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The Mysteries of Paris

 
French Literature Companion: Les Mystères de Paris

Mystères de Paris, Les. Novel by Eugène Sue. Serialized in the Journal des débats from June 1842 to October 1843, Les Mystères de Paris is the most celebrated roman-feuilleton and the quintessential example of the genre. The novel has not retained its place in modern mass culture, as have Dumas's novels, and the characters have long ceased to be household names. Nevertheless, Les Mystères de Paris had a profound effect on the development of the popular fiction of mystery, suspense, criminality, and low life. In the figure of Rodolphe it also introduced one of the first charismatic superheroes of popular culture who devote their lives to meting out justice and exacting retribution. The redemptive powers of Rodolphe are linked to Sue's socialist and humanitarian mission to help the poor and oppressed. The serialization of the novel constituted one of the first sensational media events of a nascent mass culture. It brought large and different sections of society together into a community of readers, all desperately awaiting the next number. Sue received a shoal of fan letters, many of which have been preserved. They are a precious and rare source, revealing how ordinary people actually responded to literature at this period.

[Brian Rigby]

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Wikipedia: The Mysteries of Paris
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The Mysteries of Paris (French: Les Mystères de Paris) is a novel by Eugène Sue which was published serially in Journal des débats from June 19, 1842 until October 15, 1843. Les Mystères de Paris singlehandedly increased the circulation of Journal des débats.

There has been lots of talk on the origins of the French novel of the 19th century: Stendhal, Balzac, Dumas, Gautier, Sand or Hugo. One often forgets Eugène Sue. Still, The Mysteries of Paris occupies a unique space in the birth of this literary genre: not only is it a stream of consciousness novel which entranced thousands of readers for more than a year (even illiterates who had episodes read to them), it is also a major work in the formation of a certain form of social consciousness. One often hears that the 1848 revolution was partly born in the pages of the Mysteries of Paris or, more appropriately, that the Mysteries of Paris helped create a climate which allowed the 1848 revolution to occur.

Contents

Plot and characters

The hero of the novel is the mysterious and distinguished Rodolphe, who is really the Grand Duke of Gérolstein (a fictional country) but is disguised as a Parisian worker. Rodolphe can speak in argot, is extremely strong and a good fighter. Yet he also shows great compassion for the lower classes, good judgment, and a brilliant mind. He can navigate all layers of society in order to understand their problems, and to understand how the different social classes are linked.

Rodolphe is accompanied by his friends Sir Walter Murph, an Englishman, and David, a gifted black doctor, formerly a slave.

The first figures they meet are Le Chourineur and La Goualeuse. Rodolphe saves La Goualeuse from Le Chourineur's brutality, and saves Le Chourineur from himself, knowing that the man still has some good in him. La Goualeuse is a prostitute, and Le Chourineur is a former butcher who has served 15 years in prison for murder. Both characters are grateful for Rodolphe's assistance, as are many other characters in the novel.

Other characters include:

  • Rigolette, a grisette
  • The schoolmaster, brutal and dangerous, who hides a terrible secret
  • Ferrand, a notary whose greed plunges families into poverty
  • La Louve (The She-Wolf), a friend of Fleur-de-Marie at the women's prison of Saint-Lazare
  • La Chouette (The Owl), an old woman with diabolical schemes
  • Morel, a virtuous worker, and his family
  • Polidori, an abbot with a dark past
  • Cecily, a mulatto, David's ex-wife, beautiful but dangerous
  • Countess McGregor, an ambitious woman
  • Monsieur and Madame Pipelet, concierges
  • Bras-Rouge (Red-Arm), an underworld boss
  • Tortillard, his son, clever but with bad intentions
  • Martial and his family

Though Rodolphe is described as a flawless man, Sue otherwise depicts the Parisian nobility as deaf to the misfortunes of the common people and focused on meaningless intrigues. For this reason, some, such as Dumas, have considered the novel's ending a failure. Rodolphe goes back to Gérolstein to take on the role to which he was destined by birth, rather than staying in Paris to help the lower classes.

Film adaptations

The novel was made into a feature film several times, most notably in 1962 as Les Mystères de Paris, a French film by André Hunebelle, starring Jean Marais.

Legacy

Numerous novels inspired by Les Mystères de Paris were published all over the Western world: The Mysteries of Pittsburgh by Michael Chabon, Les Mystères de Marseille by Émile Zola, The Mysteries of London by George W. M. Reynolds, Les Mystères de Londres by Paul Féval, Les Mystères de Lyon (featuring the Nyctalope) by Jean de La Hire, I misteri di Napoli by Francesco Mastriani, the Mystères de Munich, Les Nouveaux Mystères de Paris (featuring Nestor Burma) by Léo Malet.

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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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