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Reflections
of Desire: Masculinity and Fantasy in the Fin-de-Siècle Luxury
Brothel
by Gina Greene |
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"There are mirrors everywhere, on
all the walls and all the ceilings; there are hangings everywhere;
dazzling electric lights everywhere; and everywhere perfumes in
this temple of Love."1
In the late nineteenth century, when new and
spectacular forms of public entertainment began to flourish in Paris,
a type of luxury brothel, or maison de luxe, evolved. Although
houses of prostitution operating under police regulation had existed
in the city for most of the nineteenth century, these extravagantly
decorated brothels represented a departure from the modest, utilitarian
spaces municipal authorities had envisioned as part of a strategy
to sanitize prostitution. Located near the Opéra and the
Bibliothèque Nationale, brothels such as Le Chabanais, Le
Monthyon, and 6 Rue des Moulins were the exclusive domain of an
elite bourgeois and aristocratic clientele. In their lavishly decorated
interior spaces, men could fulfill erotic fantasies, satiate physical
desires, and see everywhere reflected the outward signs of their
own wealth and status. |
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A small
promotional booklet produced for the Chabanais provides a compelling
glimpse into this private world. Distributed at hotels in the heart
of Paris, the pocket-sized pamphlet had a simple black cover and,
inside, illustrations of different rooms in the brothel including
a Turkish boudoir and an entry hall designed to resemble a grotto.2
The first of these images, L'Entrée (fig. 1), provides
a representative example. By lingering on the details of the ornate
sweeping staircase, tiled floors, and foliage-filled grotto, the artist
emphasized the space itself, rather than the two small female figures
who frame the scene. |
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The emphasis on the interior naturally
raises questions. Why did the Chabanais advertise itself with pictures
of its elegant rooms? How did these illustrations compare to the actual
spaces themselves? What did these interiors, with their divergent
decorative themes, truly represent? These are some of the questions
that this essay pursues. |
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While historians have documented that
fin-de-siècle Paris was characterized by an almost obsessive
preoccupation with prostitution, few have commented on what I believe
forms a distinct subcategory of this preoccupation: the nineteenth-century
fascination with both representing and experiencing the representational
world of the brothels.3 Scholars have noted the existence
of luxury brothels, yet none have examined the photographic images
or the broader issue of why the spaces were decorated in this manner.4 |
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This essay seeks to remedy this omission
by examining fin-de-siècle photographs which document the interiors
of several luxury brothels in Paris.5 Neither the original
purposes of these photographs, nor their authors, are known. They
are valuable documents, however, in that they reproduce views of the
kinds of spaces so frequently depicted in literary and artistic representations
of the period.6 An intact portfolio of photographs from
one establishment, the Chabanais, provides an enlightening visual
tour. A photograph of the Chinese salon (fig. 2) reveals a space filled
with velvet sofas, an enormous Chinese urn, and walls framed with
lacquered woodwork. In the Louis XV bedroom (fig. 3) copies of Boucher
paintings surrounded by gold ornament frame each side of an elaborate,
canopied bed. In the Moorish bedroom (fig. 4) intricately carved woodwork
covers both the ceiling and the arched panels along the walls. Each
space is a singular and self-contained representation of a distinct
and exotic world. |
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The eclectic selection of rooms in
the brothel suggests that beyond the mere acquisition of a particular
producthere, the prostitutemale clients desired access
to an entire set of fantasies. The interior of these bordellos, I
argue, reflected the strategic deployment of resources to bring these
desires to life. In this essay I intend to shed light both on the
nature of these fantasies and the needs that informed their development.
If the rooms reflected a common set of masculine desires, and if desire
implies lack, it follows that something was perceived to be lacking
in the arena of male sexual experience.7 |
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By tracing the historical and cultural
iconography of eroticism that informed the development of these rooms,
I will demonstrate that because of the particular nature of the nineteenth-century
crisis in male sexual identity, the brothel deployed a set of fantasies
that were rooted in the idea of "natural" sexuality. This
concept of naturalness, in turn, was itself a fantasy rooted in Enlightenment
philosophies of unrestrained sexuality and innate male power. |
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The brothel situated the fantasy of
natural, unrestrained sexuality in two specific domains and artfully
recreated them: the ancien régime world of sexual libertinism,
and the sensual world of the Orient. To enact these fantasies, brothels
employed not just thematically furnished rooms, with a multitude of
authenticating details, but ultimately went beyond representation
by staging multi-sensory erotic performances complete with costumes,
music, fragrance, and female bodies. |
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I hold that what was at stake here
was the desire to traverse the imagined boundaries of ordinary middle-class
masculine sexual identity. In the private, theatrical space of the
brothel, the client's identity became fluid and mutable.8
The rooms of the brothel enabled the male client to unhinge himself
from the pressures of modernity, from the restrictive bourgeois moral
code, and from the limits of his own fixed persona, and to transform
himself into something other. Divisions between reality and
fantasy, normal and transgressive were seamlessly blurred. |
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"Signs of Masculine Suffering"
The fact that men in the late nineteenth century sought out an environment
in the brothel where sexual experiences were staged and, to some extent,
choreographed, suggests the possibility that male sexual identity
was in a state of crisis. Indeed, Alain Corbin has commented that
the very establishment and regulation of women in the brothelnot
to mention the ideological confinement of "honest" women
to the private spherewas in itself a sign of "masculine
suffering."9 My own conclusion is that the nineteenth
century's obsessive preoccupation with fixing both the nature of the
female body and its cultural locations ultimately and inadvertently
brought the body of the bourgeois male to the attention of medical
and scientific authorities. Under the scientific and psychological
gaze of the era, this body proved to be undeniably problematic. |
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Historian Robert Nye has identified
a recurring theme in nineteenth-century discourses surrounding medicine
and psychology: a profound cultural anxiety about the sexual depletion
and fragility of masculine bodies.10 These concerns arose,
in part, because new understandings of male and female physiology
and new theories about the biological effects of sexual intercourse
emerged. |
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In the late eighteenth century, as
historian Thomas Laqueur has demonstrated, a significant shift occurred
in medical texts that radically altered the traditional understanding
of male and female bodies.11 Since antiquity, scientists,
anatomists and medical experts had believed that male and female reproductive
physiologies were homologous variations of the same essential body.12
Beginning in the late eighteenth century, however, the vision of the
sexes as homologous and hierarchical was displaced by a new medical
view that emphasized their innate biological difference and incommensurability.
