thumb|right|250px|Edmond (left) with his brother Jules. Photographed by [[Félix Nadar]]

The Goncourt brothers (, , ) were Edmond de Goncourt (1822–1896) and Jules de Goncourt (1830–1870), both French naturalism writers who, as collaborative sibling authors, were inseparable in life.

Background

Edmond and Jules were born to minor aristocrats Marc-Pierre Huot de Goncourt and his second wife Annette-Cécile de Goncourt (née Guérin). Marc-Pierre was a retired cavalry officer and squadron leader in the Grande Armée of Napoléon I. The brothers' great-grandfather, Antoine Huot de Goncourt, purchased the seigneurie of the village of Goncourt in the Meuse Valley in 1786, and their grandfather Huot sat as a deputy in the National Assembly of 1789. The brothers' uncle, Pierre Antoine Victor Huot de Goncourt, was a deputy for the Vosges in the National Assembly between 1848 and 1851. In 1860, the brothers applied to the Keeper of the Seals for the exclusive use of the noble title "de Goncourt", but their claim was refused. They are buried together (in the same grave) in Montmartre Cemetery.

Partnership

They formed a partnership that "is possibly unique in literary history. Not only did they write all their books together, they did not spend more than a day apart in their adult lives, until they were finally parted by Jules's death in 1870." They are known for their literary work and for their diaries, which offer an intimate view into the French literary society of the later 19th century.

Career

thumb|250px|left|Jules and Edmond de Goncourt, an undated drawing by [[Alfred Dehodencq, Harvard Art Museums.]]

Their career as writers began with an account of a sketching holiday together. They then published books on aspects of 18th-century French and Japanese art and society. Their histories (Portraits intimes du XVIIIe siècle (1857), La Femme au XVIIIe siècle (1862), La du Barry (1878), and others) are made entirely out of documents, autograph letters, scraps of costume, engravings, songs, the unconscious self-revelations of the time. Their first novel, En 18..., had the misfortune of being published on December 2, 1851, the day of Napoléon III's coup d'état against the Second Republic. As such it was completely overlooked.

In their volumes (e.g., Portraits intimes du XVIII siecle), they dismissed the vulgarity of the Second Empire in favour of a more refined age. They wrote the long Journal des Goncourt from 1851, which gives a view of the literary and social life of their time. In 1852, the brothers were arrested, and ultimately acquitted, for an "outrage against public morality" after they quoted erotic Renaissance poetry in an article. From 1862, the brothers frequented the salon of the Princess Mathilde, where they mixed with fellow writers like Gustave Flaubert, Théophile Gautier, and Paul de Saint-Victor. In November 1862, they began attending bi-monthly dinners at Magny's restaurant with a group of intellectuals, writers, journalists, and artists. These included George Sand, Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve, Flaubert, Ernest Renan, and Paul de Saint-Victor. From 1863, the brothers would systematically record the comments made at these dinners in the Journal.

In 1865, the brothers premiered their play Henriette Maréchal at the Comédie-Française, but its realism provoked protests and it was banned after only six performances.

When they came to write novels, it was with a similar attempt to give the inner, undiscovered, minute truths of contemporary existence. The Goncourt brothers were especially interested in contrast, fragmentation and artistic experimentation where they were inspired by the etching revival in 19th century France and were particularly influenced by artists such as Charles Mèryon On top of writing many terrible things about women, they also wrote a lot about their fetishes for said women. Much of their sense of women comes from the many portraits that they studied and the fact that they could not stand bourgeoise women. They did not like the separation between men and women that was very prominent starting in the seventeenth and eighteenth, and then particularly in the nineteenth century. They believed that eighteenth century women were superior to nineteenth century women, and they looked down on the women of their own time, which pointed towards a fetishization of the eighteenth century woman.

Jennifer Forrest describes their writing about women by saying, "unrelenting hatred and disgust characterizes their overall treatment of nineteenth century women." (47). They believed that the most superior woman of the eighteenth century was Marie-Antoinette, because she facilitated the end of the way that the monarchy worked in the time. They fetishized her, writing in detail about her impact on French fashion and generally about how much they admired her. They essentially believed that anything that went wrong with the nineteenth century was solely the fault of "la femme-homme d’affaires" (60). They were known as "certified admirers of the female sex," and were quite infamous for this fact.

