fact a dialogue. The distinction betweendialogue and narrative is blurred. Two long sentencescontain all the contradictory utterancesof all of the participants in the conversation.There are, of course,no reporting clauses. Avouez qu'il ya des livres qu'on ne peut plus ecrire, des films qu'on ne peut plus les des entendre, mais chefs-d'oeuvre,ca ne qu'on peut plus musiques ne voir, datejamais, qu'est-ce qu'un chef d'oeuvre? Il faudrait eliminer les criteres impossible, subjectifs, c'est pardon c'est 1'effort de toute la critique moderne,et les criteres des Goncourt et des Renaudot,je voudrais les connaitre, les prix sont encoreplus mauvais que l'annee derniere, [...] mais non il n'y a pas d'autre critere, de critere objectif. (Les Belles Images,pp. 94-95.) This irreverent representationof the conversationconveys the jostling of the guestsfor is Incoherence to speak. space exacerbatedas towards the end of the paragraphthe conversationseemsto split into two parallel conversationshappening simultaneously, the final comment apparentlya responseto an opinion expressedsix inputs earlier, or perhapsit is simply the commentof someoneunable to force their way into the conversationuntil now. Unorthodox punctuation (most commasare omitted within what I take to be individual utterancesor contributions to the conversation),addsto the impressionof speed.The text raceson until a fervent remark from M' Thiron stops everyonein their tracks and the text is brought to an abrupt halt. Not for long, it appears: `Puis ils repartent...' (p. 95); this time, Laurencedoesnot bother even to listen. The representationof dialogue at the new Year's Eve party is equally unsettling/ disorienting 167 for readers.Again, dialogue is incorporatedinto the text with no typological clues: `Brouhaha,bruit de vaisselle, c'est delicieux, servez-vousmieux' (p. 145). The text dialogue between is it to there that and the clatter of nothing choose makes clear it is Laurence's dependent Once attention and not on more, readersare crockery. is (p. 145), Laurence's dialogue long. The for thoughts that about wine when sustained drift to last year's party and to Lucien, has shifted to astrology by the time Laurence tunes into the conversationagain.In this section of the text too, dialogue is fragmented. The representationof a snatchof conversationbetweenLaurence's father and Dufrene former's in intercalated direct literature the utterance art consists of speech, and about Dufrene's in (new then Laurence's and response elliptical paragraph) observations with free direct discourse(new paragraph).His responseis not distinguished from the rest of the long paragraphin which it is subsumed:`L'abstrait ne se vend plus; mais le figuratif inflation. il Rabächages. de la teile ya une peinture, que voulez-vous, non plus, crise 45 Laurences'ennuie' (p. 150). Incoherencealso derives from the fact that the text is multi-layered. Repeatedly, Laurencedistancesherself to make an observationthen distancesherself again to her is This her to then on comment comment. again observation, comment on disconcertingfor readers.Encounteringsuch layering in the text, this `jeu de miroirs', with its concomitant contradictoriness,readerswill shareLaurence's uncertainty and is in how distress. Laurence's her Multi-layering conspicuous on reflections ultimately, 45The distinction betweendialogue and narrative is also blurred on p. 32 where the representationof Laurence's conversationswith Lucien have a pantomime quality: `Ensuite, que d'agitation! Il me poursuivait, il pleurait, je cedais,il rompait, je souffrais, je cherchaispartout la Giulietta rouge,je me pendaisau tdldphone,il revenait, il suppliait : quitte ton marl, non jamais mais je t'aime, il m'insultait, il repartait,j'attendais, j'espdrais, je desespdrais,nous nous retrouvions, quel bonheur,j'ai tant souffert sanstoi, et moi sanstoi : avouetout a ton marl, jamais...'; `Discussiontrop connue:tu ne veux plus me voir, mais si je veux, comprends,je ne comprendsque trop...'. Seealso pp. 66-67 where Jean-Charles'sremarks on architectureare interrupted by a whole page of Laurence's reflections on relationships and her marriage before they begin again, only to be interrupted immediately by the doorbell ringing. 168 her mother is perceived.Sherejectsthe view that Dominique owes her successfulcareer to Gilbert and goeson: Its disent aussi, Gisele Dufrene le pense,que maman a mis le grappin sur Gilbert lui les interet: sans n'aurait ses voyages, eile pas pu se offrir, cette maison, par lui de etait desemparee tout apporte; qu'il a eile c'est autre chose meme soit; mais dans la (il maison comme une ame en peine, avec apresavoir quitte papa errait quelle durete eile est partie aussitötMarthe mariee); c'est grace ä Gilbert qu'elle est devenuecette femme tellement sored'elle. (Evidemment, on pourrait dire...) (Les Belles Images,p. 9.) In this example,the intrusion of a memory breaksup the text. Inconclusivenessis heightenedas Laurence'sthoughts are interrupted by the return of Hubert and Marthe from their walk in the forest. Likewise, multi-layering characterisesthe text as Laurence from discuss drive Feuverolles Gilbert. Laurence's response Jean-Charles and away and to Jean-Charles'sobservationthat it is natural she should dislike Gilbert, is marked by ) je le `Mais l'aime bien. (L'aime-t-elle tout si, ou non? eile aime monde. plurality: Gilbert ne perore pas, c'est vrai, se dit-elle. Mais personnen'ignore qu'il dinge une des de du ]' [... (p. electroniques 18). Multi-layering monde societes machines grandes plus imaginary. boundary between Indeed, they become the the the and real can obscure conflated as Laurenceis at once observerand participant, subject and object, in what is is from by be text that through the she cut advertising a scene an advertisement might thinking up: Quellejolie image publicitaire, promettant- au profit d'un marchandde Heuriste la d'un d'un le bonheur. Le securite, chemisier, meubles, couple qui le trottoir, longeant le parapetdans le doux bruissementdes arbres, sur marche contempleau passagel'interieur ideal: sousle lampadaire,l'homme jeune et elegantdaps son pullover en angoraqui lit une revue d'un air attentif; la jeune femme assiseä satable, un stylo en main, l'harmonie des noirs, des rougeset des jaunes si bien assortis(heureuxhasard)aux rouges et aux jaunes des dahlias. Tout ä l'heure, quandje les ai cueillis, c'etait des fleurs vivantes. [...] Avec des panneaux de bois vous alliez ä 1'elegancecitadine toute la poesie desforets. [...] La lumiere eclabousseles vitres, elle eclaire brutalement les amoureux enlaces, image du passepour moi qui suis l'image de leur tendre avenir, avec des enfants qu'ils devinent endormisdansdes chambresdu fond. Des enfantsse glissent a 1'interieur dun arbre creux et Usse trouvent dans une ravissante chambre aux panneaux de bois naturel. Idee ä suivre. 169 (Les Belles Images,pp. 20-21.) A similar effect is achievedat the point in the text where Laurencefinds Dominique devastatedafter a violent confrontation with Gilbert: Gilbert a sonneä dix heures,eile a cru que c'etait le concierge,eile a ouvert. Patricia a tout de suit ete pleurer dansles bras de Gilbert, et Lucile criait, il a il lui d'un de derriere la coup pied, caressaitles cheveux de Patricia, referme pone si tendrement,avec une voix apaisante,et lä dansl'antichambre il l'avait insultee, giflee, il l'avait saisiepar le col du peignoir bleu et trainee dans la chambre. (Les Belles Images,p. 124.) The text acquiresan hallucinatory quality as two narrativesare blended in one, the is letter Gilbert's The the and of visit. passage marked by abrupt shifts in tone, a receipt convulsive rhythm. Reported in the third person, the events are, nevertheless, implicitly is by herself. Dominique (The account enclosedbetween `[Dominique] parle recounted d'une voix qui n'appartient ä personne'and `La voix de Dominique s'etouffe'. ) Thus the narrative situation that prevails in the novel as a whole is paralleled here in this narrative within a narrative. A further example of multi-layering translatesLaurence's inner conflict. In this is during family the the she recalling moment meal when shewas forced to passage recogniseher powerlessnessin the face of the united opposition of everyoneelse: Son pere et Dominique l'ont dit ensemble: Alors? Hubert a hoche la tete, d'un air entendu. Laurence s'est obligee ä manger, mais c'est alors qu'elle a eu le premier spasme. Elle se savait vaincue. On n'a pas raison contre tout le monde, eile n'a jamais ete assez arrogante pour penser ca. (Il ya eu Galilee, Pasteur, et d'autres que nous citait Mil` Houchet. Mais je ne me prends pas pour Galilee. ) Done A Päques - eile sera guerie, bien sür, c'est 1'affaire de quelques jours, on se degoüte de manger pendant quelque jours et forcement ga finit par se tasser ils emmeneront Catherine a Rome. L'estomac de Laurence se crispe. Elle ne pourra peut-titre pas manger avant longtemps. (Les Belles Images,p. 175.) As Laurenceis torn by painful emotions so too the text is divided againstitself. Laurence's anguishis manifest. 170 The passagesI have beenquoting to illustrate the incoherencethat is the product it fragmentation and multi-layering, make clear that the use of bracketsand dashes of in breaks the tone have been instrumental in and silences and use of ellipses and disrupting the text and fostering incoherencein Les Belles Images. Moving closer to the text as it were, I want now to focus specifically on thesetextual strategies.On a typographical level, the markers,(), -, and..., conspicuously fracture the text. Virtually no pageof the novel is without them. With regard to meaningfulnessand function in different they of ways. a number madness, The narrative is disrupted by Laurence'sobservationsthat are frequently separatedfrom the rest of the narrative by bracketsor dashes.However, there is no isolated Not typographically and commentsthat appear all asidesare consistentpattern. in bracketsat one point in the narrative may appearwithout bracketsat another.On the it between informative, dashes that they are often stage appears asides are whole, directions, or cliched interjections, whereasbracketstend to contain more emotionally chargedmemoriesand intimate thoughts, feelings and ideasthat have no place in Laurence's milieu. A significant proportion of the parenthesesare questionswhich adds to the tentative tone of the text. However, once more, there is no consistencyand 6 found. I Perhapsthat is the exceptionsto the pattern am suggestingare easily 46Examples of the use of dashesand bracketsin Les Belles images, some of which conform to the schema proposedand someof which do not: "Tout en se recoiffant dans la chambrede sa mere, dr8lementjoli ce rustique espagnol Laurencefait un dernier effort [...]. ' (p. 15) `Ils avaientbeaucoupdans6ensemble il dansetrCsbien its ]. ' [... (p. 31) s'6taient embrassds "Non merci. - Elle a la gorge nude. - Qu'est-ce qui sepasse?' (p. 45) `Il ne viendra pas ä Feuverollesce week-end. La voix persiflante vibre de haine: -Il me plaque, quoi! ' (p. 49) x'- Qu'est-ce que les autresont queje n'ai pas?-' (p. 7) x`Est-ce quej'aime Jean-Charles- ai-je aime Lucien -d'amour? ' (p. 67) x'Et le fait est que des gens setuent - il a demand8desbananeset une serviette- parce qu'il existe justement quelquechosede pire que la mort.' (p. 85) "[Dominique talking about her ex-husband]`S'il btait mystique [...] je comprendrais.(Mais non, penseLaurence.)' (p. 15) 171 important point. Readersseekto impose a pattern,to make senseof the text only to be find is They frustrated to they the upset. expect thwarted pattern as and repeatedly logic. itself disruption disrupted the text order and resists and encountera Readers'expectationscan be disappointedto dramatic effect. For example,when Jean-Charlesis determinedto end Catherine's friendship with Brigitte, a comment that `Du into directly in brackets text: the have erupts anticipatedwould appear we might Remplacer formidable; idee affectivement. une arnie par un meme cheval! ca c'etait une it is intense Jean-Charles if is Laurence's that It towards ' (p. 172). so anger as cheval! defences. The it has broken Laurence's brackets, through be all cannot containedwithin impression in Images) Les Belles (relatively to the add of a rare exclamationmarks surgeof powerful emotion. Notwithstanding the instability of the patternsof parenthesesin the text, their be linked brackets The interesting to of can use conjectures. use gives rise a number of level, is Her textual Laurence's not on a apartness reproduced senseof alienation. with in have in her I be incorporated that the her asides thoughts can suggested narrative. all bracketstend to be more emotionally chargedwhich fits in with Freud's belief that because faced be they are thoughts without affect can obsessionalor unthinkable 47 bracketed isolated or off. It may be that, on occasion,Laurencebracketsoff the `(Pas de gene,pas de mauvaiseconscience,pas de delectationmorose.)' (p. 69) )' (p. 105) `Oui je lui ai ressemble[ä Catherine], dit Laurence.(Me ressemblera-t-elle? `Mais je ne t'aime plus d'amour. (L'ai-je jamais fait? Cesmots ont-ils un sens?)' (p. 110) x`[... ] eile s'6tonne que ce soit si important et un hasard.Sansraison speciale.(Mais tout est ainsi.)' (p. 67) x`(elle a dit qu'elle avait mangeavec les enfants,eile ne pouvait rien avaler)' (p. 137) x`[... ] sebattant entre eux comme des kriss malais dansun tiroir ferme (si on l'ouvre, tout est en ordre).' (p. 179) In theselatter examplesthe use of brackets addsan emotional edgeto otherwise seemingly neutral interpositions. 47`Inhibitions, Symptomsand Anxiety', (1926), The CompletePsychological Worksof Sigmund Freud, Volume XX (1925-1926),pp. 87-175 (pp. 119-21).In his discussionof the technique of isolating, a variation of repression,Freud arguesthat in obsessionalneurosis, a traumatic experiencecannot be forgotten as it can be in hysteria. Instead, `it is deprived of its affect and associativeconnectionsare 172 herself. in This idea finds this that way she protects some and unstabilising, painful final in In brackets Les in distribution Belles the the the narrative. chapter of of support Images,there are significantly fewer parentheses.It is in this chapterthat Laurencefaces her disappointmentand so pain and affect are no longer bracketedoff. What was included in is Nicole Ward As becomes therefore narrative. and conscious repressed Jouve said of Helene Cixous's texts, Les Belles Imagesmight be said to display `the inner logic of a psychoanalyticcure'. 8 At other times, bracketsand dashesare a way of indicating intonation, they introduce voice into the text. It is not only the casethat we `hear' Laurence's voice in the narrative. The intonation of voices shehearsis marked in the text too. The cadence of Thirion's speech,for instance,is patent: je dit-il de Gisele. Qu'est-ce ä Le consoeurs, petite que pense mes madame? plus grandbien; beaucoupsont des femmescharmanteset beaucoupont du talent (en generalce ne sont pas les memes).Mais une choseest sure:jamais aucunene le de Elles Assises. coffre, ni l'autorite, ni -je n'ont pas seracapable plaider aux vais vous etonner- le senstheätral necessaires. (Les Belles Images,p. 99.) Ellipsis as well, is a disruptive strategythat functions in a number of different disrupts blanks/ in In the text. the narrative and creates empty every case,ellipsis ways spacesin the text, spaceswhere meaning,unexpressed,can expand.It opensup the text. Ellipsis is a device that enhancesthe subjectiverealism of the text. It can simply mark the interruption of Laurence'sthoughts by an event in the story. For example,in the opening scenesat Feuverolles:`(Evidemment,on pourrait dire...)/ Hubert et Marthe reviennent de la fork [...]' (p. 9); or on a later occasionat Feuverolleswhen Laurence's suppressedor interrupted so that it remains as though isolatedand is not reproducedin the ordinary processesof thought' (p. 120). 48Ward Jouve,Nicole, `H6l6neCixous: From Inner Theatreto World Theatre' in White WomanSpeaks with Forked tongue: Criticism as Autobiography, ed. by Nicole Ward Jouve, London: Routledge, 1990,pp. 91-100 (p. 94), quoted in Shiach,Morag, Helene Cixous: A Politics of Writing, London: Routledge, 1991. 