Men and women were reinterpreted as two distinctly different creatures
with entirely different reproductive organs.13 |
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Sexual intercourse was also radically reinterpreted
by medical authorities in light of this new biology of separateness.14
Theorizations emerged regarding the destabilizing effect of sexual
acts on male and female bodies. Until the late eighteenth century,
medical experts had defined sexual intercourse as an activity involving
an active partner and a passive partner, and as a process of passing
heat from the hotter (male) body to the cooler (female) one.15
Nineteenth-century understandings of the sexual exchange between men
and women, by contrast, suggested that masculinity, as a finite resource,
was in constant threat of depletion and de-stabilization through the
sex act. Robert Nye notes that authorities viewed the transfer of
semen during intercourse as a loss for man, but a gain for woman,
"fortifying her sexual economy" and making her, ultimately,
stronger and more masculine.16 In this logic, excessive
sexual intercourse led to two anomalies: feminized men and masculinized
women. Excessive sexuality, many experts argued, exhausted and depleted
a man's vitality, ultimately leaving him debilitated and impotent.17
Fueling these anxieties was the fact that France had the lowest birth-rate
of any industrialized nation and it seemed to point to an alarming
decline in the masculine instinct to reproduce.18 |
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Finally, a new preoccupation with
categorizing sexual perversions such as necrophilia, bestiality, masochism,
and sadism reinforced the notion that a vast number of men were already
in a state of decline. Psychiatrists tended to see extreme forms of
aberrant behavior as expressions of underlying degenerative traits.19
Since an individual could not know if he had inherited underlying
degenerative traits, the unspoken implication was that all men were
potentially at risk of becoming abnormal. As Eugene Gley, author of
an 1884 article on "Les Aberrations de l'instinct sexuel,"
wrote, "Every man has, in effect, some weak point in his mind
or body, and there is no such thing as an absolutely normal
condition for the one or the other."20 |
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These collective concerns fueled widespread
apprehension about the instability of masculinity. A desire to escape
these various pressures, I argue, drove men to seek sexual refuge
in the brothel. While nineteenth-century authorities on prostitution
had asserted that an irrepressible, natural male sexual drive necessitated
the existence of brothels, it is more likely that men, single or married,
went there in part to escape these oppressive discourses of degeneration,
emasculation, and impotence.21 |
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The decision to seek out the brothel,
however, was in itself a choice fraught with contradictory consequences
and meanings. In the logic of the period, trips to the brothel invited
the possibility of excessive sexual depletion and thus even more masculine
degeneration. Furthermore, the very desire for deviant or theatrical
types of sexual entertainment reflected, according to psychologists,
the already depleted state of many men. In his 1891 study, Fetishism
in Love, Alfred Binet discussed the fetishistic nature of all
love, but in discussing particular fetishistic obsessions including
"the Byzantine taste for luxury," he identified a need "so
frequent in our époque, to increase the causes of excitation
and pleasure." "Both history and physiology," he continued,
"teach us that these are the marks of enfeeblement and decline.
The individual does not look for strong excitation with such hunger
unless his power of reaction is already in a weakened state."22 |
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Fantasies of the Natural
If male customers at luxury brothels sought to allay these anxieties
of modern masculine identity, which fantasies supplied psychic relief?
Although an infinite number of transient private fantasies could have
been staged within a brothel's many bedrooms, collective fantasies,
not individual ones, were reflected in the assortment of French, Orientalist
and historical rooms. |
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In this section, I argue that French concerns
with masculinity led to a collective desire for environments in which
sexuality could be fantasized as natural and men as naturally powerful.
Liberated from the constrictions of bourgeois morality and the scientific,
psychologizing gaze of modernity, male virility would have been, in
this idealized natural realm, an uncontested, infinite resource and
feminine receptivity would have been inspired by more than simply
monetary concerns. |
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Although the fin-de-siècle luxury brothel
was a uniquely modern place, the vision of naturalness that it commodified
for its clientele grew out of fantasies that had circulated in European
culture since the eighteenth century. Following a period of European
history characterized by social conservatism and puritanical religious
beliefs, the eighteenth century represented, in the words of historian
Edward Shorter, a "release of the libido."23
Philosophers of the period reframed sexuality as pleasurable and positive,
and celebrated the naturalness of bodily urges.24 Enlightenment
philosophies of hedonism, promoted by philosophers such as Diderot,
combined with new philosophies of utilitarianism in advancing this
novel view of sexuality.25 |
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Eighteenth-century European philosophers took
a renewed interest in primitive societies which not only fueled erotic
fantasies about other cultures, but also provided a mirror in which
Europeans could contemplate their own sexual lives. The French exploration
of Tahiti, and the published accounts that followed, for example,
exposed Europeans to a society with a comparatively more innocent
and natural approach to sexuality.26 It suggested to many
philosophers that the religious and cultural prohibitions controlling
European sexual life were arbitrary impositions that restrained men
from expressing their natural, and therefore moral, sexuality. Fascination
with primitive peoples inspired the utopian idea of the noble savage,
upon which Enlightenment philosophers imaginatively projected fantasies
of a European sexuality unleashed from society's restraints.27
Although Europe had always had an interest in foreign and exotic cultures,
a new fascination with the sexual lives of other cultures was
born in the eighteenth century. |
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This strong new sexual current in eighteenth-century
European philosophy quickly disseminated throughout society and laid
the groundwork for fantasized ideals of absolute sexual freedom. As
the population became more literate and printing technologies improved,
radical and subversive ideas became easily available to a middle class
populace in the form of newspapers, pamphlets and books.28
In the post-Enlightenment era these ideals collided with a new era
of mass consumption, and were codified into a set of popular fantasies:
the fantasy of the eighteenth-century libertine who mastered the arts
of seduction and erotic expression, and the fantasy of the intrepid
European imperialist, exploring the limitless sensual possibilities
of the Orient. They found their ultimate expression in the late nineteenth-century
dream of aristocratic and "Oriental" sexualities so prevalent
in the maisons de luxe. |
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Aristocratic Fantasy
The first fantasy that the brothel sought to conjure up was the privileged
ancien régime world of licentious sexuality. Since the
bourgeoisie, even in the late nineteenth century, were still enamored
with the aristocratic way of life, it is not surprising that this
