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===Castration=== ===Castration===
Roland Barthes identifies castration as one of the main concerns of Sarrasine. Zambinella is a castrato. Because women were not allowed on the Roman stage, castrati regularly played the parts of women. The tradition of the castrati ended in France before it did in Italy, and when Sarrasine arrives in Italy and meets Zambinella, he does not know about it. Because Zambinella has the voice of a woman Sarrasine assumes La Zambinella is a woman. La Zambinella suggests that her womanhood might be in question, but Sarrasine is too enthralled with La Zambinella as the perfect woman to pay any attention. When Sarrasine finally finds out Zambinella is a castrato, first denies the possibility, then tries to kill La Zambinella, upon which he is himself killed. Critics point out that Sarrasine may fear a kind of contagion of castration, or may feel that manhood in general or that the division between men and women is threatened by possibility of castration. The novella ends with Mme de Rochefide and the narrator condemning the castrato tradition as barbarian.
] is a major theme in the novella. Although the word castration or castrato is never said, as some critics point out, it is still obvious. The castration of opera singers was a method used to keep their voices high so they could play female roles. While it was condemned, many composers, and audiences preferred the higher male voices, even after women were allowed on stage. Since the individuals who were castrated had no testosterone, along with higher voices, the castratos also kept feminine appearances. Zambinella was revealed as a ] in the novella. Since he was a castrato, it was easier for him to appear female. Assuming Zambinella was female, Sarrasine became obsessed with the singer. Until the end, Zambinella does not correct Sarrasine, except with ]. Even though the practice of castration was widely known, it was a ]. The thought of removing sexual organs from a human, is believe to be unthinkable and wrong. It is because of taboo, that Zambinella hid his status from Sarrasine. Zambinella knew that to tell Sarrasine the truth, was to condemn himself, especially, according to the text, Zambinella only presented as female as a joke. Because castration is such a serious act, one can see why Sarrasine did not believe Zambinella, choosing rather to believe in the facade created. Although the reader never is given insight to exactly why Sarrasine reacts the way he does when Zambinella confirms his status, castration plays a part, as well as the trickery. By killing Zambinella, Sarrasine is rejecting gender ambiguity, while also showing anger for being tricked. But why is the word castration or castrato never mentioned? Critics, including Sandy Petrey suggest it is because of the taboo, that it is never mentioned. It is supposed to be inferred without confirmation.


===Homosexuality=== ===Homosexuality===

Revision as of 20:24, 31 October 2013

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For the pipevine, see Aristolochia longa.
Sarrasine
Image from Sarrasine.
AuthorHonoré de Balzac
IllustratorAlcide Théophile Robaudi
LanguageFrench
SeriesLa Comédie humaine
PublisherCharles Gosselin
Publication date1831
Publication placeFrance
Preceded byFacino Cane 
Followed byPierre Grassou 

Sarrasine is a novella written by Honoré de Balzac. It was published in 1830, and is part of his Comédie Humaine.

Introduction

Balzac began writing in 1819 while living alone in the rue Lesdiguieres. Upon writing "Sarrasine" in 1830, Balzac had been steadily producing works for over a decade, though not to much success, as Sarrasine was among his first publications not using a pseudonym.

During the period in which the novella was written, Balzac was involved in many salons, including that of Madame Recamier. Around the time in which it was published, Balzac experienced great success with another work, La Peau de Chagrin. As his career began to take off, and his publications began to accumulate, Balzac developed increasingly lavish living habits, frequently making impulsive purchases, such as new furniture for his apartment and also a hooded white cashmere gown designed to be worn by a monk which he wore at night while writing, likely to distance himself from his family’s prior debt, which was the consequence of his business as an editor and printer’s liquidation.

In 1841, once another decade had passed, an ill Balzac reached an agreement with Furne & Co., Dubochet, Hetzel and Paulin to publish La Comédie humaine. In the 10 years that elapsed, Balzac had developed a political career, becoming heavily involved in high society, which influenced much of his writing. He continued to have financial difficulties despite his success, such as with "La Cronique de Paris", a magazine he founded and abandoned, though he characteristically hid his worry in order to maintain appearances.

The first volume of La Comedie Humaine went on sale in July 1842. "Sarrasine" is part of its Scenes de la vie parisienne.

Commentary

Balzac's "Sarrasine" was not paid much attention to prior to Roland Barthes' blow-by-blow structuralist/post-structuralist analysis of the text in his book S/Z, published in 1970. Barthes dissects the text in accordance to five 'codes' (hermeneutic, semic, symbolic, proairetic, cultural).

