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“Fallen but Charming Creatures”: The Demimondaine in Russian Literature and Visual Culture of the 1860s
Author(s) -
LUCEY COLLEEN
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
the russian review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.136
H-Index - 24
eISSN - 1467-9434
pISSN - 0036-0341
DOI - 10.1111/russ.12213
Subject(s) - depiction , creatures , art , pleasure , visual culture , literature , agency (philosophy) , art history , history , visual arts , sociology , psychology , natural (archaeology) , social science , archaeology , neuroscience
This article examines the portrayal of the demimondaine in Russian literature and visual culture of the 1860s. Often referred to as kamelii (camellias) after Alexandre Dumas fils’ La Dame Aux Camelias (1848), such “fallen women” entered the cultural imagination through works of art and fiction that associated the demimondaine with pleasure and leisure. Taking the work of Vsevolod Krestovskii (1840–95) as case study, I compare the author’s short story “Pogibshee, no miloe sozdanie” (“A Fallen but Charming Creature,” 1861) with a virtually unknown album of salacious lithographs for which Krestovskii provided prurient captions. Titled Pogibshie no milye sozdaniia ( Fallen but Charming Creatures , 1862–63) in reference to his earlier tale, the album glorifies the demimondaine as a new kind of urban woman who possesses sexual and financial agency. Analyzing the depiction of kamelii in these two works–one fiction, the other visual–shows that although they differ in focus, both the story and album commodify the demimondaine for mass circulation.