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Claire de Duras

 
French Literature Companion: Claire Lechat de Kersaint Duras

Duras, Claire Lechat de Kersaint, duchesse de (1778-1828), maintained an important literary salon and also wrote three remarkable novels about impossible love. Classically simple in style and plot, they treat what were then somewhat scandalous subjects in a moving way. Ourika (1824) is the pathetic tale of the hopeless love of a young black for a noble Frenchman; she enters a convent and dies. In Édouard (1825) the son of a worker adopted by a nobleman falls in love with his adopted sister and, aware of the impossibility of the misalliance, seeks death as a solider. Olivier (posthumously published, 1971) deals with physical impotence as an obstacle to love, and inspired Stendhal's Armance.

[Frank Paul Bowman]

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Claire, Duchesse de Duras (née Claire de Kersaint) (1777, Brest, Finistère – 1828) was a French writer best known for her 1823 novel called Ourika, which examines issues of racial and sexual equality, and which inspired the 1969 John Fowles novel The French Lieutenant's Woman.

Contents

Biography

Claire de Duras left her native France for London during the French Revolution in 1789, and returned to France in 1808 as the Duchess of Duras. She maintained a famous literary salon in post-Revolutionary Paris and was the close friend of Chateaubriand, who she had met while in exile in London, and who helped her to publish her books.

Ourika was published anonymously in 1823, one of five novels Claire de Duras had written during the previous year; only two of them were published during her lifetime. The three novellas that she did publish were only done so in order to prevent any possible plagiarism.

Claire de Duras treated complex and controversial subjects, primarily dealing with oppressed/marginalized characters. She explored many fundamental principles of the French Revolution, and touched upon the intellectual debates of the Age of Enlightenment, particularly the equality of all men -- and women. In holding with these subjects, tragedy is a common theme. For a long time she was seen as the writer of small and unimportant sentimental novels, but recent criticism has revealed her works to be treasure troves of postmodern identity theory. It is likely she has not been well read because her choice and treatment of subject could not be appreciated until recently; she was ahead of her time.

Bibliography

Published during her life

  • Olivier (1822)
  • Ourika (1823)
  • Edouard (1825)

Published posthumously

  • Pensées de Louis XIV, extraites de ses ouvrages et de ses lettres manuscrites. Thoughts of Louis XIV: extracts of his writings. (1827)

Unfinished works

  • Le Moine du Saint-Bernard. The Monk of Saint-Bernard.
  • Les Mémoires de Sophie. Sophie's Memoirs.

External links

References


 
 

 

Copyrights:

French Literature Companion. The New Oxford Companion to Literature in French. Copyright © 1995, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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