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Chapter 4 - Recycling and Reembodying, Twining and Untwining

Paul et Virginie and Its After-Things

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 December 2024

Jillian Heydt-Stevenson
Affiliation:
University of Colorado Boulder

Summary

This chapter charts how Paul et Virginie manifests the degradation in the human – thing relationship from intimacy to estrangement; I further show how later artists and writers reincarnate the novel in “after-books” and in “after-art”—wallpaper, paintings, fans and plates. The novel’s insistence on splitting body from spirit, sexuality from virtue, and human from nonhuman leads to sacrificing the heroine’s life to reinforce the illusion of female purity. This sacrifice reinstates binaries partially transcended in the novel’s earlier sections when the characters’ respect for and kinesthetic engagement with the environment intensifies love and gives them the right to belong with each other and with the nonhuman. The chapter argues that after-things reimagine Bernardin’s novel in fresh ways, all of them contending with Paul et Virginie’s ultimate dualism: some recapitulate or complicate that binary thinking; some obliterate Bernardin’s protest against enslavement; and others forge a belonging with between human and nonhuman by restoring Paul and Virginie to life and happiness.

Information

Figure 0

Figure 4.1 Pierre-Auguste Cot, The Storm (1880).

Courtesy of the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Figure 1

Figure 4.2 Scenes from Paul et Virginie, after Charles Chasselat and Antoine Johannot (1825–1830).

Courtesy of the Musées d’Art et d’Histoire, Culture et Patrimoine Ville du Havre.
Figure 2

Figure 4.3 Anon., Éventail(c. 1860).

Courtesy of the Musées d’Art et d’Histoire, Culture et Patrimoine Ville du Havre.
Figure 3

Figure 4.4 Anon., set of twelve plates with scenes from Paul et Virginie (1849–1867). Author Photograph. Manufactured by Creil et Montereau (Oise, Seine-et-Marne). Number 1 is in the lower-right-hand corner of the bottom row; number 12 is in the far left of the top row.128

Courtesy of the Musées d’Art et d’Histoire, Culture et Patrimoine Ville du Havre.

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