173 `[... for interrupted: ] la tendresse:si elle her feelings Jean-Charles are musings over de La Dominique 1'arracheä sa reverie' 1'avoir toujours... voix retrouveepour pouvait (p. 92)49 Ellipsis repeatedlymarks Laurence's, or anothercharacter's,breaking off one train of thought to pursueanother.Laurencerepresentsto herself how Dominique might forewarning imagines her `Elle jettera Bans Gilbert's then mother: se with rejection cope le travail, eile prendraun nouvel amant...Et si j'allais moi-meme la prevenir, tout de suite?' (p. 48). Laurenceis paralysedby indecision and fear, `immobile, au volant de sa voiture' (p. 48). Later, Gilbert is informing Laurencethat he is going to disillude Dominique and tell her about his impending marriage to Patricia when his chain of thought is deflected: `-Je rentre ä Paris ce soir... - Le visage de Gilbert s'illumine: - Ecoutezdonc; je suis en train de me demander[...]' (p. 96). Correspondingly,ellipsis breaking leaves Laurence to train thought of speak a character's off a as when off marks her appraisalof Dominique's characterto urge her mother to get ready to go out: `On la de / femme de tete, soi, efficace... maitresse prend pour une - Habille-toi, repete Laurence.Mets des lunettesnoires etje t'emmene dejeunerquelquepart [...]' (p. 125). Similarly, ellipsis representsthe way in which, in conversation,not all utterancesare completed.This occurs for instancewhen Jean-Charlestells Laurencea story he thinks will appeal to her father. Laurence's reply, `- Oui, papa aimera ca...' captures the opennessof informal speech(p. 91). Likewise, the way Laurencedoesnot conclude her retort to Gilbert's requestthat shebe there to support Dominique once he has informed her of his plans to marry, accordswith Laurence's angrily walking away: `- Pour l'empecher de se descendreen laissantun mot oü elle dirait pourquoi? Ca ferait mauvais effet, du sangsur la robe blanche de Patricia.../ Elle s'eloigne' (p. 97). The way interlocutors constantly interrupt eachother is also marked by ellipsis. This is 49For further examples seepp. 108 and 156. 174 particularly the casewhen strong convictions and emotions are involved. Marthe desperatelywants Laurenceto allow Catherineto take her first communion and when Laurenceexplains that they had Catherinebaptisedonly to pleaseJean-Charles'smother `[... ] Laurence: is dead, Marthe cuts off maintenant qu'elle est morte.../ -Tu who now fille de instruction (p. to toute en grave responsabilite privant religieuse') une prends 75). When Laurence's father fails to supporther view that it is normal to be `toumeboule' (upset) at Catherine'sageand that she should be allowed to remain friends with Brigitte, Laurence'sdismay and anger lead her to interrupt his /pronouncements:`Si la psychologuela trouve desaxee... Mais tu ne crois pas aux in (p. final 174). The way which ellipsis promotes subjective realism is psychologues! by marking a pause,as when Jean-CharlesasksLaurenceif sheis ready, `«Tu es (p. heightens 85). In these » all cases, ambiguity, creating a spacefor the prete?... ellipsis unspokenin the text. At other comic momentsin the narrative, ellipsis is usedto cut off potentially for See the more same. examplethe point where Laurence endlessrepetition, of Lucien: days her `Tons the with early of relationship cesaller et retour et remembers toujours retomber au memepoint...' (p. 32). The suggestionis that, were it not broken off, the parodic representationof Laurence'saffair with Lucien might continue. Likewise, ellipsis implies the endlessnessand also the predictability of the Feuverolles guests' conversation:`Puis ils repartent...' (p. 95). It is as if the text is turning its back on what they are saying. Once more, ellipsis opensup a spacein the narrative. Ellipsis leavesroom for the unexpressedand inexpressible.Thoughts may not be completedbecausethey aretoo emotionally charged(with Jean-Charles,Laurence says, `j'ai retrouve aussicette douceurplus secretequej'avais connuejadis, assiseaux pieds de mon pere ou tenant samain dansla mienne...' p. 22), or becausethey are too 175 frightening/ threatening (Laurence struggles to name her disappointment, `Je suis jalouse mais surtout, surtout...' p. 179). Ellipsis repeatedlyintroduces ambiguity and uncertainty into the narrative. It addsto readers' uncertainty about the statusof the ' by Jean-Charles's la idees ä `Dix utilitarian responseto prompted minute... comment: the kaleidoscope(p. 38). Ellipsis also translatesLaurence's own uncertainty on a textual level. What should she do to preserveprecious moments for her children? `Les 50 ' (p. Ellipsis 57). de Ou suggeststhe tentativenessof alors... quoi? grandir. empecher Laurence's stepstowards understanding:`Il me manquequelque choseque les autres 1'aient (p. 83): `Ce lui A A pas non plus' soupcon qui est qu'ils ne ont... moins... moins (p. 91). lies il fonde' As in bed determine jour... etait 1'autre trying to she peut-etre venu how she should go on, ellipses leave spacesin the text for a wealth of associationsand De [... ] De fill: `Catherine to s'en quoi? eile sortira... peut-titre and meaning expand ' (p. Catherine... de 1'indifference. 181). 1'ignorance, De cette nuit. Not all breaksand silencesin the text are marked by ellipses. Often signalled by breaks in in tone, typographically and unmarked ruptures the text are an abrupt shift in following is destabilising. This the the examplethat occurs early case unsettling and in the text. Laurenceis at work thinking about how she is going to visit her father and about her relationship with her parentswhen the narrative thread is broken and readers begins following disoriented by the that the exclamation are paragraph.It takesthem sometime to realisethat the narrative has moved on and that Laurenceis trying to park: C'est son pere qu'elle aime le plus - le plus au monde - et eile voit Dominique bien davantage. Toute ma vie ainsi: c'est mon pere que j'aimais et ma mere qui faite. m' a hesite ]. demi-seconde de [... de Elle trop a une » mufle! «Espece (Les Belles Images, p. 33.) S0There is a similar exampleon p. 167: `cettepensdequeje retenaisdepuis... quand? ma soudain transpercde'.In an interview with JacquelinePiatier in Le Monde, Simone de Beauvoir draws attention to the fact that Laurence,'un 6tre de fuite', often doesnot finish her sentences,that `ses conclusionsrestenten suspens'.`Simone de Beauvoir PrdsenteLes Belles images', Le Monde, 23 December 1966,p. 17. 176 Elsewhere,a silence in the text where the readerexpectsan indirect object createsan is The everything. narrator recounting an afternoon means nothing/ space which empty feminism, house. Laurence switches off: As Dominique's the talk to turns country at `C'est comme la psychanalyse,le Marche Commun, la force de frappe, eile ne sait pas (p. Je 99). Allergic The to text suis allergique' n'en pense rien. eile penser, qu'en ...? begsthe question.The readeris dizzy and disoriented,experiencingmomentarily, feelings which evoke Laurence'sbreakdown,`un vertige [...] un tourbillon' (p. 160), `un gouffre' (p. 167). Rupturesin the text also signal Laurence'sanxiety at the gulf she seesopening father. her During the trip to Greece,she cannot agreewith him herself between and up but doesnot voice her disagreementabout the poverty she sees(`je passaisoutre' p. 162). When she seesno sign of the `austerebonheur' that her father is convinced doubts her in `j'aurais 84 (see 162), the text: the are made explicit and poor pp. rewards bien voulu que papame dise oü exactementil avait rencontredes gens que leer denuementcomblait' (p. 162); `«Un austerebonheur»: ce n'est pas du tout ce queje lisais sur cesvisagesrougis par le froid' (p. 165). Laurencetries to explain to herself how her father could be so mistaken and supposeshe has known Greecein the summer it `plus However, holds be when she must gai'. months when out this possible `her father he it: La Grece to n'est pas gaie, m'a dit papa avec un rejects mitigation soupconde reproche;eile est belle' (p. 167). Laurence'sdisillusionment is not is break in the text. The narrative shifts abruptly to the visit to There a sharp expressed. the museum.A similar rupture occursearlier when Laurencedoesnot challengeher father's unconvincing reasonsfor not signing petitions. Her disagreementand 177 disappointmentare implicit in her silencethat is reproducedon a textual level as the (p. 166). Athens to narrative unexpectedlymoves Moving on from how brackets,dashes,ellipses, ruptures and silencesfragment, disrupt and destabilisethe text of Les Belles Images, I now want examine how Simone de Beauvoir's texts are disruptedat a syntactical level. Syntax and punctuation, which important because, Roger Fowler `syntax as are points out, syntax, exercises establishes a continuousand inexorable control over our apprehensionof literary meaning and 51 1 construetransgressive(disorderedand fragmented) syntax as a symptom structure' it, `disturbances in For, Jardine Alice in the text. the syntactic chain as puts of madness - the insurgenceof rhythm and intonation into the ranks of grammatical categoriesfor 52 identity'. example- may be seenas an attack againstthe ultimate guarantor of our `Monologue' is Simonede Beauvoir's most transgressivetext and her most `crazy'. That it is perceivedas suchis, to a considerableextent, owing to its eccentric is flagrant. is is in her (mis)use The It text text that this of punctuation not syntax. without punctuation but conventionalrules of punctuation are flouted. A senseof disarray is generatedas readers,largely deprived of boundariesnormally marked by punctuation,attempt to make senseof the text. Sometimes,sentence-internal is punctuation missing. At other times, confusion arisesbecauseutterancesthat might normally be divided into two sentencesor more are amalgamated,as when Murielle disculpate herself: `Oui, si j'etais de cesmeres qui Sylvie's to suicide, seeking goesover se levent ä septheuresdu matin on 1'aurait sauveemoi je vis sur un autre rythme ce n'est pas criminel commentauraisje devine?' (p. 112). Whole sectionsof text lack punctuation.Readersencounteringseriesof undifferentiated clausesmust themselves 51Fowler, Roger,A Dictionary Modern Critical Terms,London: Routledge, 1987, 243. of p. 52Jardine,Pre-Texts, 234. p. 178 impose order on the text. Disorientation is increasedwhen clausesthey might differentiate appearjumbled. This is the casefor instanceearly in the text where Murielle imaginesher family celebratingNew Year without her. Noisy, festive people in the street ('Salauds! ils me dethirent les tympans [...]' p. 87) becomeconflated with Murielle's family ('Salauds! Its me cavalentdans la teteje les vois je les entends' p. 88) and we read: Je n'ai rien ä foutre d'eux seulementqu'ils ne m'empechent pas de dormir; on devient bon pour le cabanonon avouetout le vrai et le faux qu'ils ne comptent pas lä-dessusje suis une forte natureils ne m'auront pas. ('Monologue', p. 88.) I believe few readersare not forced to rereadsuch utterancesa number of times in order fragment doing, in In them. a of text over and over, they to make senseof repeating so Murielle. that the grip obsessions replicate Elsewhere,disarticulated,disjointed syntax translatesMurielle's distress.When is imagines because incense bums smells vomit, she she reminded of she some she Sylvie's funeral: `fette odeur d'encensc'est celle du service funebre; les ciergesles fleurs le catafalque:mon desespoir.Morte; c'etait impossible!' (p. 104). The convulsive In jerky this syntax are unmistakable. addition, seriesof short, asyntactic and rhythms of duplicating a rapid intake of breath. This disarticulated sentencessuggestbreathlessness, by being Murielle's rocked powerful emotions. For instancewhen she can suggest d'autre. Personne de lä' (p. father: `Mon Tout her m'aimait. est venu pere remembers 90). Or when sherelives the pain of Sylvie's death: `Sylvie est morte. Cinq ans dejä. Elle est morte. Pour toujours. Je ne le supportepas' (p. 104). This exampleoccursjust followed is immediately by the and syntax quoted above convulsive after example of Murielle's breaking down and uttering desperatepleas: `Au secoursj'ai mal j'ai trop 179 1a degringolade je de lä non aidezca ne veux pas que recommence mal qu'on me sorte ' 104). (p. laissez je pas seule... moi n'en peux plus ne me Together, the lack of sentence-internalpunctuation in much of the text and series hurrying have the of readersalong. effect of short, asytactic utterances 3 Murielle's in The text. the of representation mirrored are thoughts speech and rapid racing Murielle's telephonecall to Tristan is exemplary. Murielle's voice leavesno room for is how her This Long, Tristan's. relentlessonslaught. unpunctuatedsentencesreproduce Murielle puts her caseto Tristan early in the call: Toute la nuitj'ai reflechi je n'avais rien d'autre ä faire et vraiment je t'assure c'est anormal cette situation on ne va pas continuer comme ca enfin nous sommes le deux tu tien pour appartements revendrais ces toujours manes quel gaspillage de derangerais je to question pas n'aie pas peur pas au moins vingt millions et ne la Bans je d'amour la m'enfermerais reprendre vie conjugale on ne s'aime plus les tu toutes fond du tu que nanas avoir pourrais pas ne m'interromps chambre de il je raison pour m'en torche mais puisqu'on est restes amis n'y a pas voudrais le meme toit. sous pas qu'on ne vive ('Monologue', p. 115.) Thesethirteen lines of print without a pauseappearin more than three pagesof text blanks in brief break. Tristan's the text as only utterancesappear without a paragraph (ellipses), their import is gatheredonly from Murielle's response.`Tu n'as pas le droit de priver [Francis] d'un vrai foyer... Mais si revenonslä-dessus[...]' (p. 115). `Quelquefoisje me demandesi ce n'etait pas un coup monte... Oui un coup monte: c'est lächage... Tu incroyable ce amour et puis ne t'etais pas rendu tellement ce grand 54 Murielle's like Tristan, Readers, ' (pp. 116-17). de can experience compte? quoi? le It (((Elle her se vengepar monologue.»), as an assault. only weapon monologue, down. to us pin seems 53Readersattempting to read unpunctuatedsectionsof text aloud can actually experiencebreathlessness breathing deprived the they spacepunctuation provides. of are as S4Seealso pp. 114,117. 180 The effects identified in `Monologue' are not unique to that text. Many of the is by It, Images. in Belles Les found too, characterised contorted, same techniques are transgressive syntax. Syntax is often broken and disarticulated, conveying pain and the 55 in One the the point of most striking examples occurs at pangs of Laurence's anguish. bears Laurence the she as a parent: enormous responsibility the text where realises 56 `Pointe de feu ä travers le coeur. Anxiete, remords' (p. 135). Contorted syntax recurs five `Il depression her Laurence years earlier: me semblait n'avoir plus remembers when ' bon ä les Jean-Charles, cultiver? d'avenir: me petites en avaient un; moi pas; alors quoi (p. 43). And spasmodicsyntax translatesthe intenseemotion that destabilisesLaurence dance: little Greek she the girl watches as Une charmantefillette qui deviendrait cette matronne.Non. Je ne voulais pas. Avais je bu trop d'ouzo? Moi aussij'etais possedeepar cette enfant que la danseuse de fin. La instant Cet ne pas petite passionnen'aurait musique possedait. je la 1'eternite tournerait sur elle-meme et regarderais. eile grandirait pas; pendant Je refusaisde l'oublier, de redevenirunejeune femme qui voyage avec son pere; je refusals qu'un jour eile ressemblätä sa mere,ne se rappelantmeme pas avoir ete cette adorablemenade.Petite condamneeä mort, affreuse mort sanscadavre. La vie allait l'assassiner.Je pensaisA Catherinequ'on etait en train d'assassiner. (Les Belles Images,p. 158.) Disarticulation is especially marked during the culmination of Laurence's breakdownthat has beenbuilding up throughout the novel. Laurenceconsidersand `Oedipe liquide, her is jealousy idea the that ma mere the of collapse: mal at root rejects demeurantma rivale. Electre, Agamemnon.Est-cepour cela que Mycenesm'a tant emue?Non. Non. Billevesees' (p. 179). The repressedemotion that is giving rise to her inner conflict (`Le tiroir est referme, les kriss sebattent.') is her disappointmentwith her 55I am reminded of what Julia Kristeva saysabout Marguerite Duras in an interview with SusanSellers: `It's through being imperfect that Duras' sentencestranslatesuffering rather than in the fireworks of is Women's find in For Duras, Joyce. the painful'. expression of pain musical and vocal pleasurewe Review,Number 12,19-21, p. 21. 56An alternative analysis of such syntax is to read it as sentencesthat are fragmentedand the fragments in discussion Joyce's `The Dahl's James See Liisa by full-stops. sentences of expressionistic separated Attributive SentenceStructure in the Streamof ConsciousnessTechnique with SpecialReferenceto the Interior Monologue usedby Virginia Woolf, Joyce and O'Neill', NeuphilogischeMitteilungen, 68, 1967,440-54, pp. 449-50. 