There’s been a lot of discussion on books e-lists I’m on and blogs and message boards I visit about a new historical romance, Your Scandalous Ways by Loretta Chase. I love Loretta Chase’s writing. I haven’t read this book yet, but I’m very much looking forward to it. Going back to my posts about Deal-Breakers and Deal-Makers, it combines two of my deal-makers–spies and and an experienced heroine. Francesca, the heroine of Your Scandalous Ways, is a divorced woman who’s become a courtesan (the book is set in Venice in the 1820s).
And that’s been the source of much of the discussion about the book. Some readers find the idea of a courtesan as a heroine wonderfully refreshing. Others are disturbed by the idea of a heroine who had sex for money. Some have suggested the a courtesan heroine glamorizes prostitution. Others have pointed out that there’s a world of difference between a prostitute walking the streets or working in a brothel and a courtesan. Both may have sex for their livelihood, but a courtesan had far more control over her life and her person. She might have sex for money, but she could choose who she slept with. In fact it could be argued that she had more control over who she went to bed with than a married woman did in the early nineteenth century. As Mélanie says to Charles at one point in Beneath a Silent Moon,
“Legally you can take whatever you want from me.”
“That’s barbaric.”
“That’s marriage.”
“Not our marriage.”
No, it isn’t their marriage, but that’s thanks to the man Charles is. Legally Mélanie had more control over whom she slept with when she was a spy using her favors for information than she does as a married woman.
The courtesan heroine has a long literary tradition. La Dame aux Camelias/Camille/La Traviata. The courtesan heroine is almost an operatic staple, from Traviata to La Bohème (Mimi and Musetta both have wealthy protectors at various points in the story) to La Rondine.
Violetta celebrates the freedom of her life as a courtesan in Sempre Libere. Magda’s Chi il bel sogno di Doretta in La Rondine plays on another paradox of the courtesan heroine. A courtesan is a sophisticated woman of the world who has had a number of lovers, yet though she has had the freedom to choose her lovers, there’s an economic element to all of them. She may never have actually been in love. In a sense, she’s the literary female counterpart to the rakish hero whose heart has remained untouched. Of course, as I blogged about in my Fallen Heroines post, rakish heroes get happy endings far more often than courtesan heroines. I was going to say that none of the love affairs end happily in La Traviata, La Rondine, and La Bohème, but in fact, Musetta and Marcello are back together at the end of La Bohème. One can argue, given their history, over how long it will last, but the romantic in me likes to think they’ve learned something and it will.
Back to my own books, Mélanie was never a courtesan precisely. She was a prostitute, an experience she revisits when she and Charles go to a brothel seeking information in Secrets of a Lady. It’s clear, I think, that her time in the brothel was fairly horrific. As she thinks in Secrets, In the past ten years she had known anger and fear and self-hatred. But since Raoul O’Roarke had taken her out of the door of the brothel in Léon, she had rarely felt powerless. It was one of the reasons she would be forever grateful to him. Later, though she didn’t sleep with men for money, she did so for information. I think it’s fair to say her feelings about this part of her life and about sex in general are more complicated. As she says to Charles in The Mask of Night:
“It can’t always be sublime communion, Charles. Not for me. It’s been too many other things. A tool. A weapon. A defense. An escape.” She pulled her dressing gown tight about her. “I told you once that my acting abilities deserted me in the bedchamber. That was true when I was in the brothel. I was too young to put on more than a crude show. But later– Sometimes it was sordid. Sometimes it was mechanical. But sometimes—slipping into a fictional skin, making love to someone for the night, knowing it’s just that night. There’s no freedom quite like it.”
Mélanie, however, is not an experienced woman who’s romantically untouched until she meets Charles. She was in love with Raoul up to when she met Charles and overlapping with her falling in love (against her better judgment) with her husband. That was a plot element I had in place very early in my planning of the book, before I had all the elements of the Charles/Melanie/Raoul triangle worked out. I hadn’t thought of it until I wrote this post, but I wonder now if I was subconsciously reacted against the archetype of the experienced heroine whose heart remains untouched until she meets the hero.
What do you think of courtesan heroines? Deal-maker, deal-breaker or neither? Any interesting examples to recommend? Do you view courtesan heroines differently from heroines who’ve had sexual experiences but not for financial reasons? Do you view courtesan heroines differently from heroines who’ve been prostitutes or who’ve slept with men for information? Does it make a difference to you if the heroine has or hasn’t been in love before she meets the hero?
