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You won't find anything too personal here. Only articles about my main interests which randomly are: lolita fashion, dolly-kei, cult-party kei, mori kei, fashion, history, period movies, magical girls, fairytales, arts and litterature and many more. You can use the labels below to find posts that might catch your interest.

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Victorians and the aesthetic myth of children's purity.
mardi 26 août 2014
After a very long hiatus, I'm back with a new article. This time, I would like to address a very controversial subject which is how most Victorians upper-class poets, artists, men (mostly) regarded children. I'm no specialist on the subject and I only did a pretty light research, moreover it seems that scholars are still questioning the ambiguous relationship many Victorian artists had with young children. To put it in a nutshell, just consider this article as a summary of what I could gather on the subject by reading some essays on the subject.


"Heaven lies about us in our infancy!"
Most of you might have heard of Victorian children either through Lewis Carroll's Alice's adventures in Wonderland, James Barrie's Peter Pan or Charles Dickens' numerous novels. You might also know that during queen Victoria's long long reign over the British Empire, the number of children among the global UK population increased a lot, so queen Victoria was actually ruling over an average population composed of more than 1/3 of children under the age of 15. Many children had to work in factories or coal mines, which resulted in an increased child mortality rate (check Dickens' novels about working children, he knows what he's writing about as he, himself was sent to work in an infamous workhouse when he was a child).

But as many Victorians did not seem to mind the fact that children, sometimes under the age of 5, were working in factories, an increasing number of men and women seemed to consider childhood as a "sacred" or "golden" age. It seems that many Victorians revered children as innocent and pure and "unspoiled" beings who should be preserved and whom you enjoyed the company as a distraction from the ugly practical world and the stress, the quick industrialization of the country was putting on the Victorians' shoulders.

But even if Victorians seem to consider children as free from the constraints of their "materialistic" society as one can be, it seems that anything and everything (ranging from teacups to calendars, clothing and magazines) featuring children used to sell out very quickly. And stage plays featuring children used to be very popular as well even if in most of them, children were mostly used as "props" in the background and not acting properly.


Millais' "Cherry Ripe" (1879) and "Bubbles" (1886) were used by the Pears Soap Company on their boxes


"The cult of the Child"
The most controversial Victorian adult/child relationship to this day surely is Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (a.k.a. Lewis Carroll) and little Alice Liddell's one. After visiting an exhibition of Dodgson's photographic works in New-York, Vladimir Nabokov is reported to have said there was “a pathetic affinity” between the photographer and the pedophilic narrator of his novel Lolita... So was Lewis Carroll somebody you would not want children to get close to?


Some of the photos Dodgson took of the Liddell sisters (Lorina, Edith and Alice).

Charles Lutwidge Dodgson was a photography hobbyist. He took many photos throughout his life many of them seem to feature young children, especially girls, mostly his friends' or colleagues' children. The nature/subject of these photos coupled with writings taken from his diary and letters apparently became a subject of concern among some scholars.

The fact that Mrs Liddell, mother of Edith, Lorina and Alice coldly asked Dodgson to stop seing her children without supervision further fuels the idea that Dodgson must have had "impure" thoughts regarding the Liddell girls. The fact that a large part of his diary and many of his photos seem to have been voluntarily destroyed and that his family always declined interviews and to say anything about him even after his death rose a flag of suspicion over Dodgson's relationships with little girls, especially Alice Liddell, his favorite.


Other photos taken by Dodgson of the young girls he used to call his "child friends".

If we consider what I wrote above, it was not unusual for Victorian grown men and women to enjoy the view and company of children. And contrary to some of his contemporary fellow artists, Dodgson never acted on his aestetic tendency to enjoy the company and the view of little girls even if some of his writings might make our 21st century selves a bit "unconfortable". But it seems that most Victorians considered children as "asexual" beings, experiencing neither lust nor carnal desire. So even if Dodgson's feelings towards little girls might have been "impure" from our point of view, they were not especially considered as such in his times and he never seemed to have actually molested any child. Ernest Dowson for instance wrote many sonnets about little girls and even proposed to one of them when she was barely 14...


Further reading
- The Victorian child c.1837-1901 by Marah Gubar from the University of Pittsburgh.
- Lewis Carroll's shifting reputation by Jenny Woolf.
- The Victorian cult of the child from Plan Elfenbeinturm
- Lewis Carroll a myth in the making from the victorianweb.
- Victorian Children, a look into the life and times of Victorian children.
- Photographs of Alice Liddell, the inspiration for Alice in Wonderland.