181 father. Laurence'spain at recognising and naming her disappointment is conveyedby broken syntax, duplicating her breathlessness that is denotedin the text: `Je suisjalouse ' 179). doses (p. Laurence surtout... off, exhaustedafter confronting her mais surtout, find Her Jean-Charles there. to refusal to seethe doctor is expressedin pain and wakes disarticulatedsyntax: `-Non jamais! Je ne me laisserai pas manipuler. Elle crie: - Non! Non! ' (p. 180). Laurence's struggleto find a way forward is related in fractured, convulsive syntax: Elle retombe sur son oreiller. Its la forceront ä manger, ils lui feront tout avaler; tout quoi? tout ce qu'elle vomit, sa vie, celle des autres avec leurs fausses amours, leurs histoires d'argent, leurs mensonges. Its la gueriront de son refus, de son desespoir. Non. Pourquoi non? Cette taupe qui ouvre les yeux et voit qu'il fait les I'avance-t-il? Refermer Et Catherine? lui clouer les ä yeux. quoi ra noir, haut. Pas Catherine. "Non"; Je ne permettrai pas qu'on tout crie eile a paupieres? lui fasse ce qu'on m'a fait. Qu'a-t-on fait de moi? Cette femme qui n'aime incapable beautes du inensible de monde, aux meme pleurer, cette personne, femme que je vomis. Catherine: au contraire lui ouvrir les yeux tout de suite et jusqu'ä filtrera de lumiere eile, peut-titre eile s'en sortira... De un rayon peut-titre de l'indifference. De l'ignorance, Catherine... Elle se redresse De cette nuit. quoi? soudain. (Les Belles Images,pp. 180-81.) This paragraph,quoted in full becauseit exemplifies Simone de Beauvoir's use of fragmented,disrupted syntax, begins with Laurencefalling back on her pillow and ends with her sitting up, a reversalthat marks a critical moment, a turning point for her. Laurencehas found in herself the strengthto challengeJean-Charlesand fight for her daughter.The intenseemotionsthat are destabilising Laurenceare parallelled in the unsettled,disrupted syntax of the passage. The use of syntax in L'Invitee is not at first sight so radical. Nevertheless,it does contribute to the madnessof the text. There is a typical sentencestructure in L'Invitee that correspondsto the prevailing claustrophobicand obsessiveatmospherein the book. Given its reputation as a philosophical novel, there is a surprising absenceof complex or compoundsentencesin L'Lrvitee. In the main, Simone de Beauvoir has not constructed 182 by linked subordinating or coordinating carefully arguedsentenceswhere clausesare by is her Rather, characterised either simple writing paratactics7, conjunctions. including by sometimes series of clauses, subordinate sentencesmadeup of sentencesor have in by I linked and colons. semi-colons mind or or coordinateclauses,separated in depicting Francoise in Moorish the like the that novel, this one occurs early sentences dancer: Xaviere a are watching cafe where sheand Francoise s'enfonca dans les coussins; eile aussi, eile etait touchee par tout ce d'avoir ä 1'enchantait facile, surtout c'etait annexe sa vie mais ce qui clinquant Gerbert, Ines, ä triste; comme comme comme present, car existence cette petite Canzetti, Xaviere lui appartenait; rien ne donnait jamais ä Francoise des joies si fortes que cette espece de possession; Xaviere regardait attentivement la danseuse, la les que passion embellissait, sa sentait pas son propre visage main eile ne voyait Francoise etait de la tasse seule mais sensible aux qu'elle serrait, contours figure, de Xaviere, les de sa sa vie meme avaient gestes cette main: contours besoin de Franroise pour exister. (L'Invitee, pp. 22-3.) This very long sentence(twelve lines of print) is Gothic in its complexity, its in is There a sense which thesesentencescould go on an on, clauses convolutions. 58 long text, These the infinity. that to sentences characterize uncoordinated added harmonizewith and contribute to the senseof suffocation and enclosureevoked. Moreover, such sentencesresist any imposition of closure or conclusiveness.This illimitable being Francoise's in keeping is the of overwhelmed sense and with syntax fears Two Francoise's Xaviere that that sentences evoke composite personifies. peril it is in in head Spanish the the text: the to of climactic one moments night-club; come a Cette presenceennemiequi s'etait reveleetout ä 1'heuredannun sourire de folle devenaientde plus en plus proche, il n'y avait plus moyen d'en eviter le devoilementterrifiant; jour apresjour, minute apresminute, Francoiseavait fui le danger,mail c'en etait fait, eile l'avait enfin rencontrecet infranchissableobstacle depuis des formes incertaines a sa enfance; plus petite qu'elle avait pressentisous travers la jouissancemaniaquede Xaviere, ä travers sahaine et sajalousie, le 57Parataxisis the placing of sentences,clauses,or propositions together without connectives. 58Thesesentencesfollow the principles of attributive structure as it is presentedby Liisa Dahl. She argues that `different additions can be made,becausethere is no definite subordination to which a new word should conform. The connectionbetweenthe parts is "half open", for the starting point is the subject but it has no fixed termination' (p. 443). 183 definitif la eclatait, face de aussi aussi que monstrueux, mort; en scandale Francoise,et cependantsanseile, quelquechoseexistait comme une libre, irreductible, absolu, une conscienceetrangerese sans recours: condamnation dressait.C'etait comme la mort, une totale negation,une eternelleabsence,et boulversante, de contradiction une ce gouffre neant pouvait se cependantpar faire ä soi-meme et se exister pour soi avec plenitude; l'univers tout rendrepresent jamais depossedee lui, du Francoise, ä en et monde, se entier s'engloutissait dissolvait elle-meme dans ce vide dont aucunmot, aucuneimage ne pouvait infini. le contour cerner (L 'Invitee, pp. 363-64. ) The accumulationof clauseupon clauseconveysa senseof relentlessnessand inevitability. Just as Francoiseis deciding to murder Xaviere, the threat of engulfment sherepresentsis evoked again: En face de sa solitude, hors de l'espace, hors du temps, il y avait cette presence de depuis longtemps 1'ecrasait son ombre aveugle; eile etait lä, qui si ennemie n'existant que pour soi, tout entiere reflechie en elle-meme, reduisant au neant tout ce qu'elle excluait; eile enfermait le monde entier dans sa propre solitude triomphante, eile s'epanouissait sans limites, infinie, unique; tout ce qu'elle etait, d'elle-meme, ä etait 1'absolue le toute tirait eile se refusait emprise, eile eile separation. (L'Invitee, pp. 502-503.) Again, just one long convoluted sentencebuilds up the menacing picture. The appositenessof the syntax that magnifies and mirrors a senseof submergeanceis incontrovertible. At this point in the text, there is a distinct contrastbetweenthis long sentence applied to Xaviere and a seriesof short sentencesassociatedwith Francoise:`Seule. Sansappui' (p. 502); 11 n'y avait plus personne.Frangoiseetait seule./ Seule.Eile avait agi seule.Aussi seuleque dapsla mort' (p. 503). Francoise'semancipationfrom Xaviere is figured on a textual level. Her solitude being `enacted' by single-word sentencesthat standalone. Shorter and single-word sentencesintrude elsewherein the text too. Definitive and self-contained,they produce a spasmodic,jerky rhythm. A one-word sentence enclosedby longer, discursive sentencesconveysthe decisive nature of Francoise's 184 illness: `Malade' (p. 222). Similarly, the word `prisonniere' is isolated, imprisoned in the text (p. 261). A short asyntacticsentenceplaced after a long seriesof clauses Pierre's last last before in Paris Montparnasse the the war, evening evening on evoking before he is called up, conveys a senseof finality. It is like a door closing: Its s'assirentä la terrasse;le cafe etait plein de gens, de bruit et de fumee; il y d'officiers de jeunes bande tres qui chantaient; une gens nuee en une avait la ils de jailli du nuit, s'etaient repanduspar groupes sol au cours uniforme avait harcelaient des femmes les des des tables; avec rires qui restaientsans autour echo. La dernierenuit, les dernieresheures. (L'Invitee, p. 475.) A seriesof short sentencesconveysfear and panic when Francoiserealisesthat the key to her desk where she keepsher letters from Pierre and Gerbert is missing. Elle vida nerveusementson sac.Le poudrier. Le baton de rouge. Le peigne. Il fallait que la clef füt quelquepart. Elle ne s'etait pas separeede son sacune battre le Son ä le Elle coeur se mit avec violence. sac, secoua. retourna minute. Une minute. Le temps de porter le plateaude dejeunerde la cuisine dansla la dans etait de Xaviere. Et Xaviere cuisine. chambre (L'Invitee, p. 496-97.) As the narrative continues,short sentencesrelate how Francoiseruns home and finds that Xaviere has read her letters, («Xaviere sait.)>(p. 497)). Speedand breathlessness by irrevocability then are suggested a successionof short sentences. and L'Invitee is also marked by fragmented,disrupted syntax as the novel reachesits Francoise's Xaviere has letters, After the confrontation with once she read climax. disarticulatedand convulsive syntax accordswith Francoise's anguish: [Francoise]traversale couloir, eile titubait comme une aveugle, les larmes brülaient sesyeux: `J'ai etajalouse d'elle. Je lui ai pris Gerbert.' Les larmes brülaient, les mots brülaient commeun fer rouge. Elle s'assit au bord du divan et repetahebetee:`J'ai fait cela. C'est moi. ' Dans les tenebres,le visage de Gerbert brülait d'un feu noir, et les lettres sur le tapis etaient noires comme un pacte infernal. Elle ports son mouchoir ä seslevres. Une lave noire et torride coulait danssesveins. Elle aurait voulu mourir. (L'Invitee, p. 499.) 185 She cannot bear the idea that Xaviere will define her as maleficent: `Chaquematin renaitrait cette femme detesteequi etait desormaisFrancoise.Elle revit le visage de Xaviere decomposepar la souffrance.Mon crime. Il existait pour toujours' (p. 500). Tortured, fragmentedsyntax betraysFrancoise'spangs.Equally contorted and disruptive syntax marks her defianceand resolveto wipe out Xaviere and, with her, Francoise'sown guilt: C'etait une longue histoire. Elle fixa l'image. Il y avait longtempson essayaitde la lui ravir. Rigide commeune consign. Austere et pure comme un glacon. Devouee,dedaignee,buteedansles moralescreuses.Et eile avait dit : «Non.» Mais eile 1'avait dit tout bas; c'est en cachettequ'elle avait embrasseGerbert. «N'est-ce pas moi?» Souventeile hesitait, fascinee.Et maintenant,eile etait tombee dansle piege, eile etait ä la merci de cette consciencevorace qui avait attendudans1'ombrele moment de 1'engloutir. Jalouse,traltresse,criminelle. On ne pouvait pas se defendreavec desmots timides et des actesfurtifs. Xaviere existait, la trahison existait. Elle existe en chair et en os, ma criminelle figure. Elle n'existera plus. (L'Invitee, pp. 500-501.) As Francoiselooks at her reflection in the mirror, others' definitions of her are told in a seriesof asyntacticsentences.A questionin the first person breaksinto the text. The delayedpast participle, `fascinee' reproducesFrancoise'shesitation as the text seemsto falter. Xaviere's definition of Francoise,a stark enumeration,eruptsinto the text. Syntax posesthe existenceof Xaviere and the existenceof Francoise'sbetrayal as equivalent since two clausesare simply placed in the samesentencewith no conjunction (`Xaviere existait, la trahison existait'). The displacementof the subject to the end of the final sentenceof the paragraphheightensambiguity and strengthensthe identification Xaviere, betrayal, guilt. The following one-sentenceparagraphis decisive.Xaviere, the betrayal and Francoise's guilt (`eile') will be extirpatedin one move,just as their fate is decided in one short sentence. Disrupted, contorted syntax in L'Invitee is mimetic. For example,it mirrors Francoise's lack of franknesswhen she speaksto Pierre about their relationship: `- 186 Peut-etre,dit Francoise;on ne peut meme pas parler de negligence, simplement' (p. 204). Similarly, Elisabeth's hysterical laughter and bewilderment is imitated by convoluted syntax: Elisabeth. dit Elle loin; Ce ete j'ai ete loin, tut. trop trop se eile avait rien, n'est se dit-elle; trop loin; mais alors ca aussic'etait donc fait expres,ce degoüt cynique devant son personnage?Et ce mepris de ce degoüt qu'elle etait en train de se fabriquer, n'etait-il pas aussicomedie?Et ce doute devant ce mepris... ca devenait l'on ä titre sincere,on ne pouvait dons plus s'arreter? se si mettait affolant, (L'Invitee, p. 282.) Echoesin the text ('trop loin') suggesther laughter dying away to be replacedby a dizzying seriesof questionsthat fit into eachother like ever receding reflections in reflections. The seriesthat might go on forever is ruptured in the sameway as Elisabeth's laughter was broken off. Also, mimetic syntax replicates what Francoise defines as her lack of harmony, her awkward aridity: Me voila donc, pensaFrancoiseen se considerantavec un peu d'horreur; cette gaucheriemaladroite existait ä peine autrefois, quand eile n'y prenait pas garde: eile avait envahi maintenanttoute sapersonneet sesgestes,sespenseesmemes, equilibre des harmonieux cassants, son angles raides et s'etait changeen avaient sterilite vide; ce bloc de blancheurtranslucide et nue, aux aretesräpeuses,c'etait eile, en depit d'elle-meme, irremediablement. (L'Invitee, p. 312.) This long disarticulated,ungainly sentence,like Francoise,has sharpedgesand awkward angles.Contorted, fractured syntax parallels the anger and exasperation Francoisefeels towards Xaviere who persistsin cherishing an image of Pierre that contradictsFrancoise'sown. Sheimaginesbringing Xaviere face to face with the `truth': Samain se crispa sur la pochettede cuir noir. Jeter les lettres sur les genoux de Xaviere. Dans le degoüt et la fureur, Xaviere elle-memeproclamerait sa defaite; il n'y avait pas de victoire possible sansson aveu. Francoisese retrouverait solitaire, souveraine,ä jamais delivree. (L'Invitee,p. 495.) 187 Ambiguous syntax meansthe disgust and rage projected onto Xaviere in a hypothetical future, are momentarily linked in readers'minds with Francoiseand the angry gestureof throwing Pierre's letters into Xaviere's lap. I have shown how stability and coherenceare underminedby Simone de Beauvoir's textual strategiesand locatedthe madnessof the text in instability and incoherence.Madnessis duplicatedon a syntactical level too. Simone de Beauvoir's in a stateof tension and confusion and her texts are maintains readers writing practice The identity fixed demanding of rejection a conception and uncomfortable. of as often idea is fluid is in keeping be the that to meaning and with not enclosed. stable and Ultimately, textual disruption and fragmentationsubvert meaningfulness.In my final chapterI shall analysehow Simonede Beauvoir's writing practice throws the language itself into of question. meaningfulness 188 Chapter Four Language and Meaning: Les Belles Images Les Belles Images is the story of Laurence,the portrait of a woman facing a nervous breakdown,on the brink of madness.Simone de Beauvoir's textual strategiesduplicate this madnessin the text which structuresthe experienceof madness,which is an effect The text the author createsa mad textual universe where readersshare a whole. as of Laurence's experience,her helplessnessand confusion, her `desarroi'. This chapterwill focus on one areaof the mad textual universe createdin Les Belles Images and is in Madness language the text those exemplified at and meaning. points concentrateon in is in The that language the text quality specifically madness refusesto signify. when the writing that unsettlesmeaning.As Laurenceloses faith in language,so too, readers is its in language into forced their confidence and meaningfulness a position where are is Laurence's the to and of who she sense of world, sense make struggle undermined. by her language is her, is happening to and struggle with paralleled coincideswith what deal The I textual the text. to strategies shall of particular readers' efforts make sense irony the the and enumerationand repetition. use of opening up of meaning, with are Thesestrategieswill be elucidatedby an initial examination of Simone de Beauvoir's language do I to attitudes and contradictory meaning. and not wish to suggest changing that Simone de Beauvoir was an advocateof radical language.I am arguing that, as she it her in language to express make meaning, a way comparable to the struggled with ' `qui in debattent Femme des La se avec rompue mots', the women protagonists languageSimonede Beauvoir producedactually undermined the (patriarchal) ideological assumptionsabout languageand meaningthat she,in part, subscribedto. 1Beauvoir, 'Pribre d'inserer', reproducedin Francis and Gontier, Les Ecrits, pp. 231-32. 