Plot Summary

Around midnight during a ball the narrator is sitting at a window, out of sight, admiring the garden. He overhears the conversations of those passing by regarding the origins of the wealth of mansion's owner, Monsieur de Lanty. There is also the presence of an unknown old man around the house, who the family was oddly devoted to, and who frightened and intrigued the partygoers. When the man sits next to the narrator’s guest, Beatrix Rochefide, she touches him and the narrator rushes her out of the room. The narrator says he knows who the man is and says he will tell her his story the next evening. The next evening, the narrator tells Mme de Rochefide about Ernest-Jean Sarrasine, a passionate, artistic boy, who after having trouble in school became a prodigy of the sculptor Bouchardon. Sarrasine becomes a talented young man and after one of his sculptures wins a competition he heads to Rome where he sees a theatre performance featuring Zambinella. He falls in love with her, going to all of her performances and creating a clay mold of her. After spending time with her at a party, Sarrasine attempts to seduce Zambinella. She is reticent, suggesting some hidden secret or danger to their alliance. Sarrasine becomes increasingly convinced that Zambinella is the ideal woman. Sarrasine develops a plan to abduct her from a party at the French embassy. When Sarrasine arrives, Zambinella is dressed as a man. Sarrasine speaks to a cardinal, who is Zambinella’s patron, and is told that Zambinella is a castrato. Sarrasine refuses to believe the cardinal and leaves the party, seizing Zambinella. Once they are at his studio, Zambinella confirms that she is a Castrato. Sarrasine is about to kill Zambinella as a group of the cardinal’s men barge in and stab Sarrasine. The narrator then reveals that the old man around the household is Zambinella, who is Madame de Lanty’s great uncle. The story ends with Mme de Rochefide expressing her distress about the story she has just been told.

Characters

The Narrator - The narrator tells the story of Sarrasine to Madame Rochefide. He is a member of Paris's upper class and regularly frequents it grand balls. He tells the story of Sarrasine as a way to seduce Madame Rochefide.

Madame Rochefide - A delicate woman of great beauty who the narrator invited to Monsieur de Lanty's ball.

Marianina - Marianina is the de Lanty’s sixteen year old daughter who is strikingly beautiful, educated and witty. Also described as sweet and modest, she could bring the same level purity of sound, sensibility, rightness of movement and pitch, soul and science, correctness, and feeling as the sultan’s daughter in the Magic Lamp could.

Filippo - Filippo is Marianina’s brother and son of the County de Lanty. He is handsome with skin of olive complexion, defined eyebrows, and has fire of velvet eyes. Often considered an ideal partner to many girls and mothers finding husbands for their daughters. He is also described as a walking image of Antinous.

Monsieur de Lanty - The wealthy, owner of the mansion hosting the ball. He is small, ugly, and pock-marked; a complete contrast to his wife and children. He is dark skinned like a Spaniard and dull as a banker, and compared to a politician because he is cold and reserved.

Madame de Lanty - County de Lanty’s beautiful wife and mother of Marianina and Filippo

Ernest-Jean Sarrasine - The only son of a rich lawyer who rather than following in his father's path as the family wants becomes an artist, eventually having his talent as a sculptor recognized by Bouchardon. He is generally more interested in art than in women, but on a trip to Italy falls in love with the opera star, La Zambinella, who serves as the model for his most perfect statue. When he learns that Zambinella is a castrato, he tries to kill Zambinella and is himself killed instead.

Zambinella - A star of the Roman opera and the object of Sarrasine’s affection. Sarrasine is convinced that La Zambinella is the ideal woman. La Zambinella is in fact a castrato.

Bouchardon - Sculptor who taught Sarrasine as a student and took him in as his own pupil

Themes

Opposites

"Sarrasine" is marked by oppositions. The story opens with a description of the extremes of inside and out, day and night, beauty and ugliness, age and youth, male and female that prevail in French high society and at the de Lanty's ball. Whereas the ball is young and full of life, the mysterious old man who enters it stands out as the mark of opposition. “If I look at him again, I shall believe that death itself has come looking for me,” says one beautiful young woman. The most significant opposite in the entire novella is man versus woman or male versus female. The story contemplates what it means to be a man and what it means to be a woman and the degree to which those stand in opposition. The story also touches on oppositions between the generations, as Sarrasine himself is opposite to his father, on oppositions between the art world and the political world, on oppositions between France and Italy, and on oppositions between the ideal and the real.