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Quel rêve, ô pauvre Folle !
dimanche 4 mai 2014
Among Shakespearian ladies, Ophelia has always been my favourite. Mostly because Ophelia who first appears as the human incarnation of goodness and purity, so childlike and naïve, slowly falls into what the other characters of Hamlet consider as insanity : handling flowers she had gatherd in the folds of her dress to the courtesans and singing songs ; which eventually leads to her doubtful death by drwoning.


- Ophelia by Cot, Dicksee, Cabanel + not very Ophelia but much alike Paul Delaroche's "The young martyr" -


"Et l'Infini terrible éffara ton oeil bleu !"
The title I used is taken from Arthur Rimbaud's poem "Ophélie" that you can read below :

"Sur l'onde calme et noire où dorment les étoiles
La blanche Ophélia flotte comme un grand lys,
Flotte très lentement, couchée en ses longs voiles...
- On entend dans les bois lointains des hallalis.

Voici plus de mille ans que la triste Ophélie
Passe, fantôme blanc, sur le long fleuve noir
Voici plus de mille ans que sa douce folie
Murmure sa romance à la brise du soir

Le vent baise ses seins et déploie en corolle
Ses grands voiles bercés mollement par les eaux ;
Les saules frissonnants pleurent sur son épaule,
Sur son grand front rêveur s'inclinent les roseaux.

Les nénuphars froissés soupirent autour d'elle ;
Elle éveille parfois, dans un aune qui dort,
Quelque nid, d'où s'échappe un petit frisson d'aile :
- Un chant mystérieux tombe des astres d'or"

- Arthur Rimbaud, "Ophélie", Le Reliquaire, 1891.


Was Ophelia really insane ?! For some scholars, Hamlet, by his actions and words slowly drive Ophelia, the one he once loved, into madness as in his twisted mind, women are all bound to be harlots, hiding behind the guise of purity, repressed sexual desire and dark intentions.

On that account, Ophelia would be a perfect illustration of hysterical fits in Freud's psychiatric explanation of hysteria as a mental disease caused by repressed sexual desire. Shedding the psychiatric light on Ophelia, 19th century psychiatrists used her as a perfect illustration of hysteria or mental breakdown many young girls experience during adolescence.

Or does Ophelia use her so-called "madness" as a way to express her true feelings and sorrow, saying things she could not have been allowed to say, as a respectable woman in a patriarcal society ? Hence escaping the role the men who surround her: her father, Hamlet and her brother seem to confine her in : a "tool" for her father, both a loved-one and a subject of hate and disgust for Hamlet and the epitome of purity for her brother. All of them using her, having ulterior motives and an agenda of their own.

Insane or not, Ophelia seems to be meaningful for Pre-raphaelites painters. Ophelia's madness and tragic death seems to be a source of inspiration for many 19th century painters.


- Ophelia by Waterhouse, Millais and Arthur Hughes -


Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal, the Pre-raphaelites' Ophelia :
The most famous Pre-Raphaelite Ophelia definitely is Millais' Ophelia. Despite mixed reviews when it was first displayed in 1852 at the Royal Academy in London, Millais' Ophelia is his most famous painting.
Millais used then 19 years old Elizabeth Eleanor Siddal as a model for his Ophelia. He painted the landscape first and then had miss Siddal pose for long hours in a bathtub filled with water. Miss Siddal caught a cold and her father threatened to sue Millais as he held him responsible for her daughter's disease. Millais agreed to pay the doctor's bill and as miss Siddal recovered from her cold, everything was amiably settled.

Let me tell you more about Lizzie Siddal. She was born in 1829 and died in 1862. Her life story is both captivating and sad. She was born in an "upper class" labourer's family. Lizzie started to work for a milliner and she was spotted by the painter Deverell who used her as a model and introduced her to the Pre-Raphaelites. So she became one of the most famous Pre-Raphaelite model.
She especially caught Dante Gabriel Rosetti's interest in 1849 and she started modelling exclusively for Rosetti. They started then started a pretty complicated : Lizzie spent long hours at Rosetti's place, which, in 19th century Great-Britain meant that she could not marry a respectable man as she was considered as Rosetti's mistress. The problem is that Rosetti could not make his mind and it took him 10 years to finally propose to Elizabeth.

Elizabeth was very anxious over this relationship which was the cause of her ill-health. She fell into severe depression, being often very ill and using her ill-health as a mean to keep Rosetti close. Having many fits of melancholy and refusing to eat anything when she was afraid he might leave her and fall for a younger and prettier muse.
Lizzie was also addicted to laudanum, a mix of alchohol and opium which was prescribed by doctors to cure everything back then. She died of an overdose of laudanum in 1862. Her death was ruled as accidental but it actually was a suicide. Rosetti who discoverd her dying wife found a suicide note he burned before calling the doctors. As suicide was considered as shameful and would have bared Lizzie from a Christian burial.