fantasy would be omnipresent in luxury brothels. |
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Among the upper classes in Europe, the Enlightenment
liberalization of attitudes towards sexuality gave birth to libertinism,
in which the pursuit of sexual pleasure was taken to an extreme.29
Sexual promiscuity and adultery became fashionable among the aristocracy
throughout Europe and led to a rich body of literature that celebrated
seduction.30 Among aristocratic circles in France, masquerades,
balls, and private clubs supported an environment of exploration and
sexual license.31 Both the libertine lifestyle and its
literature rejected the religious and societal notion that sex should
be focused on procreation, and instead promoted the exploration of
various forms of deviant sexuality including voyeurism, flagellation,
and bondage.32 Yet, even the most famous proponent of the
libertine life, the Marquis de Sade, defended his perverse passions
by describing his urges as "natural" and, by implication,
normal. "I am guilty of nothing more," Sade asserted, "than
simple libertinage such as it is practiced by all men more or less
according to their natural temperaments or tendencies."33 |
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Although these philosophies of libertinism circulated
primarily in aristocratic circles, they eventually permeated popular
culture as well. The early nineteenth century saw the proliferation
of erotic literature, pornography, and lithographic imagery that circulated
extensively among the male population.34 These print media
made the aristocratic fantasy of sexual libertinism, if not the actual
practice of it, available to men of all classes. |
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Luxury brothels in the late nineteenth century
deliberately sought to conjure up this erotic world of aristocratic
privilege. In many maisons de luxe, walls were decorated
with lithographic prints which called these fantasies to mind.35
Erotic torture chambers, equipped with all the required implements,
were standard in many luxury brothels36 Even the generally
aristocratic manner of furnishing the top brothels with rooms decorated
in various ancien régime styles reinforced the strong
association between upper class wealth and sexual extravagance.
The eclectic rococo-inspired Salon at the Chabanais (fig.
5) and the Chambre Louis XV (fig. 3), for example, provide
evidence of this trend as the rooms utilized gilded chairs, carved
mantelpieces, stained glass, and mirrors typically associated with
aristocratic décor. |
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In the late nineteenth-century popular imagination,
particular styles of furniture were strongly associated with the
monarch under whom they had evolved. This was reflected not only
in the gendered interpretation of past regimes but also in the broader
tendency, predating the nineteenth century, to see aristocratic
styles as anthropomorphic extensions of the king's body itself.37
Leora Auslander describes the ritualistic treatment of the king's
possessions under Louis XIV:
a particular form of fetishism characterized the apogee of absolutism.
The very mundane objects used to assist the king in the satisfaction
of his bodily needs were encased in gold and granted the same
gestures of respect as the king's body itself.38
The fetishistic attitude towards these inanimate things had to
do with the notion that everything connected with the king retained
his power. "The king's objects," Auslander comments, "were
the king, and consequently the style of these objects belonged to
the king."39 |
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This strong psychological association between
particular styles and monarchs continued into the nineteenth century.
Louis XV possessed a notorious reputation for seduction and promiscuity
and it doubtless colored the nineteenth-century perception of his
styles.40 Descriptions of the style tended to anthropomorphize
it, conflating the objects that represented the Louis XV style with
his mistresses.41 In Joris-Karl Huysmans's 1884 novel
A Rebours, the character Des Esseintes ardently describes
the seductive charms of Louis-Quinze furnishings, characterizing
the eighteenth century as,
the only age which has known how to envelop woman in a wholly
depraved atmosphere, shaping its furniture on the model of her
charms, imitating her passionate contortions and spasmodic convulsions
in the curves and convolutions of wood and copper.42
Des Esseintes' fantasy of an eighteenth-century aesthetic that
shapes furniture on the model of female charms finds a clear parallel
in the Monthyon's rococo-inspired Chambre de Lords (fig.
6), a room in which life-sized nude female sculptures appear to
spring from the mantel. The eroticism associated with eighteenth-century
furnishings, however, was not always so literal. In a later passage
in A Rebours, Des Esseintes fondly recalls a white lacquered
bed in Louis XV style that contributed to his seductions by adding
"titillation, that final touch of depravity so precious to
the experienced voluptuary," who would be excited, he continues,
"by the pretended purity of a bed of vice apparently designed
for innocent children and young virgins."43 |
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By means of eighteenth-century aristocratic décor,
torture chambers outfitted with harnesses and whips, and albums of
erotic prints, late nineteenth-century maisons de luxe deliberately
sought to invoke the dream of upper-class libertine excess.44
These various trappings, commentator Louis Fiaux noted in 1896, allowed
"old men and exhausted libertines" to see brought to life
"the obscene ghosts of their imaginations."45 |
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The regulation of brothels in the nineteenth century
had acknowledged a natural male need for sexual release, but this
need had been institutionalized, medicalized, and stripped of the
elements of play, sensual exploration and perversity which had been
at the heart of the libertine experience. The later nineteenth-century
taste for luxury brothels, however, and their intentional mimicry
of aristocratic spaces, both real and literary, reflected a masculine
desire to retrieve and relive this lost period of European sexual
frivolity and aristocratic male potency. |
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The Eroticized Orient
The other dominant brothel fantasy, similarly rooted in Enlightenment
ideas of natural sexuality, was that of visiting the erotic terrain
of the Orient. A typical luxury brothel offered clients rooms decorated
in Turkish, Egyptian, Chinese, Japanese, Persian and Moorish styles.46
These spaces, Fiaux observed, enabled the French client to experience
the illusions of affairs in foreign lands and, for the foreign visitor,
the chance to imaginatively return to an "absent homeland."47
While it is unlikely that the visitors were actually from these foreign
locations, the settings are all representative of countries that were
subject to various European imperialist projects and likely flattered
the mostly European clientele by reminding them of their role as powerful
conquerors of foreign and exotic lands. Fiaux noted that the array
of Orientalist rooms in many brothels was not surprising since these
spaces were, after all, "so well adapted for sexual practices."48 |
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How was it that Orientalist rooms came to be understood
as well-adapted for sexual practices? In the vision of Europe, the
Orient was a sexual pleasure garden, a "dreamworld of heightened
sensuality."49 More generally understood in this context
as a land of exotic otherness, rather than a specific country or people,
representations of the Orient were replete with sexual metaphors of
seduction, voluptuousness, temptation, and domination.50 |
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The preoccupation with sexuality and the East
is clear in the enormous body of French Orientalist art and literature.
