The Diary of a Chambermaid | |
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Author(s) | Octave Mirbeau |
Original title | Le Journal d'une femme de chambre |
Language | French |
Publisher | Fasquelle |
Publication date | 1900 |
OCLC Number | 5323544 |
The Diary of a Chambermaid (French: Le Journal d'une femme de chambre) is a 1900 decadent novel by Octave Mirbeau, published during the Dreyfus Affair. First published in serialized form in L'Écho de Paris from 1891–2, Mirbeau's novel was reworked and polished before appearing in the Dreyfusard journal La Revue Blanche in 1900.
Contents |
The novel presents itself as the diary of Mademoiselle Célestine R., a chambermaid. Her first employer fetishizes her boots, and she later discovers the elderly man dead, with one of her boots stuffed into his mouth. Later on, Célestine becomes the maid of a bourgeois couple and is perfectly aware that she is entangled in the power struggles of their marriage. Célestine ends by becoming a bourgeois café hostess, who mistreats her servants in turn.
As a libertarian writer, Octave Mirbeau gives voice to a maidservant, Célestine : that is already subversive in itself. Through her eyes, which perceive the world through keyholes, he shows us the foul-smelling hidden sides of high society, the 'moral bumps' of the dominating classes, and the turpitudes of the bourgeois society that he assails. Mirbeau’s story undresses the members of high society of their superficial probity, revealing them in the undergarments of their moral flaws: their hypocrisy and perversions.
Ending up in a Norman town at the home of the Lanlaires, with their grotesque family name, who owe their unjustifiable wealth to their respective 'honorable' parents' swindlings, she evokes, as she recalls her memories, all the jobs that she has done for years in the swankiest households, and draws a conclusion that the reader is invited to make his own : "However much riffraff are vile, they are never as vile as decent people". ("Si infâmes que soient les canailles, ils ne le sont jamais autant que les honnêtes gens", Le Journal d’une femme de chambre, éd. du Boucher, 2003, chap. IX, p. 184).
Octave Mirbeau denounces domestic service as a modern form of slavery. However, he offers no sentimentalized image of the underclass, as servants exploited by their masters are ideologically alienated themselves : "D’être domestique, on a ça dans le sang...", Le Journal d’une femme de chambre, éd. du Boucher, 2003, chap. XVII, p. 354).
With its fractured exposition, its temporal dislocations, its clashing styles, and varying forms, Mirbeau’s novel breaks with the conventions of the realistic novel and reliquishes all claims to documentary objectivity and narrative linearity.
The novel has been freely adapted for cinema three times: in 1916, in Russia, by M. Martov, under the title Dnevnik gornitchnoi (Дневник горничной); an American film in 1946 directed by Jean Renoir starring Paulette Goddard, and also in 1964 by Luis Buñuel in French, starring Jeanne Moreau, Georges Géret and Michel Piccoli.
It was also made into a play by Andre Heuse, Andre de Lorde, and Thielly Nores. Plenty of theatrical adaptations have been made during the last 20 years, in French, but also in Italian, English, Spanish, Dutch and German.
In 2004, a new American theatrical adaptation of Diary of A Chambermaid produced by Antonia Fairchild and directed by Adrian Giurgea, had its world-premiere in New York City.