Castration

Roland Barthes identifies castration as one of the main concerns of Sarrasine. Zambinella is a castrato. Because women were not allowed on the Roman stage, castrati regularly played the parts of women. The tradition of the castrati ended in France before it did in Italy, and when Sarrasine arrives in Italy and meets Zambinella, he does not know about it. Because Zambinella has the voice of a woman Sarrasine assumes La Zambinella is a woman. La Zambinella suggests that her womanhood might be in question, but Sarrasine is too enthralled with La Zambinella as the perfect woman to pay any attention. When Sarrasine finally finds out Zambinella is a castrato, first denies the possibility, then tries to kill La Zambinella, upon which he is himself killed. Critics point out that Sarrasine may fear a kind of contagion of castration, or may feel that manhood in general or that the division between men and women is threatened by possibility of castration. The novella ends with Mme de Rochefide and the narrator condemning the castrato tradition as barbarian.

Homosexuality

Homosexuality is a common theme found in many of Honoré de Balzac's works, for example Illusions perdues. In Sarrasine, we meet Zambinella, a seemingly beautiful woman admired most certainly by Sarrasine. Zambinella turns out to be castrato. Sarrasine, who took Zambinella to be his ideal woman, is deeply distressed when he learns that Zambinella is a castrato. One possible explanation of Sarrasine's extreme reaction—he tries to kill La Zambinella—is that he fears that his love of La Zambinella is a mark of homosexuality. Sarrasine's reaction, then, can be seen as an attempt to protect his heterosexuality. Zambinella does in fact have a partner, the cardinal. In Sarrasine, the cardinal is Zambinella's "protector," which means that Zambinella would be the complementary role of "mignon". Barthes refers to Zambinella as "mignon" as it is used in French court society, where it means the homosexual lover, or "pet," of a man in power, in this case the cardinal, the "protector".

Narrative Strategies

Sarrasine features the use of first person narration. An unnamed, male, narrator tells the story in first person. Balzac’s use of a frame story is the most significant narrative strategy is "Sarrasine." In the frame story, the narrator and Mme de Rochefide attend a ball and come into close contact with a mysterious old man and see a beautiful painting. The narrator promises to tell Mme de Rochefide the story of the painting and the old man. The body of "Sarrasine" and the framed story is the story that the narrator tells to Mme de Rochefide about Ernest Jean Sarrasine and his unusual relationship with Zambinella. Balzac also employs nonlinear narration in "Sarrasine." The framed story takes place many years earlier than does and a few times the narrator jumps to the present and then goes back into telling the framed story, thus making "Sarrasine" nonlinear.

Historical Context

Castrati in Opera

Sarrasine gives us a closer look at the role of castrati in both common opera and in religious tradition. Catholicism in Italy dictated that there could be no female singers, and the high voice parts were usually played by either prepubescent boys or castrati. In order to become a castrato, a boy had to give up his "manhood", having his testes removed at a very early age. Because of the popularity of Italian opera throughout 18th-century Europe (except France), castrati such as Ferri, Farinelli, Senesino and Pacchierotti became the first operatic superstars, earning enormous fees and hysterical public adulation. However, many did not even make it through the surgery, or did not last very long after it. Castrati developed many health problems, as testosterone is needed for healthy growth in boys, and without the glands that supply the majority of testosterone during a critical period of development, the body does not grow correctly. Besides the only wanted side effect (the lack of lengthening the vocal chords), a castrato's arms and legs were often disproportionally long, they did not have much muscle mass, and other problems, such as osteoporosis and erectile dysfunction were common later in life. The story of Sarrasine is made much more believable when the fact that, due to their severe hormonal imbalance, castrati often developed real breast tissue, a condition called gynecomastia.

Literary Context

Other 19th Century French Literature

French literature flourished in the nineteenth century. Among the most famous authors from this time period is Victor Hugo. Hugo was known for works such as Les Misérables, The Hunchback of Notre-Dame, and The Toilers of the Sea. Hugo was also known for influencing Romanticism. Romanticism was a movement that spread to France in the 1820s and emphasized a sense of individuality and emotion. In his novel Les Misérables, Hugo presents romanticism and individuality with the character of Marius Pontmercy. Marius attempts to court the character of Cosette by sending her letters that reveal his love for her. By having Marius reveal his emotions in this way, Hugo follows the ideas and beliefs of this movement that he was such an influential part of. Equally important is Gustave Flaubert, known for his use of realism, which was influenced by Honoré de Balzac. Realism appears perhaps most famously in Flaubert’s first novel Madame Bovary. This novel represents the "real" experiences and feelings of a French woman who is obsessed with, and eventually dispossessed of, her romantic ideal of love. While Madame Bovary may be Flaubert's most famous novel, his other works include Salammbô and L’Éducation Sentimentale (Sentimental Education). In Salammbô, Flaubert abandons realism for historical fiction with an account of the Mercenary Revolt in Tunisia during the 3rd century BCE. Flaubert then returns to realism in L’Éducation Sentimentale with a detailed account of lives during the revolution of 1848 in France. Other influential authors from this period, include Marie-Henri Beyle ( better known by the pseudonym Stendhal) and Charles Baudelaire.

