Deux siècles de sollicitude: représentations de la servitude féminine d’Un Coeur simple à l’éthique du care

Authors

Krisztina Horváth
Université Eötvös Loránd de Budapest
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8086-6554

Synopsis

Many are the memorable figures of servants, maids and housekeepers in nineteenth- and twentieth-century literature, whether or not these representations are inspired by the extratextual realities of contemporary society. It seems to us today that the literary career of this figure has undergone a certain, even important, evolution, so that one can identify two distinct lineages. Firstly, female figures inspiring a holy horror, mingled with a feeling of exoticism, compassion, attraction mixed with repugnance, and even a desire for otherness. Some cases come close to animalising women, as in Dezső Kosztolányi’s novel Anna Édes, where the seduction of the little maid inevitably leads to her downfall and criminalisation. It seems to us that since the sociological and ethical turn in literature, the figure of the maid has detached itself from these aftertastes, to enter an era of the ethics of care, of moral and feminist thought. If certain representations still seem to be attached to a poetics of horror and the news, perpetuating the tradition of Jean Genet’s The Maids and the exaltation of what the Surrealists called – it seems to us today, wrongly – hysteria (The Perfect Nanny), other texts, linked to an equally poetic sociological realism (the Montana School or Florence Aubenas’ documentary novel, The Night Cleaner) are part of a responsible, feminist revival of literature as an action on the present, concerned with “maintaining, perpetuating and repairing our world” ( Joan Tronto 1993).

Keywords: social realism, maid, hieratic code, care theory

Author Biography

Krisztina Horváth, Université Eötvös Loránd de Budapest

est maître de conférences habilitée en littérature à l’Université Eötvös Loránd de Budapest. Ses recherches de portent sur la théorie littéraire, le Moyen Âge et la littérature des XXe et XXIe siècles. Le groupe de recherche CODHIL (Constructions Discursives en Histoire Littéraire) a publié en 2011 une histoire de la littérature française en hongrois (le premier depuis 1962), un ouvrage de près de mille pages, dans lequel elle était chargée des chapitres sur le XXe siècle, donnant une large part à la réception et à la traduction hongroises. Dernière publication : Horváth, Krisztina (2024) : « Une histoire de la réception de Flaubert en Hongrie », Flaubert 31, http://journals.openedition. org/flaubert/5718, https://doi.org/10.4000/12fd9 [12/10/2024].

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Published

May 30, 2025

Online ISSN

3057-9929

Print ISSN

3057-9449