Elizabeth was an artist herself. She wrote poems and painted and did several sketches. Ruskin, a Pre-Raphaelite brotherhood supporter, encouraged Lizzie to pursue a carreer in art. But her undecisive husband Dante Gabriel Rosetti's works unfortunately overshadow Lizzie's artistic productions.


- Steven Meisel, "The cult of beauty" for Vogue US (2011) -


Further reading :
- "Pregnant with madness" an essay about Ophelia's madness by Yi-Chi Chen.
- References to Ophelia in paintings, litteratures and movies.
- Pre-Raphaelite sisterhood, a very interesting blog about Pre-Raphalite themes.
- Ophelia learning ressources, a thorough examnination of Millais' Ophelia.
- Lizzie Siddal, victorian supermodel, a very interesting entry about Lizzie Siddal's life on Scandalous Women.
- Lizzie Siddal, a website dedicated to Lizzie Siddal's works, curated by the owner of Pre-Raphaelite sisterhood.

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Little Snow White
vendredi 25 avril 2014
Schneewittchen or Little Snow White is my favourite Grimm fairytale. As much as I love Disney's version of the tale, I still prefer the fairytale that was read to me when I was a child, especially because it's actually much longer than Disney's version and much darker on many levels.


- Illustration by sizh -



Plot variations
In Disney's version and in Grimm's most known version of the tale, Snow-White's main antagonist is her stepmother as her birthmother died in childbirth. But in Grimm's first edition of the tale, it's actually Snow White's mother who's jealous of her own's daughter beauty and youth and tries to take her down by having her killed and eating her heart in order to steal her youth and beauty.

Most of the time, only one of the many means used by Snow White's mother/stepmother is known: the famous poison apple. But the wicked queen actually used several means to have Snow White killed before the final apple trick. Let's list them in order:
- The stay-laces: the queen disguises herself as an old pedler-woman selling stay-ribbons. Little Snow White upon seeing the pretty ribbons, lets the disguised queen enter the dwarves' cottage and also lets her lace her corset/stay properly. Upon doing so, the wicked queen ties Snow White's stays so tightly that it suffocates her. But the dwarves free Snow White by cutting the laces and she's alive again.
- The poisoned comb: the queen disguises herself again and goes to Snow White, handling her a such a beautiful comb that little Snow White cannot resist and decides she has to have a closer look at that comb and she lets the queen in and lets her comb her hair. But as soon as the queen had put the comb in Snow White's hair that the poison took effect and she fell as if dead. But the dwarves remove the comb from Snow White's hair and she's alive again.
- The poison apple: the famous one... You know what happened then. But it's not the prince's kiss who relived her. The dwarves did not have the heart to burry Snow White as she was still looking very beautiful and as if still alive. So they kept her in a glass coffin. And a prince going through the forest stumbled upon the coffin and fell in love with what appeared to be a corpse (yes that's disturbing...) and begged the dwarves to let him Snow White to his castle. He begged so much that the dwarves agreed and the prince had his servants carry her on their shoulders. But they stumbled on a tree stump and by doing so, the poisonous apple bite which was stuck into Snow White's throat came out and so she was alive again.

As a punishment for being so cruel to her, Snow White, now queen had red hot iron slippers cast especially for her mother/stepmother and when the wicked queen came to the wedding, she was forced to wear these slippers and dance until she dropped dead. So much for an innocent and kind little princess...



Interpretations and adaptations of the tale
The fact that in most folk-tale versions of this tale, it's Snow White's own mother who wants her dead is meaningful because as Bruno Bettelheim states, Snow White states the "classic" mother/daughter conflict and is kind of cathartic for the child when he discovers the cruel destiny of the wicked queen.

To my greatest delight, many writers and artists were inspired by this famous tale. My favourite modern take on this tale would be Neil Gaiman's Snow, glass, apples which artfuly mixes several genres: vampire stories, fantasy and fairytale materials and is told from Snow White's stpemother's point of view and where the evil one might not be the one you think of. Angela Carter also included several short stories inspired by Snow White in The Bloody Chamber.


Mangaka were also inspired by Snow White. My favourte manga adaptation sure is Yuki Kaori's first chapter of Ludwig Kakumei. It might not please everyone but if you enjoy Yuki Kaori's wicked stories, you'll probably like it. It shares many aspects of Gaiman's take on the tale. Snow White also has a chapter in Dictatorial grimoire by Kanou Ayumi.