The sexuality that was either suppressed or highly regulated in
the European world was often imaginatively projected onto fictional
accounts of other cultures.51 Edward Said sees a direct
connection between the increasing complications of European sexual
life and the growing fantasy of a licentious, eroticized Orient.
He writes:
for nineteenth century Europe, with its increasing embourgeoisement,
sex in society entailed a web of legal, moral, even political
and economic obligations of a detailed and certainly encumbering
sort…the Orient was a place where one could look for sexual
experience unobtainable in Europe…In time "Oriental
sex" was as standard a commodity as any other available in
the mass culture, with the result that readers and writers could
have it if they wished without necessarily going to the Orient.52
Roland Barthes sees this relationship as well in his analysis of
the part autobiographical, part fictive travel writings of French
writer Pierre Loti. He sees Loti's character in the 1879 novel Aziyadé
as "sinking deliciously into Asiatic debauchery" to evade
"the moral institutions of his country, of his culture, of
his civilization."53 For Loti's characters, Barthes
notes, specific location, be it Turkey or the Maghreb, is somewhat
irrelevant. What is important is the Orient's function as
"merely a square on the board, the emphatic term of an alternative:
the Occident or something else."54 |
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The late nineteenth century saw the widespread
use of exotic architectural styles in the construction of European
theaters, dance-halls, expositions and various spaces of popular entertainment.
The Oriental space, as it was understood in nineteenth-century Europe,
was imprinted with associations of leisure and pleasure, and eventually
became a commodity experience in itself. What literary critics such
as Said and Barthes have discerned is the concurrent construction
and commodification of another kind of Oriental spacethis one
strongly saturated in associations with sexuality and escapethat
existed not in any material reality but within the literary imagination
alone. |
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If we peel back the layers of this European fantasy
of the Orient, so pervasive in nineteenth-century culture, it soon
reveals itself to be one specifically focused on the seduction of
exotic women and the imagined absence or impotence of exotic men.
The ultimate symbol of this scenario was the harem, which Malek Alloula
identifies as the undisputed locus of sensual pleasure and perversion
in the European imagination.55 Although harems were most
often associated with Turkey, Egypt, and North Africa, I would argue
that the harem colored the idea of all "exotic" women without
differentiating between various countries or cultures. Thus, the underlying
fantasy embedded in the symbol of the harema dream of passive,
receptive, trapped femininitywould have been invoked
as easily in a Japanese boudoir, as in a Moorish one.56 |
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Joan Del Plato, who has analyzed the extensive
use of the harem motif in European art, concludes that although
nineteenth-century opinions of the harem were varied, apologists
viewed the harem as "a return to a truer form of society."57
For these proponents, Del Plato argues, the idealized harem:
proffered a simple model of natural social harmony viewed
from the perspective of an increasingly complex and mechanized
industrial society…Each sex seemed to know its place and
acted accordingly, the man dominant and even cruel, if necessary,
the woman, always receptive and resigned.58
Beyond the generalized eroticization of the East, the harem focused,
reproduced, and provided a specific fantasized location for the
bourgeois man's escape from the responsibilities and limitations
of marital life. There, Del Plato posits, he could imaginatively
fulfill his latent desire for sex with multiple, accommodating female
partners.59 |
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The absence of the male in the imaginary harem
replicates the frequent exclusion of the male in artistic representations
of the harem and produces the same effect: securing the voyeuristic
position of the implied male spectator.60 Embodied in the
sensual Orientalist paintings of Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres and
Jean-Léon Gérôme, the viewer of this type of scene
is being given the illusion of possessing a certain gaze, implying
a penetration of this forbidden space, and the painting becomes the
simulacrum through which this level of power can be attained.61
The décor of the Chabanais and similar brothels, I argue, brought
this fantasized penetration of space into a fully three-dimensional
reality. |
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Because this fantasy was more about submissive
and sexualized female bodies, and masculine mastery of them, than
actual Oriental ones, it was easily expanded to include women of European
descent. This explains, in part, why the harem concubines in so many
European Orientalist paintings appear to be white, and non-white slaves
were often incorporated into the imagery to underscore this racial
contrast.62 Ivan Kalmar identifies this pictorial strategy
in harem painting as "a perverse projection of the Western woman
into the subject position of a powerless sex slave."63
The mutability of the subject position in the harem fantasy, which
seems to primarily rely on staging the naked female body in an environment
that suggests the Orient, is one of the reasons why it was so easily
recreated for consumption in the brothel. |
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Finally, one must note that the exotic harem motif
in the luxury brothels likely functioned in tandem with the client's
awareness that the brothel was, in a sense, the Frenchman's hareman
enclosed place of submissive, sexually available females. While readily
consuming the fantasy of the Oriental harem, French men may have also
been aware that the reality of the European system of regulated prostitution
directly mirrored the same power dynamics of the harem.64
The European attitude toward the harem was complex. On the one hand,
the harems of Muslim societies, and the Muslim men who ruled them,
were frequently criticized by ethnographers and political analysts
in Britain and France as backward and evil.65 On the other
hand, the noble mission of rescuing the native woman from her own
kind was, Gayatri Spivak has pointed out, a particularly seductive
part of the imperialist fantasy.66 The brothel may have
provided an ideal setting for bringing this fantasy to life. |
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I would also assert that by placing the actual
French brothel-as-harem in a fantasized Orientalist context, psychological
distance was achieved and these dynamics were imaginatively re-framed
as natural and "other." Indeed this fantasy, within the
brothel, had to be displaced onto the Orient. The East, after
all, was barbaric and the West civilized. Any explicit suggestion
of a similarity, within brothels, would have ruptured the fantasy
by exposing Westerners to their own barbarism. Thus the Eastern harem
and the French harem merged into a mythologized fantasy of the harem
in the Parisian brothel. The appeal of the mythologized harem, Del
Plato points out, in her analysis of the harem as a "rich, unfixed
symbol" in European culture, is that its inhabitants represented
a "truer, more fundamental natural womanhood than their
western counterparts."67 |
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Whether appropriating the power of the monarch
or the power of the imperialist conqueror, both fantasies in the brothel
helped men constitute a more masterful sexual identity. If we can
say that normal nineteenth-century sexual activity took place in the