Realism

Realism is an artistic movement which originated in France in the 19th century by people who rejected both idealism and romanticism. The use of romanticism began to rise dramatically in the 18th century and was the predominant artistic movement in France until Realism. Realism was widely appreciated by people who were against the inflated ideas of passion and drama that mark Romanticism. Those in the Realist movement wanted instead to portray the truth in every situation, avoiding exaggerating a scenario to emphasize only its good or bad qualities. Realism also strove to represent life as it was experienced in its more mundane details by imperfect men and women rather than idealized characters in idealized situations. Realism tends to describe middle or lower class milieux in order to paint a picture of the regular life of a majority of the population at the time the literature was written. From the people to the places, Realism strove to present everything in an undramatic and "true" manner.
In "Sarrasine" realism appears in the ways that every situation is described in its positive and negative aspects. As a member of the castrato Zambinella can be praised and adorned, but also treated as if they don’t belong. The novella also doesn’t romanticize the relationship between Zambinella and Sarrasine. The author decides to show real and imperfect emotions between the two characters, from love to vengeance. Though realism in literature was usually used for portraying the activities of middle and lower class people, it was sometimes used in situations like this, and indeed often focused on characters and situations that might otherwise be socially marginalized.

Allusions and Intertexts

Sarrasine makes many references and allusions to other sources, often times to literature (Lord Byron, Ann Radcliffe, Jean-Jacques Rousseau), the arts (Michelangelo, Girodet's Endymion), music (Gioacchino Rossini), religion, and greek mythology (Adonis, Pygmalion). The most important allusions being to the figures of beauty in Greek culture, namely Adonis, Endymion, and Pygmalion. The intertexuality between Sarrasine and Pygmalion is a vital one, as it establishes the tragedy of misconception: Sarrasine creates a statue of the "female" La Zambinella, only to discover later that there wasn't a real "woman" as Sarrasine understood it—that "a real woman is born from the statue." Furthermore, the replication of the statue into marble, and into two separate portraits (Adonis, and Girodet's Endymion) only perpetuates the symbolic notion that Sarrasine is always influenced by an intrinsic gender ambiguity.

Text

Renditions in other media

The composer Richard Beaudoin is writing an opera based on Sarrasine.

Notes

  1. Bertault, Philippe (1963). Balzac and The Human Comedy. New York City: New York University Press. pp. vii–xvi.
  2. The Tenor of "Sarrasine"
  3. Mayo Clinic
  4. Barthes, Roland. S/Z/. 208.

References

Article Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/25486268

  • Noble, Yvonne. "Castrati, Balzac, and Barthes' S/Z." Comparative Drama. Kalamazoo: Spring 1997. Vol. 31, Iss. 1. pp28–42.
  • Sprenger, Scott. “Mind as Ruin,” Stories of the Earth, New York/Amsterdam, Rodopi, 2008, 119-136.
  • Sprenger, Scott. “Sarrasine de Balzac ou l’archéologie du moi moderne,” La Plume et la pierre: l’écrivain et le modèle archéologique au XIX siècle, Nîmes, Champ Social, 2007, 291-318.
  • Stoltzfus, Ben. Lacan and Literature : Purloined Pretexts. SUNY Press: Albany, 1996. p145.
  • Petrey,Sandy. "Castration, Speech Acts, and the Realist Difference: S/Z versus Sarrasine"Vol. 102, No. 2 (Mar., 1987), pp. 153–165, Published by: Modern Language Association
  • Bertault, Philippe. Balzac and The Human Comedy. New York: New York University Press, 1963. Print.
La Comédie humaine by Honoré de Balzac
List of titles
Scènes de la vie privée
Scènes de la vie de province
Scènes de la vie Parisienne
Scènes de la vie politique
Scènes de la vie militaire
Scènes de la vie de campagne
Études philosophiques
Études analytiques
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