189 Did Simone de Beauvoir believe that languageis transparent,a straightforward sign systemwhich allows us to say what we mean?Toril Moi arguesthat Simone de Beauvoir `relies on Sartre's disastrouslysimplistic theory of languageas a transparent instrument for action', that for her, languageis `the author's most reliable ally; a faithful workhorse that never fails to convey the desiredmessage'. Other critics sharethis judgment. Irene Pagesbelives that Simonede Beauvoir's language`is a rational languagewhich never will allow itself to transgresslogic' and that she `usescurrent languageas an unequivocal sysemreferring to reality'. In her study of Simone de Beauvoir's memoirs Leah D. Hewitt writes: For contemporarycritics interestedin the way writing (`ecriture') plays havoc with identity, puts into questionthe subject of/ in languageand disrupts oppositional thought, de Beauvoir's work is perhapstoo readable,that is, naive. [...] De Beauvoir assumeswith conviction the existenceof the coherentego that attributes meaning and occupiesan unassailableposition over language.For this powerful subject, unconsciousdesirehas no place. (Autobiographical Tightropes, p. 15.)4 Without doubt theseviews do find support in Simone de Beauvoir's writing and in interviews shegave, but I considerthat her beliefs to do with languageare more complicated and contradictory than the commentsof thesecritics might suggest. In her contribution to a 1964debate,Quepeut la litterature?, Simone de Beauvoir arguesthat true communicationis possible and deniesthat languageis a barrier though, significantly, shetypifies languageas opaquenot transparent:je pense je dis je dis ce que que et qui est ce que vous entendez; il ya lä un rapport vrai qui se cree ä travers le langage:celui-ci est opacitemais c'est aussiun vehicule de 2Moi, Simonede Beauvoir, pp. 144 and 248. 3Pages,Irene, `Simone de Beauvoir and the New French Feminisms', Canadian WomanStudies: Les Cahiers de la Femme,6 (1), 1984,60-62, p. 61. ° Hewitt, Leah D., Autobiographical Tightropes: Simonede Beauvoir, Nathalie Sarraute, Marguerite Dural, Monique Wittig, and Maryse Conde,Lincoln: University of NebraskaPress, 1990, 15. p. 190 5 signification commun ä tous et accessibleä tous' This contrastssharply with the des in la in L'Existentialisme 1948 to the et sagesse nations she expresses sentiment 6 du langage [... ] `les trahisons empechenttoute communication veritable'. As effect that for languagein literature, Simonede Beauvoir is clear that, unlike scientific language between ideas, `un le there words/ signs univoque' and exists rapport where where 7 in language in literature operates a much more complex way. vocable est transparent', In her memoirs we read: Il n'y a d'oeuvre litteraire que si le langageest en jeu, si le sensse chercheä travers lui, provoquant une invention de la parole meme. [...] Une oeuvre qui se etre saurait une simple transcription, puisqu'il n'est pas doue au monde ne refere de parole. Les faits ne determinentpas leur expression,ils ne dictent rien: celui qui les relate decouvrece qu'il aä en dire, par l'acte de le dire. (Tout comptefait, pp. 162-63.) Languagein literature doesnot transmit a pre-existing meaning or representreality, but it is involved in a processof signification, of creating meaning. Later in the same in interview de Beauvoir's Simone the with memoirs, account she gives of an of chapter Francis Jeanson,she confirms this view, affirming that `le langagen'est pas la traduction d'un texte dejä formule mais qu'il s'invente ä partir d'une experience indistincte'. 8 In an interview with Ved Solverg Saetre,speakingabout the nouveau dismiss de does Simone Beauvoir the movement out of hand, expressingher not roman, appreciationof the first novels of Robbe-Grillet and Nathalie Sarrauteand commenting in following Sollers' Drame the terms: on Il decrit bien 1'echecdesmots devant la realite qu'ils pretendentexprimer - c'est cet echecqui est interessant.Ce theme est essentiel.Je ne l'ai jamais nie: les mots ne collent pas ä la realite - mais je dis les mots sont notre seul moyen de 5In Que peut la litterature? , p.78. Sartre's contribution to the samedebateappearsin the same collection, pp. 107-27. 6L'Existentialisme la sagessedes nations, p. 28. et Tout comptefait, pp. 162-63. $Tout comptefait, pp. 166-67.The interview is published in Jeanson,Francis,Simone de Beauvoir ou 1'entreprisede vivre, Paris: Seuil, 1966.A summary of the interviews that lasted four hours can be found in Francis and Gontier, Les Ecrits, pp. 220-21. (Particularly interesting in connection with Les Belles imagesand Laurence'sbreakdown is Simone de Beauvoir's Freudian interpretation of her own psychology and Oedipuscomplex.) 191 les bien ä d'etablir doit travers mots une realite essayer communication et qu'on ils tendent. nous pieges quels sachions que noun (Interview with Ved Solverg Saetre,1968.)9 Words fit reality imperfectly but they are our only tool. There is an undeniabletension in Simone de Beauvoir between,on the one hand, her conviction that she sayswhat she in the is the her she uses and, on words present that meaning unambiguously meansand is the her that hand, outcome of a struggle with meaning acknowledgement other '° in her fiction. is language,a process.This tension revealed With regard to women and language,her point of view certainly evolved in some ecrit-elle in `Une femme Sutton 1970: Nina is This to time. what she said respectsover daps differente la daps Seulement homme? oü sa situation est mesure auirementqu'un de 1'ecrivain la fait litteraire Un et situation que refleter ne style actuelle. societe notre " in her to be the This ä preface comments with compared can son rapport sa situation'. Anne Ophir's book published in 1976: Nous rejettions la notion de litterature feminine parce que nous voulions l'univers de hommes les tout entier. egalite ä avec parler Nous le voulons toujours. Seulementla recenteevolution du feminisme nous dans fait cet univers une situation singuliere et occupons que noun comprendre a faut la il de loin revendiquer. renier cette singularite, nous que, Est-ce ä dire que pour ecrire nous devonsnous inventer un langage On le d'entre Certaines moi. ne peut pas creer : pas pensent nous specifique? feminisme etait les dont le Sur langage. precieuses ce point artificiellement un les daps leur echoue; du ruelles comprise que tres proche nötre - ont parole n'etait l'ecriture feminin fange. De au n'atteint qu'un meme aujourd'hui, et s'est vite de destine le ä elitiste, Elle d'initiees. satisfaire narcissisme me paralt petit cercle 1'auteuret non ä etablir une communication avec autrui. 9Saetre,Ved Solverg, 'Interview with Simone de Beauvoir', Vinduet, 3,1968,196-201. Summary and Ecrits, (p. Gontier, Les 233). in Francis 233-34 from Norwegian and translated pp. extracts 10Ursula Tidd examinesSimone de Beauvoir's disagreementwith Sartre about about languageand in debate had day Saintit is they one at as exemplified a the of experience representation writing and Cloud and repeatedly afterwards.Shearguesthat Beauvoir concedesonly reluctantly and leur [... ] il faut le les `s'approprier in Sartre's to that saisir sens et to choses order view provisionally fixer dans desphrases'which opposedher own view that `la rdalit6 dabordetout ce qu'on peut en dire; il fallait 1'affronter Bansson ambiguite, dans son opacite au lieu de la r6duire ä des significations qui se laissentexprimer par desmots' (La Force de 1'dge). See`Simone de Beauvoir. Writing the Self, Writing the Life', unpublished doctoral thesis, University of Birmingham, 1997, pp. 266-68. " Sutton, Nina, Inteview with Simone de Beauvoir, `Sartre and TheSecondSex', Guardian, 19 February Ecrits, in Gontier, Francis Les Summary 1970, p. 11. and and extract p. 245. 192 Je sais que le langagecourant est plein de pieges.Pretendantä l'universalite, il porte en fait la marquedesmalesqui l'ont elabore; il reflete leurs valeurs, leurs pretentions,leurs prejuges.11convient de n'en user qu'avec prudence. (Preface,Regardsfeminin: condition feminine et creation litteraire. )12 Whilst Simone de Beauvoir firmly rejectsthe notion of ecriturefeminine, these commentsneverthelessreveal a more nuancedattitude to language.However, although Simone de Beauvoir's ideason women and languagedid indeed evolve, they remained ill defined and, to someextent, contradictory. In 1979, in an interview with Alice Jardine, Simone de Beauvoir was still rejecting the theories of Helene Cixous in the 13 interview, de During Simone Beauvoir talks of languageas a the terms. same be `in feminist instrument that can used a perspective' and thus `find itself universal feminist in in She 1976. Although the warning she gave manner'. reiterates changed a instrument', `can't this universal sheargues,women must be awarethat it not use we incorporatesmasculinebias and must `enrich their language,clean it up'. She dismisses the role of the unconsciousin the production of languageand with this the notion that women have a different relation to languagethan men. For her, languageis social interview function The is this social situation. at a of point confusedand practice, confusing. Alice Jardine rephrases her question about women's relation to language, trying to elicit, I believe, Simone de Beauvoir's views on women's (distinctive) entry into languageand the Symbolic Order whereasher replies deal with the unconsciousin languageproduction at a less `primitive' level. Simone de Beauvoir seemsto flounder as she attemptsto outline her position on women's and men's relationship to language; be difference betweenfeminine and masculine discourse, there should a askedwhether given their very different social situations at the presenthistorical moment, Simone de 12Ophir, Regardsfeminin, pagesnot numbered.Preface reproducedin Francis and Gontier, Les Ecrits, pp. 577-79. "Jardine, `Interview', pp. 229-31. 193 Beauvoir replies that it dependson the topic as there are topics common to women and `if it that of a woman speaks of oppression, misery, and suggests she will speak of men in exactly the sameway as a man' (p. 231). Shebelieves women speakdifferently only when they speakof their own personalproblems as a woman, assertingthat women are forgiven for One be forming the impression that could at once singular and universal. Simone de Beauvoir rejects Helene Cixous' ideaswithout having properly understood 14 `I her, herself: her'. She Be that as it may, them. can't read understand saysas much during this interview sheis clearly uncomfortable discussinglanguagein generaland Helene Cixous in particular and puts an abrupt end to the topic of conversation.The break is startling: A. J.: So that meansthat you don't agreewith Cixous when she says... S.B.: No, not at all. (Interview with Alice Jardine, 1979,p. 231.) When Alice Jardine goesback to the topic a little later in the interview, Simone de Beauvoir expressesa somewhatdifferent attitude, seemingto arguethat a woman will necessarilywrite differently to a man and assertingthat her own books could certainly 15 however, how her She define been by have texts are cannot, a man. written not her femininity/ femaleness. de by Simone Beauvoir's ideas marked on women and language,the contradictions and blindspots inherent in her views find expressionin her fiction where women are given a voice. For Simone de Beauvoir's women protagonists,languageis fraught with difficulties. Becausethey lose faith in language,becausethey do not use language unequivocally to establishthe `truth', we are invited to condemnthe protagonists in 14Jardine, `Interview', p. 229. It is striking that Simone de Beauvoir usesthe sameverb as H6l6ne Cixous to describewomen's relationship/attitudeto language;as Alice Jardinepoints out, they both use the verb voler - Simone de Beauvoir to mean `to steal' and Hblbne Cixous in its double meaning, `to steal' and `to fly' (p. 230). 15Jardine, `Interview', p. 233. 194 Simone de Beauvoir's later texts. Sheis explicit that in `La Femme rompue' Monique's 16 journal in `de le is The fact the that the se conteste'. way page en evident page guilt woman in `L'Age de discretion' is failed by languageis a symptom of her breakdown. Murielle's monologuedivorces truth from discourseand Simone de Beauvoir can seeno '7 for her In Les Belles Images, Laurence's suicide. or except madness outcome difficulties with language,her struggleto make words signify, is representedas a symptom of her disintegrating personality and mental collapse.However, as Toril Moi has arguedin relation to `La Femmerompue', the fact that the narrator constantly contradicts herself is not interpretedby modern readersas a sign of her guilt and blindness but rather as demonstrationof the inadequacyof languageand the unstable `La Femmerompue' `may paradoxically Toril Moi that suggests nature of meaning. and quite unintentionally - come acrossas a far more "modern" text than any of 18 Beauvoir's other writings'. I believe that the sametension related to languageand in in is found in La Femme be Les Belles Images, the to other stories rompue meaning and can evenbe traced in her earlier fiction too, notably in L'Invitee. To someextent, ideological de Beauvoir's Simone texts position on undermine a patriarchal almost all 16Tout comptefait, p. 175. 17See Tout comptefait, p. 177. In Simone de Beauvoir's memoirs, hope is held out for the woman in `L'Age de discretion' as, in the end, sheis able to talk to Andre again and as shenever at any point loses `1'amourde la verit6'. Failure is overcome.Remarksto do with La Femmerompue are ambiguousat this point in the memoirs. Simone de Beauvoir refers to the three stories as the first, secondand third according to the order in which she commentson them in the memoirs (`La Femme rompue', `Monologue', `L'Age de discretion') not according to the order in which they appear in La Femmerompue collection. Elizabeth Fallaize clarified which story Simone de Beauvoir's remarks about failure being overcomeapplied to, during the courseof an interview (footnote 21, TheNovels, p. 174). An addedconfusion is the fact that Simone de Beauvoir writes that in choosing to lie to themselves,Laurenceand Muriel[le] `s'interdisent toute communication avec autrui'; this does not make senseas her commentsdeal exclusively with La Femmerompue at this point and we must assumethat shemeansto write Monique and Murielle. This is especiallythe casein the light of commentsmade a page earlier when Simone de Beauvoir specifically contraststhe way Laurence and Monique behave:`Laurencecherchetimidement la lumi6re [...] tout 1'effort de Monique tend ä l'oblitCrer' (p. 142). 18Moi, 'Intentions and Effects', p. 78. 195 language,refusing to corroboratethe view (that she sharedto some extent) that language is an unequivocal sign system. JacquesDerrida's and Julia Kristeva's and, to some extent Helene Cixous's dismissal de Beauvoir's despite Simone the language, of notion of women's on writing discussion for framework textual the theoretical of my writing, provide a useful for its in Images in Belles Les radical, and, account part, that unsettle meaning strategies I the that These textual the qualities am reading strategies, are modern aspect. between is locate intention My to points of convergence metaphorically as madness. de Simone Beauvoir's writing practice. language and theories their and meaning about For Derrida meaning is not presentin words, rather meaning is producedthrough His between interplay presentand absentsignifiers-19 the `free play of the signifier', the in English, `deferral' `difference' both differance, expresses translated and as of concept ° Meaning is never present,it is the outcome of an endless this view of meaning. As deferred. is differences meaning cannot endlessly and processof presentand absent be reducedto a single or fixed meaningthere can be no `transcendentalsignified' that language. Derrida beyond truth rejects as transcendental confersmeaning, no logocentric (from the Greek word logos or `word'), philosophiesthat are basedon a fully in Word. He is belief the that argues present transcendentalsignified, a meaning that written texts in particular can always be read 'other'wise as languageconstantly Terence intended As disrupt the that meaning. exceed,contradict or evokesmeanings Hawkes puts it, becausethere is a gap betweenthe text and its `meaning', `a text can 19For my accountof Derrida's theories and indeed,my explanationsof Cixous and Kristeva's analyses,I am indebtedto Moi, Sexual Textual Politics and to Sellers,Language and Sexual Deference. 20ChristopherNorris' commentsabout the term dierance are interesting: `Its senseremains suspended betweenthe two French verbs `to differ' and `to defer', both of which contribute to its textual force but neither of which can fully capture its meaning. [...] Derance [...] offers in its own unstable meaning a graphic example of the processat work'. Deconstruction: Theory and Practice, London: Methuen, 1982,repr. 1986,p. 32. 