sober institution of marriage, or the clinical environment of the
regulated brothels, under the imagined surveillance of political,
medical and cultural authorities, the fantasy life of sexuality continued
to imaginatively occupy these other domains, culturally coded as safe
havens for sexuality both natural and perverse. |
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Beyond RepresentationStepping Into the
Scene of the Fantasy
Luxury brothels commodified these fantasies and brought them into
material reality. This materialization reflected the client's desire
to not just look at, read, or imagine the fantasy but, rather, to
step bodily into the very fabric of the fantasy itself. |
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In this section, I argue that the brothel went
beyond representation of these erotic fantasies, providing instead
a multi-dimensional and multi-sensory re-enactment of these other
worlds. With the strategic usage of female bodies, music, scents,
and costumes, the brothel owners fulfilled a desire for total immersion
in the illusion. |
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A nineteenth-century urge to translate literary
and artistic spaces into real spaces, and to use these spaces, in
turn, as vehicles for private fantasy, was clearly evident in the
homes of Orientalist writers such as Alexandre Dumas and Pierre Loti,
and painters such as Charles Cournault and Victor Madeleine.68
Inspired by trips abroad, these artists and writers returned home
to both represent the Oriental experience in their work, and imaginatively
recreate Oriental spaces in their homes. Loti decorated his home in
Rochefort-sur-Mer in a manner that was uncannily similar to the brothels
with an assortment of thematic, exotic rooms. Loti was well known
for his extensive body of fiction inspired by his travels; after each
of his own trips to foreign countries, he created Turkish, Arab, Chinese,
and Japanese rooms in his family home.69 Le Salon Turc
(fig. 7), for example, was a space filled with elaborate tiles, arched
passageways and intricate woodwork, as well as pipes, embroidered
pillows, and pictures from his travels. |
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Loti's creation of rooms in foreign styles expressed
his desire to contain memories and erotic fantasies that were linked
to his real experiences abroad.70 The creation of rooms
that conjured up the memories of places that he had actually visited,
and fictional episodes that he had written about, suggests the extent
to which fantasy and reality were viewed by Loti as being fluid and
interchangeable. Fueled by an "eternal nostalgia" he wrote
in his journal on May 22, 1894, "for where I am not," his
desire to recreate foreign spaces that he had visited eventually expanded
to include a desire for historical periods he had never experienced.71
Thus, Loti eventually constructed Gothic, Medieval, and Renaissance
rooms in his home, alongside the Orientalist rooms.72 |
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These fantastic spaces in Loti's house at Rochefort-sur-Mer
literally became part of a staged backdrop before which he could play
at certain identities. He had himself photographed in the rooms, wearing
exotic or historic costumes that matched each décor.73
Not satisfied to keep this experience private, he threw elaborate
costume dinners that celebrated the inauguration of each thematic
room in his home. Every detail from the food served, to the music
played, to the costumes of the guests, brought to life the desired
place or period. Writing about his April 12, 1888 dinner to celebrate
the debut of his Salle Gothique, he blissfully recalls, "for
two fugitive moments, I had the complete impression of the middle
ages…"74 |
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This elaborate playacting was not necessarily
without precedent in France. In the eighteenth century Marie Antoinette,
fueled by a desire to create a simple, pastoral refuge for herself,
ordered the construction of a little hamlet, Le Hameau, near
the Petit Trianon at Versailles. In this compact but life-sized village,
replete with farm animals, ponds, haylofts, and cabbage patches, she
dressed as a shepherdess and played, for pleasure, at being something
other than an aristocrat.75 |
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While Marie Antoinette's hamlet could be seen
as mere aristocratic eccentricity, the home of Pierre Loti, an upper-class
man in the late nineteenth century, provided a different context for
this stylized play-acting. Loti's home, like the luxury brothels,
reflected a desire to be elsewhere that signified more than a sentimental
longing for country life. It represented, instead, a complex, eclectic
and characteristically modern desire to be anywhere other than "here."76 |
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Historian Stephen Bann sees in Loti's elaborate
stage-setting a longing, distinctive to the nineteenth century, to
pass beyond representations and fully experience "the otherness
of the past."77 This desire for history, Bann writes,
was informed by the same conditions that drive all acts of representation,
the "need to exteriorize in a particular medium images and fantasies
to which the subject declares a relationship of desire and lack."78
Representations of other worlds in literature and in art were not
enough to effect his own transformation, which was, perhaps, the real
goal of these efforts. It was critical that he bring his body into
the scene of the fantasy. Thomas Albrecht concludes that these scenes
allowed for a total, if transient, shift in identity for Loti. Loti,
Albrecht argues, could avoid feeling restricted to a single persona.
He could, for fugitive moments, "be something more than just
a nineteenth-century, middle-class French man."79 |
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Luxury brothels similarly strove to erase the
signs of modernity, and transfer the client to another world: whether
it was an eroticized re-imaging of France's past, or a sensual environment
in the Orient. In the best aristocratic brothels, a complete assortment
of women of different nationalities was made available to match with
the appropriate rooms. A late nineteenth-century writer described
a top maison de luxe as featuring, "a Negress, a Mexican,
a Chinese, a German, a Greek, an Algerian, one or two English, a Spaniard,
an Italian, and two, three, or four Frenchwomen from various areas."80
Each one, he noted, wore her national costume, and each one attended
to the room decorated in the style of her country.81 |
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In addition to matching women with rooms and costumes
which corresponded to their ethnic or national backgrounds, a general
environment of theatricality prevailed in the brothels. Brassaï
commented that even the appropriate music was used to complement the
experience of specific rooms in the Chabanais.82 The elaborate
staging of each boudoir, the matching of ethnic personnel with their
appropriately designed room, the use of costumes, musicthis
multiplicity of details served to authenticate the historical and
exotic scenes. Alain Corbin describes a kind of theatrical play-acting
that expanded to include other fantasies of "nymphs await[ing]
their clients in Calypso's grotto, while well-rehearsed "nuns"
received theirs in Sadian convents."83 |
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In the early part of the twentieth century, the
fantasies provided by the brothel became increasingly eclectic and
varied. The possibility of imaginative erotic journeys expanded to
include even more possibilities beyond the conventional tropes of
European Orientalist or aristocratic fantasy. One brothel included
an Eskimo igloo, and another an African room featuring a savage hut
decorated with masks, animal skins, and the head of a rhinoceros (fig.