For the Fraser Correspondence this week, I’ve moved ahead to after the events of Beneath a Silent Moon, which means the letters are in the same time frame as the A+ section in Beneath. This week’s letter is from a woman who’s never been a courtesan but has certainly been a mistress, Aspasia Newland.
Now I’m off to buy Your Scandalous Ways.
June 29, 2008 at 7:19 pm
I’ve actually found few books with “true” courtesan heroines; most of them turn out to be virgins who are just pretending to be experienced, or somehow end up with the hero on the *first* try for a protector. Huh. Convenient.
OR, she is one of those martyr heroines who cries and weeps over her unworthiness to breathe the same air as “decent” people. (Like the unfaithful husband and wives of the Ton and/or the men who use courtesans?)
I don’t know about “romantisizing” prostitution; in those days a woman’s place in life often depended upon the rank and wealth of the man who fathered her, married her, or protected her. IMHO, *marriage* in those days could be considered a form of prostitution.
Actually, I admire a heroine who has the strength and the clear-headedness to survive in a world that only accepts certain roles for women.
I loved “Your Scandalous Ways”, although there were a few spots where I rolled my eyes. I also recommend “Sleeping Beauty” by Judith Ivory.
June 29, 2008 at 9:17 pm
I love this topic!
Real life is a better measure than fiction – ‘The Courtesan’s Revenge’ by Frances Wilson is the story of Harriette Wilson, a famous Regencyy courtesan who eventually resorted to blackmail through her ‘memoirs’. She and her three sisters all became courtesans, but only one found a ‘fairy tale’ ending in respectable marriage. Courtesans often led glamorous and notorious lives, but unless they did find a husband, or protect their earnings well, they usually ended up alone and ostracised; that infamous double standard at play again. It obviously took a shrewd and strong-willed woman to play men at their own game, but courtesans usually met their match – Harriette fell for a married man, and lost all of her cool and calculating sense over him!
I think I would appreciate a novel about a courtesan that was honest, like Harriette’s story – not a feminist reversal of the usual historical romance formula, but a portrait of a woman who sacrfices love for independence. She has it all – beauty, fame, legions of lovers – but at a price.
June 30, 2008 at 6:40 am
I haven’t run across many courtesan heroines who are actually courtesans *and* have a happy ending either, JMM (literature and opera provide plenty of examples of courtesan heroines with tragic endings). That’s why I’m so intrigued to read “Your Scandalous Ways.” I also keep meaning to search out “Sleeping Beauty”–I’ve heard lots of good things about it.
And I agree that it’s difficult to draw a line between a woman selling herself (or more likely her family selling her) in marriage for a title, a fortune, land, social position and a courtesan selling herself to a protector. Marriage and economics were hugely intertwined in the Regency, as comes out so clearly from Jane Austen’s novels (I blogged about that ages ago in “The Importance of Having a Fortune”). I certainly don’t think a courtesan heroine glamorizes prostitution. I don’t even think a heroine who was a whore working in a brothel would glamorized prostitution, unless her life in the brothel was glamorized.
June 30, 2008 at 6:55 am
Glad you like the topic, Sarah!’
You mentioned the Harriette Wilson book before–I need to look for it. You’re right, courtesans had to play their cards with great skill. The same double standard which means libertine heroes have fairy tale endings in literature far more often than courtesan heroines played out in real life, as you say. There’s something inherently ephemeral in a courtesan’s relationship with her protector–the thing that really troubles Gigi in the novella and musical of the same name. (As her grandmother, once a courtesan, puts it to her great-aunt, an even more successful courtesan, “And when eternal spring is over?”).
I agree it would be interesting to read a novel about a courtesan who, as JMM says, “has the strength and the clear-headedness to survive in a world that only accepts certain roles for women” and yet as you say, “has it all – beauty, fame, legions of lovers – but at a price.” On the other hand, there are plenty of historical examples of courtesans who did find love and even marriage. Elizabeth Armistead was a courtesan who had a long term relationship with Charles James Fox and eventually married him. I like happy endings, so I can also enjoy a novel about a courtesan heroine who finds one.
July 3, 2008 at 11:16 am
Tracy, can you recommend any good novels with courtesans, or their synonymous sisters (actresses), as leading ladies? I seem to be ploughing through my To Read shelf at the moment, so now is a good time to seek new titles!