196 have no ultimate, final meaning'? ' There can be no comforting closure. Derrida advocatesa mode of writing that doesnot seekto impose a single meaning but incorporatesmultiple meanings. Derrida's theories amountto a critique of binary logic, binary oppositions which have shapedWesternmetaphysics.Cixous arguesthat the hierarchical binary oppositionsthat underlie the patriarchalvalue system, can always be traced back to the fundamentalmale/ female opposition where woman systematically incorporatesthe negative pole. Toril Moi sumsup Cixous's theoretical project as `the effort to undo this logocentric ideology' that silencesand oppresseswomen.22 For Cixous, `la critique du logocentrisme[est] inseparabled'unemise en question du phallocentrisme', that is the 23 Ecriture feminine systemthat privileges the phallus asthe symbol or sourceof power. is writing that subvertspatriarchal binary schemesand opensup meaning. Cixous, like Derrida, believesthat attemptsto fix the meaning of a text are not only impossible but also reductive. The active inclusion of plural meaningswithin a text, that is both in the language of within each word or or other meanings phrase unit and through multiplicity intertextuality, the transposition into the text of meaningsfrom other texts, is seenby Kristeva as one of the ways the semiotic disrupts symbolic language.4 Furthermore,the semiotic energypresentin the rhythms and movement of a poetic text can, she argues, return readersto the rhythms, movementand echolaliasof the chora affording readersa total pleasure (`jouissance') that is `polymorphic, polyphonic, serene, eternal, 21Hawkes, Terence,Structuralism and Semiotics,London: Methuen, 1977, repr. 1986,p. 148. u Moi, SexuaVTextual Politics, 105. p. 23Cixous, Prenomsdepersonne, Paris: Seuil,1974, p236. 24For the distinction betweenthe semiotic and the symbolic, seemy `Introduction'. A useful definition of intertextuality is provided by Roudiez,p. 15. 197 25 Toni Moi sumsup the chora as a rhythmic pulsion perceptible as unchangeable'. in disruption, the symbolic and absences silences meaninglessness, contradictions, language.Kristeva contrastswomen's and men's experienceof languageand the chora, links that with the pre-Oedipal mother meanthat many women's strong suggesting force' `spasmodic disrupt the the to their to of allowing unconscious are open women language.However, if women are susceptibleto surgesof semiotic energy,they also are following Susan Sellers the provides summary of more at risk. vulnerable, more Kristeva's argument: Whereasmen's return to the semiotic chora is brought about through the have known as children which act as and echolalias we explosion of rhythms laughter to and or, alternatively, give rise comforting reminders of early plenitude for Kristeva that women reactivating theserhythms suggests play, symbolic threatensthe tenuousnature of our symbolic construction, rendering us `ecstatic, nostalgic or mad'. (Languageand SexualDifference, pp. 104-105.) Women who let the semiotic disrupt their languageexposethemselvesto the dangerof madness. A close reading of Les Belles Imageswill allow us to pinpoint where the theories intersect de have just Simone Beauvoir's I language outlined with and meaning of how how differance I in to to text, the want operates consider examine writing practice. in to madness the text. Given the fact that the plurality and subversion contribute disruption of symbolic language(that I have read metaphorically as madness)posesa (greater)threat to women, it might be expectedthat semiotic energy will break into the text, that is into Laurence'svoice, at thosepoints where her psychic stability is most at risk. It is also the casethat the rhythms, movement and echolalias of the chora, found de by Simone Beauvoir's use of enumeration and at repetition, are generated u Quoted in Sellers,p. 103. `Echolalia' is a term that conveys the ceaseless echoing back and forth betweensigns. SeeHawthorn, Jeremy,A Glossary of Contemporary Literary Theory, London: Arnold, 1992,p. 72. 198 Laurence's lost is is It when plenitude evoked. also possible to identify them moments humour disrupts the narrative. where at certain points The text of Les Belles Images exposesthe problematic nature of meaning, of the logocentrism. between It a signifier and signified, exemplifying rejection of relation language forms inadequacy important the that of enacts an embodies/ strand in the narrative. The text of Les Belles Imagesincludes a metacommentaryon language. Laurencefinds herself in a world where meaning, for her, is never fixed, always uncertain.Unlike those around her, Laurencecannot take the meaning of words for is This true well before her breakdown.Reflecting that children should be granted. from images that might upsetthem, she distancesherself from this idea and protected `Reflexion Abjecte de the abjecte. comment: : un mot mes quinze ans.Mais que makes signifie-t-il? '(p. 30). Likewise, when Gilbert informs Laurencethat he intends to end his sevenyear relationship with her mother, `[Laurence] entenddes mots qui restent fair, denues de sens[...]'(p. 46). Her attitude to languagecontrastswith en suspendus her father's. When he speaksof love, Laurenceaffirms: `Aimer d'amour; vraie valeur. Pour lui cesmots ont un sens'(p. 35). By implication, thesewords lack meaning for Laurence.When she endsher relationship with Lucien, sheusesthe word `love' without knowing exactly what she means:`Mais je ne t'aime plus d'amour. (L'ai je jamais fait? Cesmots ont-ils un sens?)' (p. 110). Even when words do mean something,Laurence is awarethat meaningsare not necessarilyshared.Were sheto read the books her daughter Catherinereads,she could not know what they meanto her: `De toute facon, les mots le n'auraient pas meme senspour moi que pour eile' (p. 25). Sherealisesthat `il nous [Laurenceand Catherine] manqueun langagecommun' (p. 77). The sameis true of all signs,not only of language.Laurencecomparesher own understandingof television imageswith her daughter's: 199 Pouvoir de l'image. «Les deux tiers du monde ont faim», et cette tote d'enfant, si belle, avec les yeux trop grandset la bouchefermee sur un terrible secret.Pour lutte la faim. la Catherine le contre a vu que signe se poursuit sign : un moi c'est faim. de age, qui son a garcon un petit (Les Belles Images, p. 29.) Similarly, the meaning of the flowers that Jean-Charlessendsher after a quarrel is not at des fleurs [... ]. Des `Un bouquet, toujours transparent: autre chose que roses c'est all [... ] flamboiement de Ce Justement n'est pas un voluptueux ardent. non. rouges:amour d'un les belles chargees a messagemensonger,elles en sont et si on elles passion;mais (p. 136). innocentes' sont Thus discourseis reducedto words, empty words in which Laurencehas no faith. Words refuse to signify for Laurence.When she getshome after the trip to Greece, for her. Asked whether she questions are problematic straightforward apparently even hashad a good time, she gives the expectedreply, `formidable! ', but cannot determine if la disait Tous `Elle is truth: the cesmots telling eile ne pas verite. pas, ne mentait she is lying. ' is The (p. 170). She dit! Des truthful nor oppposition neither mots... qu'on into its As truth the are called question. even existence and nature of underminedand Laurence'sbreakdownreachesits climax, languagelets her down: `Jen'ai pas de mots is (p. 153). She left `Voici ou pour regretter' without venir ce a voice: pour me plaindre de de la tout ces un moments est oü s'effondre; son corps qu'elle redouteplus que mort: 26 la de pierce,eile voudrait hurler; mais piercen'a pas voix; ni de larmes' (p. 176) Although words may have no stablemeaning, a subject excluded from language altogetheris condemnedto mental breakdown and madness. Interestingly, happinessin Les Belles Images is associatedwith childhood when Laurencecould look to her father to make words/ languagemeaningful. As an adult she 26Laurence'swords are reminiscent of what Simone de Beauvoir writes in the epilogue to La Force des choses:`il ya desheuressi noires qu'il ne resteplus d'autre espoir que ce cri qu'on voudrait pousser' (p. 679). 200 is still willing to accepther father's definitions; during a discussionabout art she je 1'a dit lä, `Ce : enfm ne le pensaispas avec ces mots; qu'il eile pensesouvent realises: dits les (p. 150). Travelling with pour liens' qu'ils sont eile reconnalt mais maintenant her father in Greece,Laurence's regressionis exemplified by her dependenceon him in devant language: le `J'aimais to cet alphabet retrouver mystere enfantin du relation langageet que, comme autrefois, le sensdesmots et des chosesme eint par lui' (p. 154). This is explicitly the happiestmoment in the book. It is no coincidencethat happinessis linked with the illusion of transparencyin language,with a time when in And the presentof the narrative, Laurence unproblematical. seemed meaning it is if incorporates `happiness'; the the as word meaning: comprehends word [...] Papaa commandepour moi une boisson ä la cerise,fraiche, leg6re,aigrelette, delicieusementpuerile. Et j'ai su ce que voulait dire ce mot qu'on lit dansdes livres: bonheur. [...] Cet accord d'un ciel bleu et d'un gout fruite, avec le passeet le presentrassemblesdannun visagecher et cette paix en moi, je l'ignorais bonheur: de Le la ä tres travers comme souvenirs. une que vieux raison vie se sauf donne ä elle-meme.Il m'enveloppait [...]. (Les Belles Images,p. 155.) In complete contrast,as Laurenceexperiencesmental collapse and is forced to reassess her relationship with her father, languagecomesto be associatedwith pain and violence. Laurence is prostrate: [...] terrasseepar une galopaded'images et de mots qui defilaient danssa tete, se battant entre eux comme des kriss malais dansun tiroir ferme (si on l'ouvre, tout est en ordre). [...] J'ai ete decue.Le mot la poignarde.Elle serre son mouchoir contre sesdents comme pour arreterle cri qu'elle est incapablede pousser. (Les Belles Images,pp. 179-80.) Paradoxically, it is by naming her pain that shewill recover from it. At the end of the 7 book Laurencefords her voice. Languageis her weaponthat she will use to silence others: `Malgre eile, la voix de Laurencese monte, eile parle, eile parle, eile ne sait pas 27Until this point Laurencehas failed to voice the disagreementshe feels. Seefor example pp. 12,15,26, 41,128,156,162,166. 201 exactementce qu'elle dit, peu importe, l'important est de crier plus fort que JeanCharleset que tous les autres,de les reduire au silence' (p. 182). In Simone de Beauvoir's textual universewords and silence are equally little boy in both The has `la the starving are contingent. poster and meaningful/less bouchefermee sur un terrible secret'. Laurenceanguishesabout the effects of words/ les hasards `Les humeurs Catherine: d'un quotidiennes, mot, d'un silence, on silence toutes ces contingencesqui devraients'effacer derriere moi, ca s'inscrit dans cette je souviendra, comme et qui se me souviensdes inflexions de voix de enfant qui rumine Dominique' (p. 135). Later shewonders,with referenceto Jean-Charles:`Est-ce qu'il ne dites? des du le des non non choses pas silence, poids mais phrases nous entre sentpas is it is is but Silence [... ]' (p. 140). necessarily what unspoken can redefined; not vaines be what is spokenwithout meaning,sentencesthat signify nothing. The problematic nature of meaningis further underlined as accepteddefinitions into being Laurence When Jeanquestion; wonders what called normal means. are Charlesis advocatingconsulting a psychologist about Catherine,Laurenceaskshim, `Tourner rond: qu'est-ce que ca veut dire? A mon avis ca ne tourne pas tellement rond chez les gensque tu juges normaux' (p. 132). Being `normal' is also something she discusses with her father in Greece: il est normal d'etre effraye quand on commence ä doute ä epoque Sans toute decouvrir le monde. la la dit. Alors, si on rassure, on rend anormale, ai-je C'etait une evidenceet eile me foudroya. Souspretexte de guerir Catherine...on allait la mutiler. (Les Belles Images, p. 159.) This identification of curing with mutilation recalls Laurence's responseto the little Greek girl shehad watcheddancing; life and deathare conflated: `La vie allait 1'assassiner'(p. 158). 202 Here, story meetstext. So far, I have, in part, been discussinglanguage/meaning just book Now, in Belles Images. Les the the theme content of as calls the as does itself. language into It the too text question, so of repeatedly meaningfulness binary Just lying thus the undermining oppositions. of opposites, as equivalence asserts do `completely different' `exactly the truthfulness so each other out, cancel and and same' ('tout ä fait different, exactementpareil' pp. 7,9,50). and `always' and `never'; Laurence's anxiety is presentand not present: `En realite, c'est lä sansy titre, c'est dans la couleur du jour. Elle y pensetout le temps, eile n'y pensejamais' (p. 75). The distinction between`full' and `empty' is subverted:`Vie trop remplie? trop vide? Remplie de chosesvides. Quelle confusion!' (p. 146). The effect is accentuatedby her in impose Laurence to sense of attempts vain make existence, some order. repetition. By assertingthe equivalenceof oppositesin this way, the text can epitomise Laurence's distance. Speaking her of at a of the trip to Greece, sense existing senseof unreality, Laurencecan affirm: 'Je mangeaisavec appetit et indifference...' (p. 156). Such contradictory assertionscan expressa positive moment in the text as when Laurencehas for Greece: feeling the the takes world when with plane of and oneness off wholeness a `[...] sousmes pieds s'etalent de blancspaysagesqui m'eblouissent et qui n'existent pas. $ Je suis ailleurs: nulle part et partout' (p. 154)2. Laurenceis elsewhere,nowhere and is her body strange, out of experience condensedin this undercutting of everywhere; distinctions. The accumulationof statementsof this kind createsan impression of for readers.The text is, in a sense,crazy. Placing together as alienation strangenessand defined as contradictory, involves redefining are usually complementarywords which both terms and allowing meaning/ nonmeaningto emergefrom the spacebetweenthem. 28This is an echo and revision of Laurence's earlier affirmation that `le monde est partout ailleurs, et il n'y a pas moyen d'y entrer' (p. 26). It is also an appropriation and valorisation of an earlier pejoritive statementof Laurence's father's about tourists who `ne sont nulle part, tout en dtant partout' (p. 40). 203 Meaning not fully presentin words themselves,not expressibleby them, emanatesfrom the blank of `non-meaning' that exists in the spacesbetweenthem. In a senseit is unspoken,un-speakable. The problematic nature of meaningis further accentuatedby the use of irony. 9 ironic is book. Irony contributesto the creation of a mad textual Les Belles Images an it is in in that the text and an embodiment of the a source of ambiguity universe `treacherous', `slippery' nature of meaning; at the simplest level, irony is saying one 30 thing whilst meaning another. It foregrounds the discrepancy that exists between words and meaning and duplicates the gap between appearance and reality. It also involves a certain distancing, which, taken to its extreme, is a form of alienation. Readers,who are invited to collude with Laurence,the narrator, are thus implicated in her alienation from her environment. On anotherlevel, irony functions to distance from herself. irony Laurence Does suggesta contradiction since it involves readers control which is patently not an elementof madness?Certainly, irony is a knowing form of defence.However, I am suggestingthat `madness'in the text is the outcome of the ambiguity and feelings of alienation createdin readersby the use of irony, not an intrinsic quality of the irony itself. How, then, are theseeffects of ambiguity and a heightenedsenseof alienation created?The irony in Les Belles Imagesis multi-layered. This layering, which accentuatesLaurence's alienation, is renderedeven more ambiguousby the je/ eile split 1 is heart of the narrative. Although much of the irony can be attributed to which at the Laurenceas narrator, Laurenceas characteris also ironic and, at times, sarcastic.From the very first pageof the novel, irony is directed at Laurence's milieu. As Elizabeth 29The title Les Belles imagesis itself ironic and open to a multiplicity of interpretations. 30Irony can also be read as an inscription hysteria in the text insofar as in hysteria the symptom of appearsto `mean' one thing while it actually concealsanother `meaning'. 31The je/ elle split is discussedin Chapter Three. 204 Fallaize says,as the novel opens,readersseekuneasily the sourceof the malicious 32 description Feuverolles of and the guests' conversation. remarksthat undercut the Favourite butts for Laurence's irony are her sister and brother in-law, Marthe and Hubert. The tone of Laurence's ironic asidesinclines towards the cruel. Her portrait of Hubert is vicious and very funny: Hubert allume sa pipe qu'il est bien le dernier homme en Francea appeler«ma vieille bouffarde». Son sourire de paralytique general, son embonpoint. Quand il voyage il porte des lunettesnoires: «j'adore voyager incognito.» Un excellent dentistequi pendantsesloisirs etudie consciencieusementle tierce. (Les Belles Images,p. 9.) Her contempt for him even intrudes into Laurence's account of the crucial family meal is discussed Laurence Catherine's and case realisesher complete isolation; she where imagines Hubert is eating in silence because`il devait combiner de tortueux echangesde for derriere lubie' (p. it is 174). Marthe, As her faith is that sa c'est religious porte-cles, irony. her She down by her being Laurence's to sister's puts conversion married to met Hubert and mocks the posesshe adopts,like `une sainte,ivre du joyeux amour de Dieu' (p. 9). When Marthe drops by to seeLaurence `ä 1'improviste', something Laurencehas imputes do, Laurence fact her `eile des ä this to the to that not asked obeit expressly impulsions surnaturelles;eile est devenuetres imperieusedepuis que le ciel l'inspire' (p. 74). Laurenceis sarcasticto Marthe's face when shepresumesto interfere in the way Laurencebrings up Catherine.