8).84 |
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Eventually the mechanisms of modern travel
became inspirations for erotic fantasy.85 One brothel
had a room designed to mimic the compartment of a railroad car.
The room was designed to provide the complete illusion of travel
as panoramic scenery slowly passed by outside of a false window.
At another establishment, a room was famously decorated to replicate
the cabin of a transatlantic ship (fig. 9).86 In this
bedroom, an elaborate pulley system caused the bed to rock as if
it were at sea.87 It recalls a similar room described
by Huysmans in A Rebours. Des Esseintes constructs a dining
room designed to mimic a ship's cabin which allows him to enjoy,
all the sensations of a long sea-voyage, without ever leaving
home; the pleasure of moving from place to place, a pleasure which
in fact exists only in recollection of the past and hardly ever
in experience of the present…the imagination could provide
a more-than-adequate substitute for the vulgar reality of actual
experience.88
Huysmans's decoration of spaces in his literary work, Loti's decoration
of his family home, and the luxury brothel's elaborate décor
and staging of erotic fantasies all seem to reflect a nineteenth-century
idea that the simulation of an experience could be as satisfying,
if not more so, than the real experience itself. |
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Conclusions
In peering through the keyhole of the maisons de luxe, it is
clear that, far from being a marginal phenomenon, the fin-de-siècle
luxury brothel was at the center of a number of issues critical to
our understanding of gender, sexuality and commodity culture in late
nineteenth-century Paris. As representational spaces, brothels functioned
as hermetically-sealed dream worlds in which the objects in the interior
became vehicles for visual fantasies. |
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In an era when male sexuality was perceived to
be fragile and unstable, brothels provided a fantasized recreation
of 'natural' sexual worlds where men could imaginatively reclaim their
virility and mastery. Calling on the dreams of aristocratic libertine
sexuality and Oriental eroticism so prevalent in nineteenth-century
French culture, brothels enabled fantasies that had long circulated
in art, literature, and the popular imagination to come to life. To
effect this transformation, they went beyond architectural representation,
utilizing costumes, music, and prostitutes' bodies to create a complete
multi-sensory experience. |
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Brothels such as the Chabanais and the Monthyon,
then, attempted to satisfy this desire, so prevalent in late nineteenth-century
culture, to be "elsewhere." As in Pierre Loti's home, the
brothel décor soothed a crisis in conscience, imaginatively
setting the stage for fluid masculine identities, and allowed the
client the opportunity not only to be somewhere else, but to
become something other than a middle-class French man. And
it did so within the reassuringly safe and familiar confines of a
Parisian hôtel particulier. |
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I would like to thank Professor Pat Morton, Professor Steven Ostrow,
and Professor Gabriel Weisberg along with the anonymous reviewer
at Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide, Petra ten-Doesschate
Chu, and Robert Alvin Adler for their helpful suggestions.
All translations are by the author, unless otherwise indicated.
1. Paul Meunier, Annexes au rapport général présenté
par M.F. Hennequin (Melun, Imp. Adm. 1908), 421ff quoted in
Alain Corbin, Women for Hire: Prostitution and Sexuality in France
after 1850, trans. Alan Sheridan (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press, 1990), 123.
2. The existence of this booklet is mentioned in Jacques Roberti,
Maisons de Société: Choses vues (Paris: Arthème
Fayard et Cie, Editeurs, 1927), 57. A gallery owner, Nicole Canet,
has one in her private collection. Embossed on the cover of the
brochures was the address on the Rue Chabanais.
3. The first major work on prostitution in Paris was Alexandre
Parent- Duchâtelet, De la prostitution dans la ville de
Paris: Considérée sous le rapport de l'hygiène
publique, de la morale et de l'administration. (Paris: J.-B.
Baillière, 1836).
4. Historian Alain Corbin made a critical intervention in the field
with his work Les filles de noce: Misère sexuelle et prostitution,
19e et 20e siècles (Paris: Aubier Montaigne, 1978). In
it he documents shifts in the style of sexual demand in late nineteenth-
and early twentieth-century France. For the history of various strategies
to control prostitution in nineteenth-century Paris see Jill Harsin,
Policing Prostitution in Nineteenth-Century Paris (Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1985). Art historians such as T.J. Clark
and Hollis Clayson have illuminated the ways in which prostitution
as a subject in art mediated discourses on class, gender, and sexuality.
See T.J. Clark, The Painting of Modern Life: Paris in the Art
of Manet and his Followers (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University
Press, 1984) and Hollis Clayson, Painted Love: Prostitution in
French Art of the Impressionist Era (New Haven: Yale University
Press, 1991).
5. The primary visual documents to be examined in this essay are
photographs from the Cabinet des Estampes at the Bibliotheque Nationale
de France and the Portfolio du Chabanais: 16 photos des intérieurs,
conceived by Joseph Caprio; after an idea by Nicole Canet (Paris:
Galerie au Bonheur du Jour, [200?]). This portfolio contains
16 black & white photographs made from original glass plates
taken ca. 1900 of Le Chabanais, the most celebrated bordello of
Paris.
6. Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec painted the salon of the brothel at
6 Rue des Moulins, for example, and Edgar Degas' brothel monotypes
appear to be set in a luxury brothel.
7. For more on psychoanalytic theories of desire and lack as they
relate to fantasy see Jacques Lacan, The Ego in Freud's Theory
and in the Technique of Psychoanalysis, 1954-1955, trans. Sylvana
Tomaselli (New York: W.W. Norton, 1991). Also see Jean Laplanche
and Jean-Bertrand Pontalis, "Fantasy and the Origins of Sexuality,"
in Formations of Fantasy, ed. Victor Burgin, James Donald,
and Cora Kaplan (London: Methuen, 1986), 534.