July 4, 2008 at 5:16 am
I’ve been pondering your question all day, Sarah, trying to think of books. I can’t think of that many books with courtesan heroines, which is one reason “Your Scandalous Ways” so intrigues me. There’s “Sleeping Beauty” by Judith Ivory, which JMM mentioned. “La Dame aux Camelias” if you haven’t read it (I confess I haven’t, though I’ve seen “Camille” and “La Traviata” many times). “Gigi” by Colette for a story of courtesan-in-training. “In the Company of the Courtesan” by Sarah Dunant (I haven’t read it yet, but her “The Birth of Venus” was beautifully written). “The King’s Favorite” by Susan Holloway Scott, about Nell Gwyn (haven’t read it yet either, so behind on reading).
Speaking of the line between actresses and courtesans, I thought it interesting in putting my post together that Marguerite St. Just Blakeney could have been a courtesan-type but instead Orczy makes it clear that she’s never been involved with a man before Percy.
July 4, 2008 at 7:47 am
Thank you, Tracy – didn’t mean to put you in the hotseat! I love the film ‘Gigi’, so I shall hunt down a copy of the book as well. Looking up the Dunant book, I notice that there’s another book about a courtesan by Diane Haeger, who also wrote about Nell Gwynn – obviously popular subjects!
Yes, I like that about Marguerite – no doubt feminist types would be itching to subvert her innocence and infer that she was a type of courtesan, but I think it takes more strength of character and complexity for Marguerite to have resisted the obvious path. It also makes her love for Percy stronger, because they are quite literally made for each other!
July 4, 2008 at 5:45 pm
It was fun to try to think up title, I just realized I couldn’t think of very many. The novella “Gigi” is very good–a bit darker than the movie, though the ending is still lovely.
I think it’s interesting that while having Marguerite be be “a woman without a past” makes her somewhat atypical for an actress at the time, it makes her more of typical for a heroine. To me it falls a bit into the trap of “sexual-purity-equals-goodness.” I think I’d enjoy reading about a Marguerite who was more a Camille/Violetta/Magda type but still got her happy ending.
July 4, 2008 at 8:10 pm
It’s an interesting topic, courtesan heroines. I agree that they probably had more freedom than many married women, AND they were often respected for their intelligence and wit.
About Marguerite. It seems to me that the Baroness wasn’t really making an issue out of sexual purity. Unlike Barbara Cartland and her heroines, where the point of the books, like in so many romance fics, is the great final deflowering of the pure virgin by big man hero.
The Scarlet Pimpernel starts with a married couple, who, we are told, had 24 hours before the great mis, so Percy and Marguerite might have had sex. But that, as Marguerite’s past is not the focus – ok the Baroness, being a Victorian, casts Armand as a chaperone. The focus is the psychological barriers that prevent Percy and Marguerite from allowing themselves to show their feelings. So much more adult and interesting than the sex issue.
I like the idea of Marguerite – like Sarah says – choosing not to go the obvious way and be a courtesan. Perhaps it reflects that in this sense the Baroness projected the possibilities for an intelligent woman that were emerging at her time, rather than the choices a woman had around the French Revolution.
July 4, 2008 at 8:22 pm
Good points, Dorthe. I agree that the sexual purity of the heroine isn’t nearly as much of an issue in “The Scarlet Pimpernel” as in many books of the same genre/type (not sure of the correct word). It’s the focus, as you say, on the psychological barriers between Marguerite and Percy that I find so intriguing. However, it does seem to me that Orczy goes a bit out of her way to make it very clear that Marguerite was a virgin before she met Percy. And to me that echoes the sentiment at the time the book was written (and I’m not sure how very much things have changed) that a heroine should be untouched before she meets the hero.
July 5, 2008 at 2:56 pm
I am not sure things have changed either. There are still very different standards for men and women. Males are Casanovas not sluts.
I think the Baroness wanted to show Percy and Marguerite as soul mates with a unique bond, which made the idea of other partners not really possible.
The Baroness made it clear that Marguerite had never loved anyone before. She never mentions Percy’s past (a fiancée – Mary de Courcy -appeared in her son’s biography of Percy). I find it hard to imagine Percy with another women, yet I don’t see him as a virgin. I don’t see Marguerite as a virgin in the conventional sense either, yet I can’t see her with another man than Percy. I basically didn’t like the triangle with Chauvelin.