`Il to restetoujours la ressourcede prier pour eile', she tells her, refusing to relent and let Catherinetake her first communion. To what extent is it meaningful or possibleto separatethe two layers of irony, narrator and character?SometimesLaurencethe narrator is clearly directing irony at Laurencethe character.Note the light, playful tone of this example occuring early in the book which will be marked by a progressionto bitternessas Laurencereachesbreaking 32Fallaize, TheNovels, p. 119. 205 Jeve du jours A des `il on se mauvais pied, oü on ra oü ne prend comme plaisir ya point: distinction (p. 19). However, 1'habitude' devrait the time the of much avoir rien! eile betweenthesetwo levels of irony is latent rather than actual and is a sourceof free in be direct discourse. the question may utterance ambiguity, particularly when Readers,dependenton Laurence,haveno way of knowing the statusof the utterance bitterness is being for left anger and whose expressed, example, wondering, and are bonhomme `Suivre de devier they son chemin, sans read: when narrator's or character's, d'un pouce, defense de regarder ä droite ou ä gauche, ä chaque age ses täches, si la fais des d'eau de Ca to et mouvements un verre gymnastique. m'a avale prend colere bien reussi, ca m'a parfaitementreussi [...]' (p. 132). Similarly, the statusof the bitter irony evinced as the narrative recountsthe moment when Laurenceis forced to accept Jean-Charles'decision that Catherineshould be separatedfrom her friend, Brigitte, is idee formidable; Remplacer `Du affectivement. meme une ca c'etait cheval! ambiguous: fact interpolation in brackets is ' The (p. 172). that the or not cheval! une amie par un betweendashesincreasesambiguity. It suggeststhat the irony is Laurencethe impression later is lines this to However, some contradicted of a number character's. in Jean-Charles' have Laurence that to adopted point of view once appears extent as Rome, `eile ne penseraguereä son amie' and that with `un peu de doigt6, [...] Pan (p. 173). Here, Laurence her 1'aura the completement oubliee' narrator of eile prochain is in indication being first is (there the this the whether story at point narrated no story irony/ be directing (self-) third the criticism at Laurencethe person),may possibly or character. The retrospectivenarration of the final chapterof Les Belles Images allows Laurence (narrator)to be ironic at the expenseof Laurence(character),exploiting the how irony. Laurence during a conversationwith her for dramatic recounts potential 206 father about Dominique, she did not contradict his kindly estimation of the changesin her personality. The irony directed at herself is scathing: je ne voulais pas priver ma ironic Laurence's (p. 157). lui d'amitie bribes des response accordait' qu'il pauvre mere learned before takes their behaviour father's a on of reconciliation she her to and mother further level of irony in the context of Laurence'sretrospectivenarration. Laurence, initial, blindness her is has happened, the back looking and naivety critical of at what ironic reaction displayed: `(Maman prenantgout aux reunions de famille! on aura tout free (p. 173). Such )' egard! de A the la statusof with play son papa vu! et courtoisie in text. be the the expression of semiotic energy of as evidence read can utterances At other times theselayers of irony, narrator's and character's,arejuxtaposed; distancing, Laurence implies then is ironic, as this a certain Laurenceas character irony irony Laurence directs further herself distances as character, at and even narrator is because her is Laurence to she work unable concentrateon at her irony. Thus when femme de la dechiree bien la `«Voilä Catherine, qui condition read: we about worried bien dechiree ironie. (Elle dit-elle sentait quand eile ne se plus travaille», se avec dissociation it ' This (p. 28). the reveals are emblematic of acute split and travaillait pas). the madnessof the text. There is a further level of irony basedon complicity betweenthe implied author is Gilbert Laurence her targetted Despite and with along reservations, and readers. language distorting by the irony the by the mystifying/ of of the use generated others 33 is Gilbert's One bourgeoisie the shocking most examples responseto of technocratic faux frais. `«Des Gilbert in boy » expliquait prison: the suicide of a twelve-year old 33Simone de Beauvoir writes about her intention to evoke the 'societt technocratique' and to `faire in Tout 172. There is aujourd'hui son comptefait, appelle «discours»' p. also a ce qu'on entendre la in Quepeut litterature? where Simone de Beauvoir is disparaging technocratic to society reference de l'avenir la `qui d'un (p. its se misbre et qui seit abondance comme appelle alibi' optimism about 91). The transpositionof meaningsderived from other texts into Les Belles images,the processof intertextuality, is, for Kristeva, evidence of semiotic activity. 207 des faux frais. Oui, forcement' forcement (p. il 58). Laurence is toute ya societe qu'en her Jean-Charles in her enjoy a wry yet readers smile of at appraisal expense sincere dit des femmes, Jean-Charles `«le they qui est pourtant cote convulsif read: when feministe' (p. 44). Again, readers`know' that Laurence is wrong when she asserts:`On fait de la tout ce qu'on ne peut pas prendre responsabilite - ne fait pas. «Qu'est-ce que tu fais pour eux?» Ces comptesexigessoudaindansun monde oü rien ne compte tellement. C'est comme un abus'(p. 136). We are invited to judge her negatively. The foi `La is her is true revealed: psychologue dirait qu'elle fait when mauvaise same Si Absurde. de vraiment eile ne voulait pas, eile refuserait, malade... se rendre expres ] believe I (women) [Emphasis (p. 175). that battrait' modem added. readerstend elle se to resist the invitation to `condemn' Laurencefor her apparentfailings and are more likely to sympathiseand identify with her, perhapseven considering that the implied author is somehowtaking an unfair advantage. There is a further group of utteranceswhose statusis ambiguousin that it is impossible to know whether the irony, which is clearly intended, is the narrator's or the implied author's. Are we being invited to direct our criticism with Laurence(narrator) but by by books her title their the prize they have won? `Sur to not she refers when or at Realite, L'Express, d'elle, il des ä Candide, Votre Jardin cote ya revues gueridon un le (p. 91). We livres le Goncourt, Renaudot' if Laurence is sincere wonder : et quelques when sherepeatswhat `everyone' knows about the condition of the working class, `qui bien les [... ] ils doit familiales etre qu'avec allocations n'est pas ce qu'elle aient presque tous une machine ä laver, la te1e,et memeune auto'(p. 73). [Emphasisadded.] Is Laurenceawareof the irony when sherepeatedlyrefers to le coin «relaxe-silence»in her mother's appartment,even as sheis describingDominique's distress?34 A similar 34Seepp. 49,50,58,100. 208 by Jean-Charles' to the prompted more playful remark adheres ambiguity responseto the kaleidoscope,so out of key with Laurence's and the children's, to the effect that it fabrics for designers The be tool of and wallpaper. statusof the an excellent would ' is la (p. 38). it idees ä belongs `dix If to minute... unclear. unfinished observation, Laurencethe character,is shebeing sincereor ironic? Does it expressthe indulgence or distancedderision of the narrator?Is the irony then the implied author's? The is, deprive to this again, yet of ambiguity readersof any firm foothold, effect cumulative a secureplace from where they can makejudgements. Enumerationis also relatedto the questioning of meaning and the undermining in Belles Images. The in language Les lists is use of one of the most of our confidence is dominated by features The the text text. so enumerationthat this strategy of striking `tic'. There are exampleson virtually every page be described textual as a could almost 35 is book This the perhapsquite natural, given the premisethat a sign never means of bouquet from Jean-Charles, Laurence As thing when she reflects receives a only. one `un bouquet,c'est toujours autre choseque des fleurs : c'est de 1'amitie, de 1'espoir,de la gratitude, de la gaiete' (p. 136). Conversely,given the inadequaciesof language,one word is not enoughto convey meaning.Interesting theoretical work has beendone on 6 by has how Beatrice Damamme. She shown enumeration enumerationcan work to createan impression of uncertainty, of groping towards true meaning/ the right term. In Les Belles Images,adjectives,verbs and nouns are multiplied. There is an interesting in book; final Laurenceis depressedand fording it the this the of pages example of her in to to terms reconciliation and, parents' come with particular, to squareher painful 33Indeed, it is characteristicof much of Simone de Beauvoir's writing as a whole. Claire Cayron discussesthe pleasureSimone de Beauvoir derives from enumeration in La Nature chezSimone de Beauvoir, Paris: Gallimard, 1973,pp. 163-68. 36Damamme,Beatrice, `Reflexions sur le role desddmarcateursde coordination dans les 6numirations littdraires', Le Francais Moderne: Revuede Linguistique Francais, 49(1), January 1981,20-35. 209 mother's presentself-satisfactionwith the distressshehad been feeling. The synonymity of the terms in the two parallel lists is evocative: `On crie, on pleure, on se dann la vie quelquechosedigne de ces cris, ces larmes, ces s'il y avait convulse comme between different Spaces (p. 177). the terms and meaning are created agitations' in it is box; interaction the betweenthem, the there, outcome as a sound of reverberates more than the sum of the individual words that are themselvesdeficient. Enumerations in Les Belles Images embodythe displacementand deferral of meaning. An important aspectof Simonede Beauvoir's use of lists is rhythm. It is a useful criterion for the selection of quotationsto illustrate my contention that enumerationcan in language/ by the way in which meaning challengeour confidence words/ linked. Furthermore, it terms and antonymous are synonymous will be useful to examinetheseenumerationsin the light of the theoretical work done by Madelene 37 Frederic She has shown how enumerationsslip almost imperceptibly from highly formulations tightly at one end of the spectrumto what sheterms structured organised, `enumerationschaotiques' at the other. According to her classification, most of the enumerationswe are dealing with in Les Belles Images vere towards or belong in the disorderedcategory,possessingeither a vague synthesizingexpression('formule synthetique') that sumsup the terms that make up the enumerationor none at all and frequently linking heterogeneouselements38 This is in keeping with the `madness'of 37Frederic, Madeleine, `Enumeration,enumCrationhomologique, 6numCration chaotique: essaide caracterisation', in Styistique,rhetorique et poetique dans les languesromans, Actes du XVIIe Congrbsinternational de linguistique et de philologie romanes,(Aix-en-Provence, 1983), vol 8, Aixen-Provence:UniversitC de Provence,1986,104-17. 38FredCricgives the following definition of 'formule synthCtique': `un tenne ou un groupe de termes dont le contenu sCmantiquerecouvre celui de 1'ensembleou d'une partie seulementdestermes/ des syntagmesconstituant la serie' (p. 106). Among the examplesshe gives of vague synthesizing expressionsare those that include the word `chose' (seep. 108). A classic examplewith `chose' occurs in Les Belles imageson p. 81: `[Catherine] apprenddes chosesqui ne s'enseignentpas en classe:compatir, consoler,recevoir et donner, percevoir sur les visageset dans les voix des nuances qui lui 8chappaient'. `Tout' is another such expression. Seethe following quotation that begins: `Tout etait net, frais parfait [...]'. 210 the text. Towards the beginning of Les Belles Images we find the following striking days her describing Jeanthe of early relationship with of enumeration; examples Charles,Laurencesays: Tout etait net, frais, parfait: l'eau bleue de la piscine, le bruit luxueux des banes de tennis, les blanches aiguilles de pierre, les nuages roules en boule dans le ciel lisse, l'odeur des sapins [... ]. Dans le parc de 1'hotel, les garcons et les fines en le hälee, de beaux la soleil par comme polis peau vetements, galets. Et clairs Laurence et Jean-Charles de clair vetus, häles, polis. Soudain un soir, au retour d'une promenade, dans la voiture arretee, sa bouche sur ma bouche, cet jours des des je Alors, et semaines, pendant ce vertige. n'ai plus ete embrasement, desir, image, plaisir. chair et sang, mais une (Les Belles Images, p. 22.) The quotation begins with an enumerationof three closely related adjectives, none of them alone sufficient to convey the meaningwhich emergesfrom the gapsbetween them. Then follows a list of objects,of which I will say more later. The next hales, `de vetus, polis', made up of three past participles, echoesand clair enumeration, from Laurence's The description text reachesa the the window. view of condenses kiss for is Laurence first kiss here Jean-Charles to the time, about as a crescendo further by In the final a sense communicating of urgency. enumeration, a expressed enumeration- `chair et sang,desir, plaisir' - rhythm underlines the sensuality of their be interpreted The this of can rhythm and movement passage relationship. as a surge of kind in the the text, of polymorphic/ polyphonic pleasurethat providing semiotic energy Kristeva links to the chora. Semiotic energyis apparentlater in the text when Laurence's ecstatic,giddy responseto the dancing of a Greek child and the intensity of her experienceis suggestedby a list of past participles: `Transporteepar la musique, eblouie, grisee,transfiguree,eperdue'(p. 158). The effect is reinforced by the way in which theseterms echo and reinforce eachother. Use of rhythm is also interesting as Laurenceseemsto reachthe lowest point in her breakdown; there are, in fact, five parallel lists here, whose rhythms convey, not only her panic and despair,but also her 211 confusion in the face of such complexity; feelings sharedby readerswho sink down impenetrable/ into Laurence the enveloping mass createdby the lists seemingly with before experiencingthe dawning of hope as the rhythm of the final list rises up, lifts Laurenceand readersto a point beyond despair: Its la forceront ä manger, ils lui feront tout avaler; tout quoi? tout ce qu'elle vomit, sa vie, celle des autresavec leurs faussesamours, leurs histoires d'argent, leurs mensonges.Its la gueriront de sesrefus, de son desespoir.