Madeleine Bourdouxhe (1906–1996)
Auteur de La femme de Gilles
A propos de l'auteur
Crédit image: Madeleine Bourdouxhe
Œuvres de Madeleine Bourdouxhe
Bourdouxhe Madeleine 1 exemplaire
Anna 1 exemplaire
Clara 1 exemplaire
A mulher de Gilles (Portuguese Edition) 1 exemplaire
Étiqueté
Partage des connaissances
- Nom canonique
- Bourdouxhe, Madeleine
- Date de naissance
- 1906-09-25
- Date de décès
- 1996-04-16
- Sexe
- female
- Nationalité
- Belgium
- Lieu de naissance
- Lüttich, Belgien
Liege, Belgium - Lieux de résidence
- Liège, Belgium (birth)
Brussels, Belgium (death)
Paris, France - Professions
- novelist
- Courte biographie
- Madeleine Bourdouxhe was born to a middle-class family in Liège, Belgium. In 1914, she moved with her parents to Paris, where they lived for the duration of World War I. She spent the rest of her childhood between the two countries. She went to Brussels to study languages and philosophy. In 1927, she married Jacques Muller, a mathematics teacher with whom she had a daughter. The publication of her novel La femme de Gilles (1937) brought her fame. At the outbreak of World War II, she fled with her husband and baby to a small village near Bordeaux, but was forced to return to Brussels. There the couple became active in the Belgian Resistance.
After the war, she traveled regularly to Paris, frequenting the cafés patronized by her friends and fellow writers Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, and Raymond Queneau and by painters such as René Magritte and Paul Delvaux. Madeleine Bourdouxhe's work was rediscovered by feminist literary critics in the 1980s, resulting in new editions and translations. She was the subject of a 2004 documentary, Une lumière la nuit: Un portrait de Madeleine Bourdouxhe by Nadia Benzekri, her granddaughter.
Membres
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Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 12
- Membres
- 376
- Popularité
- #64,175
- Évaluation
- 3.7
- Critiques
- 17
- ISBN
- 64
- Langues
- 9
- Favoris
- 1
This is one of those books where you (or I guess me) spend a lot of time wanting to give pretty much every character a good, vigorous shake. "What are you doing?" I wanted to yell at them. "How do you foresee your current course of action turning out?" I suppose that's to be expected in a book where, within the first twenty pages, the main character realizes her husband is having an affair with her sister and decides to pretend she doesn't know and just carry on normally until he comes to his senses?
But of course, it doesn't take very long to realize that none of her other choices are any good anyway. Her sister is terrible, her mother (though she doesn't know the full circumstance) babies her sister. A priest assigns her prayers of penitence and cautions against rebelling against His plans. And though Elisa spends endless time analyzing, buffering, and trying to manage Gilles's emotional state, it's soon clear that Gilles does not see Elisa as a person with any interiority at all -- she is merely what she does for him.
Of course I rooted for Elisa to rebel, to run away, but how could she? The final ending, sickening as it was, was also a kind of relief.
Both the Introduction and Afterword were incredibly helpful for contextualizing and processing this painful little story. As much as it hurt, I'm glad I gave it a second chance. A powerful novel.… (plus d'informations)