Meet the Mousmé. The Otherness of the Japanese Woman in the Writings of French Women Travellers of the First Half of the 20th Century

Anne-Aurélie Seya-Grondin

Abstract


From Pierre Loti to Nicolas Bouvier, via Roland Barthes and many other Western travellers, the perception of Japanese women and their otherness since the 1860s has been constantly enriched by diverse and recurring mental images linked to a certain form of exoticism and Japonism. It seems essential to enrich the reflections on the concept of the otherness of feminine discourse in order to shed new light on major issues of the history of French women travellers, the French imagination of Japan and Japanese exoticism. This article explores some avenues of reflection on the construction of the figure of the Japanese woman, a pillar theme of travel literature, present in travel writings produced by French women. How to meet the other and the other’s elsewhere when this other is also a woman? What is the perception of Japanese women in French women’s travel writings? What areas of the allegory of the elsewhere inherited from a dominant discourse of male travellers can be found (or not) in these discourses of women travellers? Beginning from the concept of Mousmé, introduced by Loti, and all the exotic load that results from it, the author reflects on the circumstances of encounters and the particularities of writings from the perception of the other as a female and her feminity. But it is not simply a question of entering into a purely comparative vision by confronting women travellers with dominant male travel literature. By analysing several writings in the light of a collective Japanese imagination in French, the author can reveal facets of Japanese exoticism and otherness hitherto subcontracted and intrinsically linked to women’s travel practices; but also open the door to a reflection on the importance of enriching the mental representations of Japan with narrative produced by women about women.


Keywords


French women travellers; travel literature; mental representations of Japan; otherness; exoticism

Full Text:

PDF

References


Sources

Du Bourg de Bozas, Marguerite Marie Sipière. (1903). Mon tour du monde: les Indes, la Chine, le Japon. Paris: Plon-Nourrit et Cie.

Durand-Fardel, Laure. (1881). De Marseille à Shangai͏̈ et Yédo: récits d’une parisienne. France: Hachette.

Leroi-Gourhan, Arlette. (1989). Un voyage chez les Aïnous: Hokkaïdo, 1938. Paris: Albin Michel.

Loti, Pierre. (1888). Madame Chrysanthème. Paris: Calmann-Lévy.

Tormia. (1928). Voyage au Japon. Paris: E. Figuière.

Viollis, Andrée. (1934). Le Japon intime. Paris: Montaigne.

References

Beillevaire, Patrick. (1993). Le Japon en langue française: ouvrages et articles publiés de 1850 à 1945. Paris: Ed. Kimé.

Beillevaire, Patrick. (2001). Le voyage au Japon: anthologie de textes français. Paris: Laffont.

Bird, Dúnlaith. (2012). Travelling in different skins: gender identity in European women’s oriental travelogues, 1850–1950. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Bourguinat, Nicolas (ed.). (2012). Le voyage au féminin: perspectives historiques et littéraires, XVIIIe–XXe siècles. Strasbourg: Presses Universitaires de Strasbourg.

Estelmann, Frank (ed.). (2012). Voyageuses européennes au XIXe siècle: identités, genres, codes. Paris: PUPS.

Klein, Ronald (ed.). (2016). Meiji Japan as Western Women Saw It: A Bibliographic Companion. Tokyo: Edition Synapse for Eureka Press.

Lewis, Reina. (1996). Gendering Orientalism: Race, femininity and representation. Femininity and Representation, 222, pp. 1–267.

Montier, Jean-Pierre. (2012). Pierre Loti et le Japon. Rennes: Ed. Ouest-France.

Moura, Jean-Marc. (1995). Anti-utopie et péril jaune au tournant du siècle, quelques exemples romanesques. Orients Extrêmes, Les Carnets de l’exotisme, 15–16, pp. 83–92.

Moura, Jean-Marc. (2005). Littératures francophones et théorie postcoloniale. Paris: PUF.

Pellegrin, Nicole. (2011). Genre, voyage et histoire. Quelques aperçus. Genre & Histoire, 8.

Robinson, Jane (ed.). (2001). Unsuitable for Ladies: An Anthology of Women Travellers. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Segler-Messner, Silke (ed.). (2009).Voyages à l’envers: formes et figures de l’exotisme dans les littératures post-coloniales francophones. Strasbourg: Strasbourg University Press.

Shimazaki, Eiji. (2012). Figuration de l’Orient à travers les romans de Pierre Loti et le discours colonial de son époque – Turquie, Inde, Japon. Doctoral thesis, Letters, Ideas, Knowledge. Créteil: [s.n.].

Siegel, Kristi (ed.). (2004). Gender, Genre, and Identity in Women’s Travel Writing. New York: P. Lang.

Sterry, Lorraine. (2009). Victorian Women Travellers in Meiji Japan: Discovering a “New” Land. Folkestone: Global Oriental.

Yee, Jennifer. (2000). Clichés de la femme exotique: un regard sur la littérature coloniale française entre 1871 et 1914. Paris: l’Harmattan.




DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17951/ff.2020.38.2.125-143
Date of publication: 2020-12-29 08:16:42
Date of submission: 2020-03-12 17:33:02


Statistics


Total abstract view - 808
Downloads (from 2020-06-17) - PDF - 674

Indicators



Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Copyright (c) 2020 Anne-Aurélie Seya

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.