Well the semester has finally come to a close and I have just finished my final project. I chose to write a paper comparing St. Therese de Lisieux and St. Teresa de Avila, a Spanish mystic and Catholic female hero. Thanks for visiting my blog and have a wonderful holiday!
-Madeleine
French Women Heroes & their Myths
Thursday, December 19, 2013
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
Other 20th Century Feminists
Benoîte Groult
Benoîte Groult is a French feminist writer. Born in 1920, she was raised in Paris. She studied literature until 1953 and went on to a career as a journalist. Groult has published at least seven books. Most deal with feminist issues such as misogyny and discrimination of women. Groult has also written about the history of feminism. One of her novels, Les vaisseaux du cœur, inspired the a 1992 film by Andrew Birkin called The Salt on Our Skin. Groult's novels have a role in feminism. They explore how fictional women choose to handle the feminist issues that appear in the novels and may influence Groult's audience.
Françoise Giroud
Françoise Giroud was a French writer, journalist, screenwriter, and politician. She was born in Switzerland in 1916 to immigrant Jewish Turkish parents. Giroud began working in cinema in the 1930s and went on to a career in screenwriting. She wrote about thirty books during her life and was a journalist. She was the editor of Elle magazine and L'Express, a magazine that she co-founded. In the 1970s she began to become involved in French politics. One of her goals was to "get France out of its rut", this goal was inspired by her visits to America after World War II. One of the positions she held was Minister of Culture. Giroud had experience in many different occupations. I think her influence in popular French magazines really helped her express her ideas for her country. She seems to have been a well loved female icon in France.
Julia Kristeva
Julia Kristeva is a Bulgarian-French philosopher, psychoanalyst, feminist, and novelist. Kristeva was born in 1941 and moved to France in the 1960s. After publishing her first book, Semeiotikè, in 1969, she became very influential as a critical analyst of cultural theory and as a feminist writer. Kristeva is a leading French feminist like Simone de Beauvoir. Some of her ideas are controversial even to feminists. I am do not feel that Kristeva is super heroic, but her writings and ideas are certainly important. She brings up new thoughts about feminism and challenges feminist ideas, probably to keep other feminists thinking about what they believe is important for women today and women in the future.
Click these links for more on these women!
Monday, November 18, 2013
20th Century Feminists - Simone Veil
Simone Veil was a French lawyer and Politician born in 1927. Some of her most prestigious roles in politics include: Minister of Health, President of the European Parliament, and member of the Constitutional Council of France. Veil was born to Jewish parents in Nice, France. In 1944, her family was deported by Nazis to Auschwitz. All of her family members, except for her sister Milou, died in concentration camps. After the liberation of the concentration camp, Veil returned to France and resumed her studies. At the University of Paris she met her husband, Antoine Veil. At the beginning of her career, she worked as an attorney for the Ministry of Justice. From 1974 - 1979, she was the Minister of Health. The legislation she focused on helped pass laws that made access to contraception easier and led to the legalization of abortion in France. One of her achievements was when she became the first female president for the European Parliament.
Simone's achievements in the political arena are very heroic. She was successful in an often male dominated area of society, which I think other women can admire about her. She is a feminist heroine for passing legislation that many feminists support.
Click these links for more on Simone Veil!
20th Century Feminists - Simone de Beauvoir
Simone de Beauvoir was a French author, existentialist philosopher, political activist, and feminist born in 1908. When she was young, her father was said to have boasted that "Simone [thought] like a man!". In 1929, Simone and Jean-Paul Sarte became a couple. Sarte asked Beauvoir to marry him, but she refused and they became life partners. Beauvoir also had many lovers, male and female, during her life. One of Beauvoir's most well known and important works is The Second Sex. The book is considered a major work of feminist philosophy. Beauvoir and Sarte were both editors for a political journal called Les Temps Modernes, which began being published at the end of World War II. Beauvoir was active in the French women's liberation movement in the 1970s and even signed the Manifesto of the 343 (a list of women who claimed to have had an abortion, abortion was illegal at the time). Beauvoir died in 1986 at the age of 78 in Paris.
Simone de Beauvoir was certainly an influential woman during her time. She was an important intellectual, prolific writer, and avid activist. Her works came about at a time when women were beginning to organize and push for reforms that they believed were beneficial for women. I think it would be interesting to know what would have happened with out Beauvoir's book, The Second Sex, which many feminists today are inspired by. Beauvoir may be considered a feminist heroine for igniting new ideas about the female identity.
Click these links for more on Simone de Beauvoir!
Monday, November 11, 2013
Heroines of World War II - Maryse Bastié
Maryse Bastié is known for being the first French woman to cross the South Atlantic Ocean on a solo flight. Maryse was born in 1898 into a poor French family. Her father died when she was eleven so she had to start working to provide for her family. She worked in a shoe factory in her youth and had an unsuccessful early marriage that left her with child and little money. Maryse married a World War I pilot, who introduced her to the power of flight. She became very passionate about flight, earning her pilot's license and hoping to buy her own plane. After her husband died in 1926 in an airplane accident, Maryse began performing aerobatics to earn a living. In 1927, she earned enough to buy her first plane, a Caudron C.109 (Maryse piloted a women's duration record of 26 hours and 47 minutes long flight in her C.109 in 1929).