8. This argument takes as one of its basic premises the notion
that masculine identity is partially a social construction. In this
case, I also draw upon the theory that the construction of identity
in nineteenth-century France involved using commodities for self
fashioning. For current theories of masculinity see Maurice Berger,
Brian Wallis and Simon Watson, eds., Constructing Masculinity
(New York: Routledge, 1995). Also see Kaja Silverman, Male Subjectivity
at the Margins (New York: Routledge, 1992).
9. Alain Corbin, "'Le sexe en deuil' et l'histoire des femmes
au XIXe siècle," in Alain Corbin, Le Temps, le désir
et l'horreur: Essais sur le dix-neuvième siècle
(Paris: Aubier, 1991), 102.
10. See Robert Nye,"Honor, Impotence, and Male Sexuality in
Nineteenth-Century French Medicine," French Historical Studies,
16, no. 1 (Spring 1989): 55. Robert Nye's article has been an invaluable
resource for constituting the crisis in male sexual identity. Also
see Michel Foucault, The History of Sexuality, Volume I: An Introduction,
trans. Robert Hurley (New York: Pantheon Books, 1978).
11. Thomas Laqueur, "Orgasm, Generation, and the Politics
of Reproductive Biology," in The Making of the Modern Body,
ed.Thomas Laqueur and Catherine Gallagher (Berkeley and Los Angeles:
University of California Press, 1987), 23.
12. Laqueur, "Orgasm, Generation," 2.
13. Stephen Garton, Histories of Sexuality (New York: Routledge,
2004), 96.
14. Ibid., 97.
15. Laqueur, "Orgasm, Generation," 57. Also see
Garton, Histories of Sexuality, 3047.
16. Nye, "Honor, Impotence, and Male Sexuality," 57.
17. Ibid., 54.
18. Ibid., 61.
19. Ibid., 6768.
20. Ibid., 67. He quotes Eugene Gley, "Les Aberrations de
l'instinct sexuel," Revue Philosophique 17 (January
1884): 92. Emphasis mine.
21. For more on these irrepressible urges, see Alexandre Parent-Duchâtelet,
De la prostitution à Paris au XIX siècle, ed.
Alain Corbin (Paris: Editions de Seuil, 1981).
22. Alfred Binet, Études de psychologie expérimentale:
Le fétichisme dans l'amour, La vie psychique des micro-organismes,
L'intensité des images mentales, etc. (Paris: Octave
Doin, 1891), 7475.
23. Garton, Histories of Sexuality, 82, citing Edward Shorter,
The Making of the Modern Family (London: Collins, 1976),
25568.
24. Garton, Histories of Sexuality, 91. Garton refers to
Lawrence Stone, The Family, Sex and Marriage, 1500-1800 (London:
Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1977), who identified some of these attitudes.
25. G.S. Rousseau and Roy Porter, eds., Sexual Underworlds of
the Enlightenment (Manchester: Manchester University Press,
1987), 1.
26. Rousseau and Porter, Sexual Underworlds of the Enlightenment,
2. Louis-Antoine de Bougainville published an account of his travels
to Tahiti in Voyage autour du monde, par le frégate du
roi La Boudeuse, et la flûte L'Étoile en 1766...1769,
2nd ed. (Paris: Chez Saillant & Nyon).
27. Jean-Jacques Rousseau is most famously associated with the
idea of the noble savage and with his 1755 work A Discourse on
the Origins and Foundations of Inequality in Men. A discussion
of the sexual life of primitive peoples is associated with Denis
Diderot's Supplement to Bougainville's "Voyage"
written in 1771. For a contemporary discussion of both works, and
how they influenced nineteenth-century thought, see Stephen Eisenman,
Gauguin's Skirt (New York: Thames and Hudson, 1997), 7880.
28. Garton, Histories of Sexuality, 92.
29. Rousseau and Porter, Sexual Underworlds, 3.
30. Garton, Histories of Sexuality, 92. For a literary example,
see Choderlos de Laclos, Les Liaisons Dangereuses (1782),
trans. Douglas Parmée (Oxford; New York: Oxford University
Press, 1995). Also see the many writings of the Marquis de Sade,
such as Philosophy in the Boudoir (1795). While Sade famously
celebrated the libertine lifestyle, Laclos' work is commonly interpreted
as a critique of it.
31. Garton, Histories of Sexuality, 92.
32. Ibid., 93.
33. Antony Copley, Sexual Moralities in France, 1780-1980
(London; New York: Routledge, 1992), 47. He quotes a letter Sade
wrote to Madame de Sade, dated February 20, 1781. The letter appears
in Marquis de Sade, Selected Letters, ed. G. Lely, trans.
W. J. Strachan (London: P. Owen, 1965), 7879. Emphasis mine.
34. Garton, Histories of Sexuality, 92.
35. On the presence of lithographs in brothels see Beatrice Farwell,
French Popular Lithographic Imagery, 1815-1870, vol. 11,
Pinups and Erotica (Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
1981), 3. Also see Louis Fiaux, Les maisons de tolérance,
leur fermeture, 3rd ed. (Paris: Mansons et cie éditeurs,
1896),
171.
36. Fiaux, Les maisons de tolérance, 165. Also for
the persistence of these torture chambers into the 20th century
see, Brassaï, The Secret Paris of the 30's, trans. Richard
Miller (New York: Pantheon Books, 1976), n.p.
37. Leora Auslander, Taste and Power: Furnishing Modern France
(Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1996),
35.
38. Ibid.
39. Ibid.
40. Mario Praz, An Illustrated History of Interior Decoration:
From Pompeii to Art Nouveau (New York: Thames and Hudson, 1982),
152.
41. Brassaï, Secret Paris of the 30's, n.p. Brassaï
describes the aristocratic rooms of the Chabanais by linking them
to the monarch's mistresses: "There was the Louis XVI boudoir,
in homage to Marie Antoinette, and the Louis XV boudoir, for Madame
de Pompadour."
42. Joris-Karl Huysmans, Against Nature (A Rebours),
trans. Robert Baldrick (Harmondsworth, Eng.; Baltimore: Penguin
Books, 1959), 74.
43. Ibid., 7475.
44. Fiaux, Les maisons de tolérance, 16566.
45. Ibid., 166, 176.
46. This was a common set of rooms for luxury brothels, described
by Louis Fiaux and many other writers.