Chapter four of Apter's book "Unmasking the Masquerade: Fetishism and Femininity from the Goncourt Brothers to Joan Riviere" explores the feminist ideology of the masquerade and the Freudian discourse of fetishism through the lens of literature from the Goncourt Brothers and their contemporaries. This article responds to Riviere's essay "Womanliness as a Masquerade" by recognizing how "both theories may be characterized in terms of a defensive posture toward the symbolic order of castration…" (65). Also, the study of sartorial language in the Goncourt brothers’ works reveals the expression of a female "sartorial super-ego." (65). The Goncourts’ reconstruction of eighteenth-century feminine culture focused on pretty and distinguished detail in manners of clothing, appearance, and expression in order to promote what Edmond termed "féminilité." These were the intangible qualities of a woman that were considered to be her innermost being–seduction, arousal, and deception. Indeed, "the Goncourts were notorious for their misogynistic view of the female sex, which they placed on par with animals" (67). Their novels and the infamous Journal capitalize on images of the insatiable sexual urges of women. Nevertheless, the Goncourt brothers also contributed to the medicalization of literature and the pathologization of the aristocratic class. This led to the debauchery of noble women being attributed to "emptiness, ennui, vapors, hypochondria, hysteria, and intellectual libertinage" (68). These descriptions as well as the Goncourt Brothers’ habit of diagnosing the consequences of promiscuity informed their misogynistic, pathological perspective that fetishized and promoted femininity and sexual desire to the detriment of women.

Legacy

Edmond de Goncourt bequeathed his entire estate for the foundation and maintenance of the Académie Goncourt. Since 1903, the académie has awarded the Prix Goncourt, probably the most important literary prize in French literature.

The first English translation of Manette Salomon, translated by Tina Kover, was published in November 2017 by Snuggly Books.

Works

Novels

  • En 18... (1851)
  • Sœur Philomène (1861)
  • Renée Mauperin (1864)
  • Germinie Lacerteux (1865)
  • Manette Salomon (1867), translated into English by Tina Kover (Snuggly Books, 2017)
  • Madame Gervaisais (1869)

and, by Edmond alone:

  • La Fille Elisa (1878), translated into English as "Elisa" by Margaret Crosland (H. Fertig, 1975)
  • Les Frères Zemganno (1879)
  • La Faustin (1882)
  • Chérie (1884)

Plays

  • Henriette Maréchal (Performed at the Comédie-Française in 1865)
  • La patrie en danger (Published 1873, performed at the Théâtre Libre in 1889)

Other

  • La Révolution dans les moeurs (1854)
  • Histoire de la société française pendant la Révolution (1854)
  • Histoire de la société française pendant le Directoire (1855)
  • Sophie Arnould (1857)
  • Journal des Goncourt, 1851–1896
  • Portraits intimes du XVIIIe siècle (1857)
  • Histoire de Marie Antoinette (1858)
  • Les Maîtresses de Louis XV (1860)
  • La Femme au XVIIIe siècle (1862)
  • La du Barry (1878)
  • Madame de Pompadour (1878)
  • La Duchesse de Chateauroux et ses soeurs (1879)
  • L'Art du XVIIIe siècle (French Eighteenth Century Painters) (1859–1875)

Notes

References

  • Baldick, Robert. Dinner at Magny's (Victor Gollancz, 1971)
  • Baldick, Robert. The Goncourts (Bowes & Bowes, 1960)
  • Baldick, Robert ed. Pages from the Goncourt Journal (Oxford University Press, 1962)
  • Billy, André. The Goncourt Brothers (Andre Deutsch, 1960)
  • Edmond & Jules de Goncourt. Journal des Goncourt: Mémoires de la Vie Littéraire I, 1851-1865 (Robert Laffont, 1989)
  • Kirsch, Adam "Masters of indiscretion" in The New York Sun August 29, 2006
  • "Goncourt Brothers and the Taste for the 18th Century" symposium at the Frick Collection, featuring art historians Olivier Berggruen and Yuriko Jackall