A Caudron C.109 aircraft
By 1935 Maryse opened her flying school at the Orly Airport. She served in the French Air Force during World War II, logging over 3,000 hours in the air, and earning the title Captain. Among a few of her awards are the Harmon Trophy, which she received in 1931, and the honor of being named a commander of the Legion of Honor. In 1952, Maryse died in a airplane accident. As she was taking off, her plane crashed on the airfield. She was buried in Paris.
Maryse Bastié was a hero for future female aviators. She was as passionate about serving her country as other leading male aviators during the war. I was kind of surprised at how involved women during tis time were involved in aviation. Maryse seems very similar to Amelia Earhart, who was also very influential in aviation.
Visit these links for more on Maryse Bastié!
Sunday, November 10, 2013
Heroines of World War II - Lucie Aubrac
Lucie at age 90
Lucie Aubrac was really a remarkable woman. She was quite literally a hero, as a member of the French Resistance, for her country, but she was also a hero for her family. Lucie Aubrac was born in 1912. In 1939, Lucie married Raymond Samuel, a young jewish man. At the onset of World War II, Lucie and her husband were in danger. Jews were being persecuted in France and this anti-Semitism forced the Samuel's to adopt the last name Aubrac. When France fell to the Germans, Lucie and Raymond assisted in forming the Liberation South resistance group. This branch of the French resistance published an underground newspaper, Libération. On June 21st 1943, Raymond and another important member of the Resistance, Jean Moulin, were captured by the Gestapo.
At the time of her husband's capture, Lucie was pregnant with her second child. Lucky for the Aubracs, there was a provision of French law that allowed those condemned to death to marry civilly (marriage in extremis). Lucie saved her husband and the other captured resistance members by tricking the Gestapo captain into releasing her husband so that they could get "married". On the day of their "marriage" Lucie and other Resistance members attacked the Germans transporting the prisoners. They rescued everyone and had to leave France since their true identities had been revealed. The Aubracs fled to London and raised their children in the United Kingdom for the remainder of the war. Post-war, Lucie renewed her teaching license and began teaching history again. She was also an activist for human rights and published her memoirs in a book which translated into English is called Outwitting the Gestapo. Lucie died in 2007 near Paris.
I think it is pretty obvious that Lucie Aubrac was a very brave woman who believed strongly that the risks that she and her fellow Resistance members were taking were worth taking for the sake of their country. When Raymond was captured, Lucie was able to keep her cool and do whatever she needed to do to save her husband and protect her family.
For more about Lucie visit these links!
Lucie Aubrac obituary
Towards the end of this part of a documentary called Great Escapes of WWII,
Lucie and Raymond Aubrac tell their story of escape.
Lucie and Raymond Aubrac tell their story of escape.
The Singer - Edith Piaf
Piaf in 1962
Édith Giovanna Gassion was born in December of 1915 and was abandoned by her mother at birth. Her father, a street performer/acrobat, sent his daughter to live with his mother. Edith's paternal grandmother ran a brothel and it was here that Edith was raised. There is an interesting story about her time in the brothel in Normandy. From the age of three to about seven, Edith was supposedly blind because she suffered from keratitis, inflammation of the cornea. The prostitutes who were raising her pooled some of their money together so that young Edith could go on a pilgrimage honoring St. Therese de Lisieux. After going on this pilgrimage, Edith's sight was restored! In 1929, Edith left the brothel to join her father. At 14 she began performing on the streets with her father and a young woman named Simone "Mômone" Berteaut, who may have been her half sister. At 17, Edith and her boyfriend Louis Dupont had a daughter, Marcelle, who later died at age 2 of meningitis and neglect.
1935 was an important year for Edith. She was discovered by a night club owner named Louis Leplée. Leplée encouraged the budding artist and gave her gigs to sing in his nightclub, jump starting her career. He also is attributed with giving her the stage name "La Môme Piaf" or "The Little Sparrow" and telling her to wear a black dress, the only outfit she would ever wear during performances. Edith would eventually adopt the name Edith Piaf after Leplée's murder in 1936. Around this time Edith began recording her first records. Edith would go on to become one of France's greatest entertainers and had influence all around the world.
During World War II, Edith was sometimes called a traitor. This was because she often sang for the German forces in occupied France. She later defended her actions by stating that she was helping the French Resistance. Edith may have helped several people during the war including a Jewish man escaping German persecution. She dated a Jewish pianist during the war and with contributions from her friend and songwriter Marguerite Monnot, wrote a song in subtle protest of the war. Her songs may have been helpful in boosting the morale of French troops.
After suffering injuries caused by a car accident in 1951, Edith may have began abusing morphine and alcohol. Edith Piaf continued singing up until 1963 when she died from liver cancer. over 100,000 fans were present at her funeral in Paris. Piaf's songs are still used today in films or just for personal enjoyment. Her life also inspired several films and plays about her life.
I think Edith used her popularity appropriately, she was helpful during war times, and after the war she went on tours in the countries involved in the war including the United States and some European and Latin American countries. Her patriotism to her country is evident by her involvement in occupied France. Her popularity, even with the enemy, was helpful to the French Resistance's cause. Also the fact that she could rise above her impoverished beginnings to become a 20th century superstar is pretty amazing. I enjoyed listening to one of her songs (posted below) and I really liked how she commanded the attention of the audience with nothing but her voice. There are no distractions like crazy outfits or dubbed over voices, it is just her, in her trademark black dress.
For more about Edith Piaf visit these links!
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