Our Lady of the Flowers

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Our Lady of the Flowers
Author Jean Genet
Original title Notre Dame des Fleurs
Translator Bernard Frechtman
Country France
Language French
Genre(s) novel
Publisher Marc Barbezat - L'Arbalete (Original French), Grove Press (English Translation)
Publication date 1948
Media type Print


Our Lady of the Flowers (Notre Dame des Fleurs) is the debut novel of French writer Jean Genet, first published in 1943. The free-flowing, poetic novel is a largely autobiographical account of a man's journey through the Parisian underworld. The characters are drawn after their real-life counterparts, who are mostly homosexuals living on the fringes of society.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

The novel tells the story of Divine, a drag queen who, when the novel opens, has died of tuberculosis and been canonised as a result. The narrator tells us that the stories he is telling are mainly to amuse himself whilst he passes his sentence in prison - and the highly erotic, often explicitly sexual, stories are spun to assist his masturbation. Jean-Paul Sartre called it "the epic of masturbation".

Divine lives in an attic room overlooking Montmartre cemetery, which he shares with various lovers, the most important of which is a pimp called Darling Daintyfoot. One day Darling brings home a young hoodlum and murderer, dubbed Our Lady of the Flowers. Our Lady is eventually arrested and tried, and executed. Death and ecstasy accompany the acts of every character, as Genet performs a transvaluation of all values, making betrayal the highest moral value, murder an act of virtue and sexual appeal.

[edit] Publication history and reception

Our Lady of the Flowers was written in prison, and Genet liked to claim that the first fifty pages were discovered and destroyed and had to be rewritten. But Genet's story of the manuscript's destruction was a fabrication or misremembering, as it was actually the initial part of his subsequent novel, The Miracle of the Rose, that had been confiscated.

Largely completed in 1942, the book was first published anonymously by Robert Denoël and Paul Morihien at the end of 1943, though only about 30 copies of the first edition were bound in that year (most began to be bound and sold in August 1944, during the Liberation). The first printing was designed for sale to well-to-do collectors of erotica; it circulated by private sales lists and under the counter. But Genet never intended his work as mere pornography and later excised more graphic passages. In November 1943, he sent a copy of the first printing to Marc Barbezat, publisher of the literary journal L'Arbalete, who published the book in 1944 and again 1948. Genet revised the novel when it was published by Gallimard in 1951; the Gallimard edition omits some of the more pornographic passages in the novel. Later L'Arbalete editions include a number of smaller revisions.

[edit] Literary influence

The novel was an enormous influence on the Beats, with its free-flowing, highly poetic language mixed with argot/slang, and its celebration of lowlifes and explicit descriptions of homosexuality. It is elegantly transgressive, and its self-reflexive nature prefigures the approach to language developed later by the post-structuralists. Jacques Derrida wrote on Genet in his book Glas, and Hélène Cixous celebrated his work as an example of écriture feminine. Jean-Paul Sartre wrote his famous Saint Genet as an analysis of Genet's work and life but most especially of Our Lady of the Flowers. Our Lady of the Flowers made Genet, in Sartre's mind at least, a poster child of existentialism and most especially an embodiment of that philosophy's views on freedom.

[edit] Adaptations

Lindsay Kemp did a production of Flowers. A pantomime for Jean Genet (based on Our Lady of the Flowers by Jean Genet) in 1974 at the Bush Theatre, London; he subsequently toured it in the USA and Australia.

[edit] In popular culture

In Nigel Williams, Scenes from a Poisoner's Life (1994), Henry Farr the main protagonist gives Our Lady of the Flowers to his homosexual brother Nigel as a Christmas present.

The Pogues have a song titled "Hell's Ditch," which contains references to the novel.

Placebo's self-titled debut album features a song called "Lady Of The Flowers".

Cocorosie's song "Beautiful Boyz" is believed to be about it.

[edit] References

  • Our Lady of the Flowers (Barnard Frechtman, tr.); Grove Press (1963) ISBN 0-8021-3013-43
  • Michael Lucey, "Genet's Notre-Dame-des-Fleurs: Fantasy and Sexual Identity", Yale French Studies, No. 91, Genet: In the Language of the Enemy (1997)
  • Mathieu Lindon, "Genet regenere," Liberation (Paris) 30, September 1993