[...] Qu'a-t-on fait de insensible femme Cette qui n'aime personne, aux beautesdu monde, moi? incapablememe de pleurer, cette femme queje vomis. Catherine [...] peut-etre eile s'en sortira... De quoi? De cette nuit. De l'ignorance, de l'indifference. Catherine...Elle se redressesoudain. (Les Belles Images, pp. 180-81.) Readingthis, it seemsto me that the text also reproducesLaurence's experienceof breathlessnessfor readers.The semiotic energythat Kristeva identifies as erupting in Celine's verse as `panting', `breathlessness and `acceleration' of pace erupts in the text breakdown Belles Images Laurence Les confronts and madness.Such lists within as of lists, lists upon lists, are a common featureof Les Belles Images.Elsewherein the text, it is a techniqueusedto portray the advertising industry and the psychological lists it Here, the to. suggestsnot only complexity but use of parallel motivations appeals also excessand duplicity. Note the seriesof synonymsthat begins the following quotation and the linking of divergent elementsin the fmal list: `Le lisse, le brillant, le luisant, reve de glissement,de perfection glacee;valeurs de 1'erotismeet valeurs de 1'enfance(innocence);vitesse,domination, chaleur, securite'(p. 42). Enumerationis a suppletool that Simone de Beauvoir usesskillfully in Les Belles Images to communicateLaurence'smood. Comparerespectively the joy, determination,wistfulness and bitternessin the following quotations. Assonanceand alliteration reinforce the childlike senseof happinessevokedwhen Laurenceand her daughterslook in a kaleidoscope:`[...] enchantementdescouleurs et des formes qui se 212 font, se defont, papillotent et semultiplient dans la fuyante symetrie dun octogone' (p. 37). When Laurenceis rememberingher first breakdown and trying to convince herself that it will not happenagain, a seriesof verbs together with the repetition of `je suis' conveysher determination: `Jene retomberaipas. Maintenant je suis prevenue,je suis armee,je me tiens en main'(p. 44). Repetition combines with enumerationagain to expressLaurence'swistfulness when she is shopping for Christmas presents:`[... ] une daim d'une indefinissable: de brume, couleur en couleur veste couleur du temps, couleur des robesde Peau-d'Ane' (p. 139). The jacket is at once all and none of these colours. She doesnot buy the jacket but allows Jean-Charlesto choosea necklace for her. Her tone is bitter as sherealiseswhat the gift represents:`C'est une compensation,un symbole,un succedane'(p. 140).Here too the use of a seriesof quasi-synonyms reminds us of the inadequacyof words. Alliteration intensifies the effect. All of the examplesI have quotedare what Beatrice Damammerefers to as open enumerations.That is, the final term of the enumerationis not precededby an `and' which would give an impressionof finality/ completion, of closure. Without an `and' we feel the list could go on. This openness,this inconclusivenessis characteristicof Les Belles Images as a whole and correspondswell with Laurence's frame of mind. It also deprivesreaders,who are dependenton Laurence'snarrative, of any certainty. The lack of closurein Simone de Beauvoir's text is an instanceof her radical writing practice. Lists can also createa senseof meaninglessness,deprive reality of its seriousnessso that it seemsunreal. This is most strikingly the casewhen it is a matter of lists of catastrophesand the processof detachmentis explicated in the text: Les horreursdu monde, on est force de s'y habituer, il y en a trop: le gavagedes oies, l'excision, les lynchages,les avortements,les suicides, les enfantsmartyres, les maisonsde la mort, les massacresd'otages,les repressions,on voit ca au cinema,ä la tele, on passe. (Les Belles Images, p. 30.) 213 Cadavressanglantsde Blancs, de Noirs, des autocarsrenversesdans des ravins, incendies, des des d'autres deux, tues, coupes carcasses en vingt-cinq enfants d'avions fracasses,cent dix passagersmorts sur le coup, des cyclones, des inondations,despays entiers devastes,des villages en flarnmes, des erneutes hagards. C'etait des defiles de lugubre locales, des refugies si guerres raciales, ] des images, de [... On fin la n'apercoit que rire. envie on avait presque qu'ä leur de ecran le et qui n'ont pas poids realite. proprementencadreessur petit (Les Belles Images, p. 147.) Laurence's latent responseto the review of the year's events,hysterical laughter, in by be to the transcribed response catalogueof readers replicated easily might 9 for humour in is Les Belles Images. Enumeration disasters. certainly usedas a vehicle Elizabeth Fallaize has drawn attentionto the comic subversionthat operateswhen JeanCharlesconjuresup a picture of the future: `les desertsse sont couverts de ble, de legumes,de fruits, toute la terre est devenuela terre promise; gaves de lait, de riz, de 40 (pp. 30-31) Laurence lists the titles tomateset d'oranges,tous les enfantssouriaient' in included high-sounding list in books the shop window; of eleven titles sees a she of that could go on (it `ends' with an ellipsis) we find `Une nouvelle classeouvriere, Une (p. 73). A comic repetition and reversal. Laurenceour narrator classeouvriere nouvelle' detachesherself from her world in order to mock it and, by extension,herself. Selfparody is characteristicof the text. Can humour be defined as transgressive?To what extent can humour be consideredmad?Is there somethingslightly `hysterical' in the burlesquedescription of Laurence'srelationship with Lucien, for example?This is what she says: Ensuite, que d'agitation! Il me poursuivait, il pleurait, je cedais,il rompait, je la je il Giulietta je telephone, me au rouge, pendais cherchais partout souffrais, je il il jamais il t'aime, ton mais m'insultait, non maxi, revenait, suppliait: quitte 39It has been suggestedthat from a certain length, all enumerationsmay be comic, whatever the subject matter. SeeBarbara C. Bowen's commentduring the discussionthat follows Francis Bar's paper 'Ripetition et Enumerationchez les auteursburlesquesdu XVIIe si8cle', reported in Actes du colloque organisepar I'Institut d'etudes romaneset le Centre de civilisation de 1'Universfte de Varsovie, 1981, pp. 163-86 (p. 186). 40Fallaize, TheNovels, p. 126. 214 je desesperais, j'esperais, j'attendais, nous nous retrouvions, quel repartait, bonheur,j'ai tant souffert sanstoi, et moi sanstoi: avoue tout ä ton mari, jamais... (Les Belles Images, p. 32.) It is revealing to comparethis hyperbole used to portray the early days of their language/ disillusioned, has become Laurence the the with relationship once her We that time. to of well-being at awareness convey read: enumerationused `J'ecraseraismes remords, si c'etait comme avant; le trouble qui foudroie, la nuit qui flambe, tourbillons et avalanchesde desirs et de delices: pour ces metamorphoseson brittle 63). The hyperbole (p. this tout trahir, nature of risquer' mentir, and peut Laurence'sbitter disappointmentare exposedshortly afterwards when she recalls that il ä du `[... ] last Christmas chose avait quelque y regretter, quelque choseau moins even Lucien: `Il de and she envies connalt encorecette chagrin', monde qui valait son poids fievre, et le desespoir,et l'espoir. I1 a plus de chanceque moi' (p. 65). It is interesting to impression `and'. Exceptionally, is list by have the the this the of use we closure of note jolly been front behind has finality. Laurence to the able maintain not which she one of had tried to hide her emptinessfrom herself. Her feelings of remotenessbecomemore acute in Greece.Lists of objects in the indifference in boredom in Athens the and reproduce readers of Laurencewho museum remembersthat she `coulai[t] ä pic, dannun gouffre d'indifference' and that her `ennui feelings (p. 167). Her jusqu'ä 1'angoisse' of suffocation are experiencedby s'exasperait lists by feel the of objects which are so typical of the text smothered readerswho can indeed: lists food lengthy (p. furniture 8); (p. 45); of very sometimes and which are furniture and clothes (p. 58); books (pp. 72-73); drinks (p. 90); magazines(p. 92); objects in shopwindows (pp. 137-38),which take up twenty-one lines. These lists convey a senseof over abundanceand leave `no spaceto breathe'. Clearly they mirror the world in which Laurencelives and reflect its materialistic values. 215 A further interesting effect of theselists of objects is to slow down the text. They level, literally There is time down temporal stand the text make still. a something on pin her in to Laurence's catalogue environment, perhaps apparentcompulsion obsessional in an attempt to gain some semblanceof control over it. The text relentlessly traps inventories, long I Reading in the am also reminded of narrator's obsession. readers Simone de Beauvoir's expressdesire,apparentlyrepudiatedwhen she met Sartre, to 41 d'une fille in Memoires jeune `say it all': `«je dirais tout' shewrote rangee The feelings of suffocation I have mentioned are effectively reinforced by the Simone de Beauvoir's textual characteristic of striking equally an of repetition, use forty-four identified have I Images. in Les Belles words, expressions,sentences, practice dialogues and constructionsthat are repeatedthroughout the the text, sometimesup to dense duplicates This web of utterances creates a and times. use of repetition six Laurence's feelings of entrapment.Utterancesreverberatethroughout the narrative like The images, text structuresan of reflections of reflections. reflections en abyme, mirror itself be described In Freudian text the terms can as neurotic as obsessivesituation. is Freud be is to repetition. arguedthat the neurosis more precise, repetition neurotic or, involves Therapy instead `repeats of converting repetition into remembering'. neurotic 42 The final chapterof Les Belles Images can be read as an attempt to remembrance. "See Memoires d'une jeune falle rangee,p. 481. The incident in the Luxembourg Gardenswhen Sartre `defeats' Simone de Beauvoir, leading her to abandonher project of saying/ telling everything, is discussedby Moi in Simonede Beauvoir, pp. 15-17. (Note that the use of the conditional tense ) it telling the all. of saying/ possibility undercuts 42`Remembering,Repeatingand Working Through', The CompletePsychological Worksof Sigmund Freud, ed. JamesStrachey,London: The Hogarth Press,1958,Volume XII (1911-1913), pp. 147-56 (p. 151). My reading accordswith Simone de Beauvoir's referenceto the discoveriesof psychoanalysisin Existentialismeet la sagessedes nations: `Il pourrait sembler inutile et meme ndfastede rivbler ä un adolescentqu'il haft son p8re; mais s'il n'a pas avoue cette haine avec des mots, il ne 1'apas moansaffumde danssessentiments,sesconduites,sesreves, sesangoisses;le psychanalystene choisit pas de d&couvrirgratuitementet brutalementune v6ritb ignorbe; il essaie d'aider son maladeä modifier les conduitespar lesquellesil reagit 6 cette rdalit8; au lieu d'employer sesforces ä se dissimuler sa haine, il faut que le sujet s'en lib8re, non en la niant, mais en l'assumant et en la ddpassant;cc qui exige d'abord qu'il la reconnaisseexplicitement et la comprenne' (pp. 4849). 216 remember.Furthermore,repetition can evoke a senseof unreality, duplicating Laurence's experiencefor readers.I suggestthat readerswho encountersuch extensive is, inevitably become that they will distance self conscious as readers, repetition will themselvesfrom the fictional world of the text and in this way experienceLaurence's alienation. It will be useful to quote in full two of the seriesof repetitions, so as to illustrate just how densethe text can become.Early in the narrative we read: Justeen ce moment, dapsun autrejardin, tout ä fait different, exactementpareil, quelqu'un dit cesmots et le meme sourire sepose sur un autre visage. (p. 7.) A few pageslater we find: Dans un autrejardin, tout a fait different, exactementpareil, quelqu'un dit [...] (p. 9.) Again, someforty pageslater we read: (Dans un autre salon,tout ä fait different, exactementpareil, avec des vasespleins de fleurs luxueuses,le meme cri sort d'une autre bouche :« Salaudb>)(p. 50.) This recalls: (Est-ce qu'en cet instant, dapsun autre coin de la galaxie, un autre Lucien, une autre Laurencedisent les memesmots?) (p. 32.) in is later the text: echoed which Mais la voix nostalgiquefait lever en eile comme un echo brouille de quelque chosevecujadis, dansune autre vie, ou peut-etreen ce moment, sur une autre plante. (p. 60.) All of thesequotationsareechoedagainwhenLaurencesays: Justea cetteminute, destas d'amants sont en train de rompre [...]. (p. 110.) (Une autre jeune femme, des centaines de jeunes femmes en cette minute se demandent : pourquoi lui plutöt qu'un autre?) (p. 137.) This last quotation links with anotherseriesof repetitions: «Pourquoi Jean-Charles plutöt que Lucien? » [... ] (Pourquoi moi plutöt qu'une autre?) (p. 65.) 217 Pourquoi Jean-Charlesplutöt que Lucien? [...] Pourquoi un homme plutöt qu'un autre?(p. 66.) Pourquoi Jean-Charlesplutöt qu'un autre?(p. 137.) Grouping repeatedutterancesin this way, illustratesjust how weighted down the text of Les Belles Imagesis. One seriesof repetitions is echoedby another. Moreover, the word `salaud' which appearsin the seriesjust quoted, ricochets through the text, repeated thirteen other times on four different occasions.Certain words are concentratedin a lying lies in final the times the third of are repeated six and of work; section particular 3 Les Belles Images. As Laurencecomesto seemore clearly through the glossy veneer her it becomes the lives, in of more and more vehement she rejection world which of building last `no' the text, the to a crescendowhen throughout part of reverberates and Laurence,unableto deny her true feelings any longer, finds her voice and screamsher refusal to comply. Non. Je ne voulais pas. [...] Je refusaisde l'oublier, [...] je refusais qu'un jour eile ) ]. (p. 158. ä ressemblät samere[... La psychologue dirait qu'elle fait expres de se rendre malade parce qu'elle ne veut pas emmener Catherine. Absurde. Si vraiment eile ne voulait pas, eile refuserait, eile se battrait. (p. 175.) Non. Non. (p. 179.) Non, jamais! Je ne me laisserai pas manipuler. Elle crie : -Non! Non! [... ] Non. Pouquoi non? [... ] "Non"; eile a crie tout haut. (p. 180.) Here Simonede Beauvoir is also using repetition to make explicit the connections betweenLaurence,Catherineand the little Greek girl. Another seriesof repetitions developsfurther the identification of Laurencewith Catherine: 43Seep. 136 `mensonger';p. 139 `mensonge';p. 140 `mensonge';p. 168 `la chaine de mensonges'; p. 180 'il parlerait ä cette radio qu'il accusaitde mensonge'; p. 180 `leurs mensonges'.(Laurence herself lies a number of times in the narrative; to Catherineabout Jean-Charles'swork p. 29 and to JeanCharles,not only about Lucien, but also about Goya's Christmasbonus, p. 128; about the number of times Catherinehas cried at night, p. 129 (cf. p. 135); about having eaten,p. 137.) 218 C'est toi [Laurence]qui la [Catherine] detraqueavec tes scrupules,to sensiblerie. (p. 133.) Souspretexte de guerir Catherinede cette "sensiblerie" qui inquietait JeanCharles,on allait la mutiler. (p. 159.) Donc A Päques- eile seraguerie, bien sür [Laurence]. (p. 175) Its la [Laurence] gueriront de sesrefus, de son desespoir.(p. 180.) This repetition and seriesof identifications reflect Laurence's disintegrating senseof identity. discomfort They are the as regards narrator's self and accentuatereaders' is depending but in the on a narrator who not only unreliable, of position painful placed is whose personality disintegrating. Clearly, eachtime words reappeartheir meaning is transformed, embeddedas 4 in different they are contexts. Thus the whole processof undermining our confidence in fixed meaning is reinforced. When Laurencelearns from her mother that her parents 45 finds intend to live togetheragain,news which she utterly painful, she recalls the he her her his he had to Gilbert that told was about reject mother; when spoken words by Laurence layers have to refer to and are recalled of significance acquirednew words both herself and her mother with bitter irony: - On supporte,on supporte,dit Gilbert. (p. 47.) "On supporte,on supporte." Gilbert avait raison. (p. 177.) The text underlinesthe ambivalenceof even apparently straightforward words such as the term which meansto force feed that is usedto designatefour very different situations: 44Kristeva follows Vologinov to arguethat all meaning is contextual. Context does not allow us to determine/close the meaning of a text as context itself cannotbe fixed. Derrida has shown how every text possessesa number of different contexts.SeeMoi, Sexuall Textual Politics, p. 155. 45Repetition of what Dominique said to Laurenceunderlines the acutepain she feels. This is further reinforced by the use of direct speech.Laurenceis `hearing' her mother's voice in her mind. `"Tu n'imagines pas le plaisir que ca lui a fait."' (Dominique, p. 177.) "`Tu n'imagines pas le plaisir que ca lui a fait."' (Laurence,p. 180.) 219 le gavagedes oies (p. 30.) (p. ) d'oranges 31. de lait, de de tomates et riz, gaves se gavant de glace (p. 38.) Elle se gave de tranquillisants (p. 143.) The horrific presentis linked with Jean-Charles'sutopic vision of the future which is linked with an apparentlyidyllic family meal which is in turn linked with Dominique's pain and despair.The resonanceof this seriesof repetitions is intensified by the central importanceof food and eating in the symbolic landscapein Les Belles Images. The term `se gayer' is remindful of Laurence'splight, or rather, her words as she lies in bed will recall theseearlier instancesof force feeding: `Ils la forceront ä manger, ils lui feront tout avaler [...]. '(p. 180). Also in relation to meaning,it is interesting to note how repetition in Les Belles Images is usedto confer symbolic significance on certain words. Paradoxically, through but lose their also come to meanmore than meaning repetition, words can not only themselves.Simone de Beauvoir's choice of such objects as banal as a safety pin suggestsshewished to challengeacceptednotions of objects worthy of symbolic status. In the text the safety pin comesto standfor the true friendship that Laurencehas never known and which Jean-Charlesbelievesto be inappropriate: J'ai allume, Brigitte s'est levee : «Bonjour, m'dame.» J'ai tout de suite remarque la grosseepingle de nourrice planteeBansl'ourlet de sajupe. (p. 53.) Laissez-moi au moins arranger1'epingle.(p. 55.) [...] 1'epingleetait encoreplanteedansla Jupede Brigitte. (p. 78.) Je revois Brigitte, l'epingle fichee Bansson ourlet : "Bonjour, m'dame" [...]