In a way Percy and Marguerite mirror Peter Wimsey and Harriet Vane. Peter and Harriet also had this deep bond. Both had affairs earlier, but they never loved anyone the way they loved each other.
Of course, real life relationships are much more ambivalent. I like Charles and Melanie’s relationship because you give them a past, where there was love (Melanie and Raoul) and yet you also show how they develop a deep bond like Percy and Marguerite and Peter and Harriet over time.
July 5, 2008 at 4:23 pm
Actually, I think the publishing industry has taken a step backwards – I remember books from the 80′s and early 90′s; experienced heroines were more common. And there certainly were a lot less “virgin widows”. Nowadays, a lot of authors jump through hoops to contrive the heroine’s virginity, even in books in which there’s no point to it. (If the book isn’t titled, “The Boss’s Virgin Secretary”, then the heroine’s virtue is in the back blurb, even if it’s not really a part of the story.)
Oddly enough, I’m tired of marriage being romantisized in the historicals. When a woman married, she lost any rights she had to her body or to her property.
This is… trivialized in romantic novels. The heroine who expresses doubts about marriage is pooh-poohed by other characters. “True Love will conquer all!” The hero is always angry that the heroine won’t jump at the chance to hand over her property to him along with the rights to her body.
July 5, 2008 at 5:32 pm
Thanks for the thoughtful comments, Dorthe and JMM! I agree things haven’t changed all that much–witness the number of libertine heroes who find true love and reform and the relative scarcity of heroines who have had lovers (whether courtesans or not).
Dorthe, I do think the Baroness wanted to show Percy and Marguerite as soul mates who were made for each other. Good comparison to Peter and Harriet. That doesn’t necessarily mean Marguerite couldn’t have had one or move lovers without actually being in love. I don’t see Percy as a virgin either, and Peter and Harriet as you say both had prior lovers. In fact, Peter had a fiancée he lost, I think , during the war or after because she couldn’t deal with his shellshock. Barbara, I think. The implication is that he thought he was very much in love with her, though it was very different from what he comes to feel for Harriet.
Thanks for the nice words about Charles and Mélanie. I think of them as soul mates, but they grew into being soul mates==both changed and influence the other. Which I think is more how it happens in real life.
JMM, I was thinking when I typed Melanie’s quote about marriage meaning that Charles “Legally can take whatever he wants” from her , just how appalling marriage was for a woman in the legal sense. Have you read “Freedom & Necessity” by Steven Brust & Emma Bull? It’s mid-Victorian (fabulous mix of adventure, suspense, romance, political intrigue, and a bit of paranormal). The heroine refuses to get married because of what marriage means legally for a woman. The hero (who like Charles has very advanced ideas about gender equality) respects her principles but continues to propose, much like Peter proposing to Harriet. They end up together, with a child, with her still saying no to his proposals and him saying he’ll propose once a year.
July 5, 2008 at 5:40 pm
I’m suddenly remembering the scene in “The Forsyte Saga” (The 60′s version) where Jo proposes to Irene. He tells her he will understand if she says no. (Her first marriage was terrible; she married a possessive man.)
(Or something like that, I need to watch that again.)
Have you read The Forsyte Saga, Tracy? Much of the theme seems to be possessiveness and the difference between outer respectability and inner decency.
July 5, 2008 at 5:54 pm
I haven’t read “The Forsyte Saga,” JMM (yet another set of books I keep meaning to read
. But I have been the movie “That Forsyte Woman” and most of the recent television adaptation. From what I’ve seen, possessiveness and the difference between outer respectability and inner decency sum up the themes exactly. It’s a great example of how a woman was putting herself in man’s power by marrying him and how much depended on the type of man he was and whether or not he chose to exercise that legal power.
July 6, 2008 at 3:56 pm
This is a great topic and discussion, with lots of food for thought and lots of stuff I haven’t read yet. ;-}
And I’m particularly taken with the notion (implicit in some of the comments) that the knowing courtesan is a female counterpart to the as-yet-untamed rake, and that both of these fantasy images may play parts in the romance marriage reconciliation — the erotics of an ideal marriage demanding a shadow/other/past to provide a sort of chiaroscuro modeling of its present.