47. Fiaux, Les maisons de tolérance, 253.
48. Ibid., 252.
49. This phrase is borrowed from Christopher Miller who makes the
following comment regarding the novel Madame Bovary, "The
Orient for Emma Bovary is a dreamworld of heightened sensuality"
in Christopher Miller, "Orientalism, Colonialism," in
A New History of French Literature, ed. Denis Hollier (Cambridge,
MA; London, England: Harvard University Press, 1989), 704.
50. Garton, Histories of Sexuality, 131.
51. Ibid., 125.
52. Edward Said, Orientalism (New York: Vintage Books, 1994),
190.
53. Roland Barthes, New Critical Essays, trans. Richard
Howard (New York: Hill and Wang, 1980), 113-114. Barthes identifies
a homo-erotic strain in Loti's work that was part of the perception
of the East as a land where "anything is possible."
54. Ibid., 116. Emphasis in original.
55. Malek Alloula, The Colonial Harem, trans. Mynra Godzich
and Wlad Godzich (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1986),
95.
56. All "exotic" women may have been indiscriminately
implicated in the harem dream although specific countries did provide
alternate erotic fantasies as in the geisha of Japanese culture,
or the concubine/wife of Chinese culture. I discuss later in this
essay the frequent phenomenon of European women finding their way
into representations of the harem; a fact that underscores the ways
in which the harem dream is so powerful, all women are pulled
into it.
57. Joan Del Plato, Multiple Wives, Multiple Pleasures: Representing
the Harem, 1800-1875, (Madison, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University
Press, 2002), 21.
58. Ibid. Emphasis mine.
59. Ibid., 22.
60. Ivan Kalmar, "The Houkah in the Harem: On Smoking and
Orientalist Art," in Smoke, ed. Sander L. Gilman and
Xun Zhou (London: Reaktion Press, 2004), 220.
61. For a discussion of Gérôme's paintings see Linda
Nochlin, "The Imaginary Orient," Art in America
MayJune 1983, 4659.
62. Ivan Kalmar, "Houkah in the Harem," 222. On the general
use of Orientalist motifs also see Alexa Celebonovic, Peinture
kitsch ou realisme bourgeois: L'art pompier dans le monde, trans.
Sacha Tolstoi (Paris: Seghers, 1974). Celebonovic discusses the
broad usage of "oriental" motifs to eroticize representations
of European women.
63. Ivan Kalmar,"Houkah in the Harem," 222.
64. See Del Plato, Multiple Wives, Multiple Pleasures, 188.
She notes that abolitionists often drew comparisons between harems
and brothel prostitution during this period.
65. Ibid., 1920.
66. See Gayatri Spivak, "Can the Subaltern Speak," in
Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture, ed. Cary Nelson
and Lawrence Grossberg (Urbana-Champaign: University of Illinois
Press, 1988), 299, quoted in Del Plato, Multiple Wives, Multiple
Pleasures, 20.
67. Del Plato, Multiple Wives, Multiple Pleasures, 238.
Emphasis mine.
68. Nadine Beauthéac and François Xavier-Bouchart,
L'Europe exotique, (Paris: Editions du Chêne, 1985),
116. The authors write that, inspired by his trip to Tunisia in
1844, Alexandre Dumas père returned to France and
constructed a Moorish salon in his home. He also incorporated Moorish
decorative motifs into the façade of his chateau. Photographs
of the Orientalist ateliers of painters Charles Cournault and Victor
Madeleine, featuring both men in exotic costume, also appear in
Europe exotique.
69. Beauthéac and Xavier-Bouchart, Europe exotique,
119. Also see Bruno Vercier, Jean-Pierre Melot, and Gaby Scaon,
La maison de Pierre Loti: Rochefort (Paris: Editions du Patrimoine,
1999). The date of each new room corresponds with the period following
his return from each country.
70. Thomas Albrecht, "The Nostalgia of Nowhere: Pierre Loti's
Utopian Spaces," Mosaic (Winnipeg), December 2003, 25.
71. Loti as quoted in Stephen Bann, "Face-to-Face with History,"
New Literary History, 29, no. 2 (1998): 238. He quotes from
Pierre Loti, Cette éternelle nostalgie: Journal intime
1878-1911, ed. Bruno Vercier, Alain Quella-Villéger,
and Guy Dugas (Paris: La Table Ronde, 1997), 397.
72. Vercier, Melot, and Scaon, La maison de Pierre Loti,
1028.
73. Ibid., 2024.
74. Bann, "Face-to-Face with History," 238.
75. Rosalind Williams, Dream Worlds (Berkeley: University
of California Press, 1991), 4.
76. Beatrice Farwell, French Lithographic Imagery, vol.
9, Historicism and Exoticism (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 1981), 21. Farwell comments that "exoticism had the
same cultural value as historicism: the idea that a distant place
is much more wonderful and stimulating than here parallels the feeling
that a past epoch is much more wonderful than now."
77. Bann, "Face-to-Face with History," 238.
78. Stephen Bann, Romanticism and the Rise of History (New
York: Twayne; Toronto: Maxwell Macmillan Canada; 1995), 103.
79. Albrecht,"The Nostalgia of Nowhere," 2.
80. Leo Taxil, La prostitution contemporaine, (Paris: Libraire
Populaire, 1884),11314. I don't imagine that this careful
matching of rooms and personnel was always the casebut that
it happened at all is rather remarkable.
81. Ibid.
82. Brassaï, Secret Paris of the 30's, n.p.
83. Alain Corbin, "Backstage," in A History of Private
Life, vol. 4, ed. Phillipe Ariès and Georges Duby (Cambridge,
MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1987), 61112.
84. See Alphonse Boudard, La fermeture (Paris: Éditions
Robert La Font, 1986), 165, and Laure Adler, La vie quotidienne
dans les maisons closes: 1830 -1930 (Paris: Hachette, 1990),
171.
85. For more on the eroticization of travel see Henri Lefebvre
who has written about the association of sex and sexuality with
places of leisure, such as vacation spots. Henri Lefebvre, The
Production of Space, trans. Donald Nicholson Smith (Cambridge:
Basil Blackwell, 1994), 311, 353.
86. Boudard, La fermeture, 165.
87. Fiaux, Les maisons de tolérance, 253.
88. Huysmans, Against Nature, 3335.
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