. (p. 172.) Subtle changes,when utterancesare echoedrather than repeated,can be extremely eloquent; they are an economicalway of marking the progressionin 220 Laurence's frame of mind. The nature of her uncertainty changes.Early in the text we read: (mais qu'ont-ils queje n'ai pas non plus?) (p. 14.) And then: Et de nouveau Laurence se demande : qu'ont-ils que je n'ai pas? (p. 19.) This becomes: Ii me manque quelque chose que les autres ont... A moins... A moins qu'ils ne 1'aient pas non plus. (p. 83.) Then,finally: Est-ce moi qui Buisanormale?une amdeuse,une angoissee: qu'est-ce quej'ai ) (p. 150. qu'ils n'ont pas? Repetition underlinesLaurence'srevision of her position; shemoves from uncertainty through tentative doubt/hopeto certainty: Ce secretqu'elle se reprochait de n'avoir pas su decouvrir, peut-etre qu'apres tout il n'existait pas.Il n'existait pas : eile le sait depuis la Grece. (p. 179.) There is a similar progressionwith regardto her perception of Jean-Charles.It centres around his reactionto the car accidentwhen Laurenceswervesto avoid a young cyclist. Words echo in the text as they echoin Laurence's mind, replicating her obsession. La voiture est en miettes. (p. 102.) «Je ne trouve vraiment pas ca malirr; nous n'avons qu'une assurancetiercecollision. » [...] Tout le mondeaurait temoigne en to faveur. Il a dit ca sansen penserun mot [...]. (p. 103.) «La voiture est en miettes.» (p. 109.) «Je ne trouve ca vraiment pas malin; nous n'avons qu'une assurancetiercecollision... Tout le mondeaurait temoigne en to faveur.» Et eile realise en un eclair qu'il ne plaisantait pas.(p. 134.) «Jean-Charlesne plaisantaitpas.)) Combien de fois s'est-elle repetecette phrase pendantcette semaine?Elle se la repeteencore.(p. 150.) 221 As Laurencetells her story her feelings changeand shebecomesgradually more aware feelings: her true of Mais si, je l'aime bien. [Gilbert] (L'aime-t-elle ou non? eile aime tout le monde.) (p. 18.) ) Gilbert. (p. 48. deteste toujours » «J'ai Mais non. Je 1'aimebien. [Lucien] Je vais rompre avec lui, mais je 1'aime bien. J'aime bien tout le monde. Sauf Gilbert. (p. 87.) [...] incapabled'aimer. (p. 176.) Qu'a-t-on fait de moi? Cette femme qui n'aime personne[...] incapable meme de )x6 ]. (p. 181. [... pleurer This progressionalso underminesany notion of truth as an absolute.Just as meanings is immutable. be It for that fixed truth so much not can never all, once and are never Laurencemoves from a position of ignorance/error to knowledge and truth but that what is true changes. At the height of Laurence's crisis, repitition underlinesconnectionsbetweenthe (p. The `Je decue' 180). becomes (p. 179). `J'ai decue' ete suis the past and present. lui fasse `Je head in Laurence's qu'on ce qu'on ma pas ne permettrai are voiced: words fait' (pp. 180-81).becomes`- On ne lui fers pas ce qu'on m'a fait' (p. 181). Repetition exemplifies Laurence'spowerlessness,the trap in which she is is Jean-Charles, her disagreements However there no way out: with caught. profound `Quoi qu'il fasse,ou dise, quoi qu'elle dise ou fasse,il n'y aura pas de sanction' (p. 137). This repetition combinedwith reversalsuggeststhe net in which Laurence is by is her the repetition that occurs The hopelessness evoked of predicament caught. when shewonderswhy she decidedto end her relationship with Lucien: `Pourquoi avait-elle decide de faire le vide dannsavie, d'epargnerson temps, sesforces, son coeur 46The readeralso recalls what Laurencesaid earlier. `Moi aussi,ä son Age,je pleurais: commej'ai pleurd! C'est peut-@trepour ;a queje ne pleure plus jamais' (p. 25). 222 forces, faire de trop temps, ses quoi son coeur?' (p. 146). The sait son alors qu'elle ne in `trop', `vide' `remplie' disorder in terms the the next apparent and of repetition `Vie befuddlement: Laurence's trop remplie? trop vide? Remplie sentencesexemplifies de choresvides. Quelle confusion!' (p. 146). A further, specific use of repetition in Les Belles Images occurs particularly in the early part of the book. Laurence,alienatedand unsureof herself, echoesthose around her, holding onto the languageof othersin an attempt to anchor herself, gain imitation is conspicuous: Sometimes this echoing/ some semblanceof stability. Merveilleuse, dit Marthe avec ferveur. Merveilleuse, repeteLaurence.(p. 14.) dit Jean-Charles. vraiment reussi! -Un week-end (p. 19. ) -Vraiment reussi. At other times, it is less foregrounded.For example,at FeuverollesLaurence just irritated has been by her Dominique though she mother's unwittingly echoes by Florence ', Dominique Granada banal... `C'est d'un to and applied phraseology; twenty yearsearlier, is now used in connectionwith Saint-Tropezand echoedby Laurencein her comment on the Paris suburbs,`c'est d'un deprimant!' (p. 10). 7 When Laurencegoesto Dominique who hasbeenphysically maltreatedby Gilbert, her words are a direct echo of those usedby her colleague,Mona, with regardto aggressivemale drivers, `ce sont desbrutes' (pp. 86 and 124). Once,when speakingto Mona, she becomesawareof what sheis doing and stopsherself: Elle allait dire machinalement: indispensable,eile s'est reprise a temps. Elle entendla voix de Gilbert : «Une detenteindispensable))[...]. (p. 69.) Laurence'sbehaviour is especiallyinteresting in the light of the way the text explicitly and insistently associatesimitating with Dominique: "Elizabeth Fallaize also discussesthis example. TheNovels, pp. 126-27. 223 imite-t-elle Qui C'est ce en moment? une scie, entre eux, cette question que fait d'une hysterique. Le Freud ä est que Dominique imite toujours propos posait quelqu'un. (p. 34.) [...] (qui imite-t-elle?). (p. 88.) Imitant toujours quelqu'un faute de savoir inventer des conduites adapteesaux circonstances.(p. 125.) Qui imitait-elle? la femme qu'elle souhaitait devenir? (p. 176.) Laurence,like Dominique, lacking any inner conviction about who she is and how she should be, looks to her entouragein searchof models. She echoesand imitates others as the text echoesand imitates iself. I have shown how languagein Les Belles Images is usedto reproduce Laurence'sbreakdown.Enumerationand repetition mediateher feelings of alienation, strangeness,indifference, boredom,and suffocation. They mirror Laurence's uncertainty and her disintegrating senseof identity. The text duplicatesher obsessionand is, itself, neurotic. And aboveall, the text epitomisesher loss of faith in language.In Laurence's universethe meaningfulnessof languagecannot be taken for granted.Readerswho are invited to interpret a loss of confidencein languageas a symptom of breakdown and madness,a sign of failure and guilt, find themselvesplaced in this sameposition. In the mad textual universecreatedby Simonede Beauvoir, readersare trapped in an uncomfortableplace where they shareLaurence's distress. Simonede Beauvoir is generally perceivedto producetexts which are lisiblel readerly. Yet a close reading of her texts doesnot corroboratethis view. Les Belles Images demonstratesthe intrinsic inadequacyof language.Languagewill not submit to control and meaningremains fluid. Simone de Beauvoir's texts have much in common with texts which are scriptiblel writerly. Indeed, her texts underminethe lisiblel 224 ecrivain/ ecrivant boundary. Simone de Beauvoir the crosses scriptible opposition. 225 Conclusion It has clearly emergedthat far from being flat, detachedand controlled, Simonede Beauvoir's writing is frequently inflected by forceful emotions and disrupted.' Madness is enactedin the text of her fiction, duplicated by textual strategies.It is inherent in the text in those qualities that destabilisemeaning and identity, that representchaos.Marks of excess,plurality, disruption and transgressionare an inscription of madnessat a discursive level. In Simone de Beauvoir's fiction, symbolic languageis disrupted by the semiotic. Madnessis inscribed in the text of L'Invitee as excess,hyperbole and ambiguity. In this work, languageis taken to the limits of expressibility. The realist novel is embeddedin a Gothic textual universethat Simonede Beauvoir createsto be the space in which sheconfronts pain and madness.Gothic conventionsand figures inform the novel to an extent that makesit justifiable to speakof the Gothic economyof the text. In L'Invitee, as in the Gothic mode, feeling and emotion exceedreason,and ambivalence and ambiguity prevail. In so far as the text is Gothic and transgressiveit is mad, it enacts madness. It is true that in her oeuvre as a whole, variations in tone are considerable.Toril Moi argues convincingly that the range in tone of Simone de Beauvoir's writings (vital to lifeless) is related to the `degreeof disavowal she engagesin'. Simonede Beauvoir, pp. 249-52. My readingsof L'Invitee, Les Belles imagesand La Femmerompue are in complete opposition to those such as SusanMarie Loffredo's. She contendsthat 'Beauvoir's fiction is written unambiguously,both in terms of action and chronology' and that `her skillfully and coolly controlled prose' doesnot fit situationswhere emotional control is lost. See`A Portrait of the Sexes:The Masculine and the Feminine in the Novels of Simone de Beauvoir, Marguerite Duras and Christiane Rochefort', unpublished doctoral dissertation,Princeton University, 1978,pp. 280-81. Seealso Evans,Masks of Tradition, p. 92 where sherefers to the `flatness' of Simone de Beauvoir's prose and pp. 99- 100 where shediscussesthe `no-frills quality' of her style. She quotesapprovingly, JacquesEhrmann's view that Simone de Beauvoir always maintains `her distance,her self-control and an entire lucidity'. `Simone de Beauvoir and the related destiniesof woman and intellectual', YaleFrench Studies,27,1961,26-32 (p. 29.) As I recordedin my Introduction, Brosmandefines the tone of Les Belles imagesas `detached', 86. p. 226 Simone de Beauvoir's imagery is an imagery of madness,an expressionof the in images lost Networks distress the of of madness, evocation of plenitude. pain and L'Invitee, Les Belles Images and La Femmerompue mediatemadnessin the text. Madnessexperiencedas dissolution and loss of self is suggestedby interlocking loss images. Feelings that threatenthe self are evoked and of abandonment patternsof by images of the void and nothingnessthat combine the motifs of the abyss,vertigo and falling. Images of collapseand engulfment also evoke fear and senseof loss of self. Theseare apocalyptic imagesof submergence,weight, enclosure,immobilisation, imprisonment and live burial. The forceful senseof helplessnessand suffering and fear images by death by images, is these of and paralysis. amplified communicated Emphasison black in all the texts contributesto the pervasiveatmosphereof pain and despair.Light, too, is associatedwith pain. Violent, cruel imagespredominatein all three texts. Emotional and physical suffering is evoked by imagesof tearing, burning, biting, sharpness,cutting, stabbingand breaking. An imagery of mirrors, reflections, images,andthe gazeof othersformsa densenetworkof symbolisation.Theseimages figure the frail line that divides the real and the illusory and the fragility of the women protagonists' senseof self. The body is a key elementof the imagery and symbolic framework of all three books. It is a metaphorfor the self, generally a sourceor expressionof pain and disgust.A thread of nostalgic imagesthat evoke a senseof lost well-being and happinessruns through the sombreand desperateweave of the text. Light, water and transparencyare recurring motifs. A remarkableaffinity exists between the symbolic landscapesof the early and later fiction where excessand hyperbole 227 persist. It seemsapparentthat Simone de Beauvoir did not eschewthe `chaos' of ' metaphor. Madnessis also located in the text in instability and incoherence.The text reproducesthe disintegration of identity experiencedby charactersthreatenedby madnessand subvertsnotions of a unified and stable identity. Mirrored charactersand unstablenarration and focalisation are instrumental in this. Inconclusivenessand ambiguity in the text can also be read as symptomsof madness.Disruptive textual strategiesintroduce incoherenceinto the narrativesand unsettlemeaning.Temporal confusion characterisesthe later fiction in which the text refusesto convey a senseof chronology, a senseof linear logic. Time in Simone de Beauvoir's novels and short stories is experiencedas distorted and reified. Fragmentedand interrupted narratives also contribute to the incoherencethat exemplifies madnessin the text. The use of brackets,dashes,ellipses, rupturesand silencesfragment, disrupt and destabilisethe text. Multi-layering is a further sourceof incoherence.Syntax, too, is instrumental in the creation of a mad text. Disarticulated and contorted syntax evokesthe pain of Simone de Beauvoir's women protagonistsand conveysa senseof claustrophobiaand obsession. In Les Belles Imagesmadnessis identifiable in the text at those points where languagerefusesto signify and where the meaningfulnessof languageis subverted.The use of plural meanings,irony, enumerationand repetition are instrumental in the creation of a mad textual universewhere readers'faith in languageis undermined and where they shareLaurence's `desarroi'. The text exposesthe problematic nature of 2This term is used by Fowler in his comparisonof simile and metaphor, metaphor,unlike simile, he argues,`upsetsreality' (p. 223.). The rich networks of images I have uncoveredmean that I cannot agreewith Martha Noel Evans's argumentthat Simone de Beauvoir `banished' metaphor: `Taking up a position of masterywith respectto her own femaleness,shethus drained her writing of the enriching power of its own vulnerability. The metaphoric languagethat might have emergedfrom confusion as its expressionand its transcendencewas sappedof its vitality and cast aside' (Masks of Tradition, p. 100.). 228 inadequacy the of languageand Laurence's experienceof madness. meaning and enacts Irony reproducesa senseof alienation and also contributesto the creationof a mad textual universe in that it is a sourceof ambiguity in the text and an embodimentof the `treacherous',`slippery' nature of meaning.Enumeration,too, challengesreaders' confidence in words, languageand meaningby linking synonymousand antonymous terms. This technique embodiesthe displacementand deferral of meaningand can even foster meaninglessnessand be a sourceof transgressivehumour. Togetherwith repetition, it mediatesfeelings of alienation, indifference, boredom, and suffocation, Repetition Laurence's also underlinesthe ambiguity and uncertainty. mirroring ambivalenceof language.It exemplifies obsessionand powerlessness.Rhythm and disrupting in the text the of presenceof semiotic energy. are expression an movement The closer one gets to Simonede Beauvoir's writing, the more conspicuousits Les Belles Images L'Invitee, becomes. Such closure. and complexity writing resists rich La Femmerompue correspondto Simonede Beauvoir's definition of true fiction: Un vrai roman ne se laisse donc ni reduire en formules, ni meme raconter;on ne d'un detache detacher le visage. sensqu'on ne un sourire peut pas plus en Quoique fait des mots, il existe comme les objets du monde qui debordenttout ce qu'on peut en dire avec des mots. (`Litterature et metaphysique',p. 107.) Far from being definitive, my readingsof madnessin the text open up meaning. Reading madnessin the text is to perceivethe ambiguities and contradictionsof existenceoperatingthere. The insistentvoice of madnessbreaksinto the text, disrupting demanding logic, to be heard. order and 229 Bibliography Works by Simone de Beauvoir Books L'Invitee, coll. folio, Paris: Gallimard, 1943 Le Sang des autres, coll. folio, Paris: Gallimard, 1945 Tous les hommes sont mortels, coll. folio, Paris: Gallimard, 1946 Pour une morale de 1'ambiguIte, coll. idees, Paris: Gallimard, 1947 L'Existentialisme et la sagesse des nations, including `Idealisme moral et realisme 1948 Nagel, Paris: `Geil `Litterature oeil', pour et metaphysique' and politique', Le Deuxieme Sexe, 2 vols., coll. folio, Paris: Gallimard, 1949 Les Mandarins, coll. folio, Paris: Gallimard, 1954 Memoires d'une jeune fille ran gee, coll. folio, Paris: Gallimard, 1958 La Force de Page, Paris: Gallimard, 1960 LaForce des choses,Paris: Gallimard, 1963 Une Mort tres douce, coll. folio, Paris: Gallimard, 1964 Les Belles Images, coll. folio, Paris: Gallimard, 1966 La Femme rompue, coll. folio, Paris: Gallimard, 1968 La Vieillesse, coll. folio, Paris: Gallimard, 1970 Tout compte fait, coll. folio, Paris: Gallimard, 1972 Quand prime le spirituel, Paris: Gallimard, 1979 La Ceremonie des adieux and Entretiens avec Jean-Paul Sartre, coll. folio, Paris: Gallimard, 1981 Lettres a Sartre, 2 vols., Paris: Gallimard, 1990 Interviews. lectures and prefaces Prefaceto Leduc, Violette, La Bätarde, Paris: Gallimard, 1964 Contribution to a 1964 debate on literature published in Que peut la litterature?, ed. by Yves Buin, Paris: Union Generale d'Editions, 1965, pp. 73-92 Interview in Jeanson, Francis, Simone de Beauvoir ou l'entreprise de vivre, Paris: Seuil, 1966. 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