July 6, 2008 at 4:10 pm
Nice to “see” you here, Pam! I think as literary archetypes there’s a definite parallel between the libertine (particularly the libertine who has yet to fall in love) and the courtesan (particularly the courtesan who has yet to fall in love). But I can think of far more stories where the libertine finds true love and settles down to a happily ever after than where the courtesan does (one reason I found the idea of Loretta Chase’s book so refreshing). I also think it’s interesting that both types of characters tend not to have been in love before. There’s something very powerful about the one true love, made for each other idea. But I also rather like, as Dorthe pointed out, the real life, fascinating messiness of loving more than once, in different ways. And of that not lessening the power of an emotional bond between two people.
July 7, 2008 at 7:40 am
I have the first of the Forsyte saga books on my To Read pile, JMM – I started it, but couldn’t really get into it. I shall try again, though, and give it a good run-up!
Dorthe, I agree wholeheartedly with the points you have made here – you can phrase thoughts so much more concisely than I can! I love the pure romance of Percy and Marguerite, they are my favourite fictional couple. It’s not that I object to ‘experienced’ heroines, although this type of woman is almost as much of a romance trope as the virgin waiting for true love now, but I don’t see such a background for Marguerite. Or Percy, come to think. Both are too hesitant and proud, I think, and it takes something special – that ‘soul mate’ connection – for them to take the risk with a lover.
On the other hand, I don’t believe that Marguerite would have been entirely ‘innocent’, either – I don’t think she would have taken lovers without thinking herself in love, but she knows that she is attractive to men and would have enjoyed a flirtation or two! She probably had a row of ‘suitors’ who were deeply disappointed when she married!
July 7, 2008 at 3:21 pm
Let us know what you think of the Forsyte books, Sarah! It sounds as though you’re likely to read them sooner than I am.
I think Marguerite definitely comes across as an attractive woman who knows she’s attractive (one of the things I find refreshing about her). I picture her being surrounded by a court of admirers in Paris, much as she is later in London.
July 12, 2008 at 10:07 pm
[...] Pimpernel, Secrets of a Lady, Tracy Grant Recently I blogged about Courtesan Heroines, both here and on History Hoydens. Both posts generated a lot of fascinating discussion. The discussion [...]
July 26, 2008 at 12:36 am
[...] — women have stepped to the forefront in recent years: check out this interesting discussion at Tracy Grant’s blog about the current popularity of courtesan heroines in romance [...]
July 31, 2008 at 11:44 am
Tracy – just finished ‘The Man of Property’, which is the first book in the Forsyte saga: I won’t be reading any more. Galsworthy is a lyrical writer and shrewd judge of human character, but I didn’t take to the Forsyte family (bar old Jolyon) and that is what makes a book for me.
Re: this thread, Irene marries Soames, her first husband, even though she doesn’t love him (actually detests him) because she has to get married; he pesters her for months, and she finally relents when her stepmother forces her hand. But I didn’t feel any sympathy for her – she doesn’t treat her husband like a human being, recognising his fragile ego and his admiration for her, any more than Soames respects his wife beyond her looks and the pride of ‘owning’ her. Irene tells him that she has ‘tried to love him’, but she is barely civil and obviously loathes his company – what did she expect? I also didn’t believe the depth of her feeling for the man she does fall in love with (Galsworthy’s fictional counterpart), although that could be the limited perspective of the narration.
The reader is supposed to believe that Irene is a beautiful, loving, charming, gentle woman, betrayed by circumstance and abused by her husband (Soames does eventually turn on her), but I think she creates her own misfortune. She doesn’t deserve what happens to her, by any means, but she misjudged her husband just as he underestimated her.
A rather negative review, but I can see why JMM brought these characters into the discussion now!
August 2, 2008 at 4:25 pm
Thanks for the comments, Sarah! Based on the television series, I was quite sympathetic to Irene. I did feel some sympathy for Soames–he was a very sad person. They were almost a case study of a couple who shouldn’t be married because they can’t see things from each other’s perspective. But ultimately Soames’s possessiveness and treating Irene as a possession made it hard for me to like him. It’s a great illustration of the legal difficulties of marriage for a woman in that era.
July 2, 2011 at 7:38 pm
[...] at All About Romance just now about prostitute and courtesan heroines. It sent me back to a post I wrote here a couple of years ago and then reworked for History Hoydens. I thought this would be a good time to [...]