Snow White's story has been adapted for cinema several times as well. The most recent releases being "Mirror Mirror" - which is pretty funny and tongue in cheek, with a dash of Bollywood drama (see for yourself here) - and "Snow White and the huntsman" - which I actually did not like at all for so many reasons I should just stop here otherwise this post would turn into a looong rant -.



Snow White in lolita
Snow White is also quite a popular fairytale in the lolita world as the tale has been used on many prints or photoshoots in various magazines already. Baby the Stars Shine Bright seems to especially like this fairytale as they've been releasing several Snow White prints over the years (1 - 2 - 3 - 4).


- Victorian Maiden, Innocent World, Baby the Stars Shine Bright -




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魔法少女になりたい!
jeudi 24 avril 2014
I'm not planning to write a comprehensive entry about the Magical girl genre as many more documented bloggers already did it (see: here, there or there for instance). Just a quick reminder though: Magical girls usually are young girls or teenagers who can transform (変身/'henshin') into a magical being and use magic powers or abilities.


- Some of Sailor Moon henshin brooches -

Most of the time, magical girls manga or anime are targeting a young audience, mostly girls who can relate to the young heroine, providing a wide range of merchandising and "goodies" little girls, or rather their parents can buy. Because magical girls often use compacts or special items to transform and always have a cute sidekick which would make a great plush...


Let's have fun and win love and make friends!
The first category of magical girls which appealed to me mostly when I was still a child (and still appeal to the childish part of my inner self), are what I would call the "carefree" magical girls. They might still fight evil forces but it's mostly for a "selfish" motive.


- Creamy Mami (1983), Full Moon wo Sagashite (2002), Ojamajo Doremi (1999), Sugar Sugar Rune (2004) -

In most of mahou shoujo manga which follow that plot line, the young heroine either want to become a successful idol (Creamy Mami), become a better witch or the witch queen (Ojamajo Doremi or Sugar Sugar Rune which is more mature than the earlier in many aspects though), win the heart or reach out to the one they love (Full moon wo sagashite or Mermaid Melody Pichi Pichi Pitch). Most of the time, the main character is either very clumsy (MMPP) and clueless or a tomboy (Creamy or Chocolat) but pretty bubbly, positive and friendly.
Plotwise, the tension resides in the secret identity of the magical girl and the fact that the one they love often falls in love with their magical form while totally disregarding their "regular" form. In the end, there rarely are any surprise: the young heroine gets the boy and wins the crown or whatever she was after to begin with.

What is particularly appealing to me in this kind of "mahou shoujo substyle", is that being a magical girl might probably have been the dream of every little girl or teenager. Who never dreamed of having super powers which could allow you to turn your very average self into a wonderful perfect being? (if you say you never wished that, you're probably lying...)


Let's show everyone how powerful and able we are!
So let me tell you more about my absolute and unconditional love for Sailor Moon. First published in 1992, I bet you know the story already, but if you don't go here. I'm talking about the manga, not the anime, because I don't like what the original anime did with some characters. Especially Rei Hino / Sailor Mars who happens to be my favourite character, turning her into a kind of super hot-tempered, often ill manered girl, always yelling at Usagi for everything and nothing...


- Inner and Outer Senshis -

Well, to put it simply, Sailor Moon is basically a "sentai for girl". But what I love so much about this manga is that it shows how the characters evolve subtly through the years. At the begining of the manga, the main characters are all 14 while at the end they're 18. It teaches you that no matter how you are, you can still be powerful and achieve great things. You can be a teenage crybaby, clumsy and lazy like Usagi and still can grow into a beautiful lady on all levels. You can be very intelligent and reserved like Ami but still be a fierce fighter and do everything in your powers to help the ones you love and care about. You can be a hopeless romantic and enjoy baking cakes like Makoto, but still be one of the strongest and trustworthy senshi. You can be a very cold, distant and elegant girl like Rei and still learn to trust your friends and open to others. You can also be very careless, care only about boys, idols, sports and food like Minako but still be one of the most powerful and turstworthy sailor senshis.

Moreover, I like how the manga deals with gender roles (after all, even if Mamoru is always supportive and has healing powers, he still can do nothing without Usagi), all kinds of love (see here or there) and genderbending. I think that if this franchise still appeals so much to mahou shoujo amateurs, it's because it contains meaningful messages. You can of course read it only as a good entertainment, well-built shoujou manga, but for me it contains more than just girls who transform into senshis and fight evil to save the planet.


It's cute and all, but then, something dreadful happens and then it becomes a CLAMP manga...
I reserved a special place for the 2 magical girls series studio CLAMP created. Because as my tongue in cheek title states it, CLAMP mangas are hard to categorize because they often share many aspects of various manga genres and often are some kind of "UFOs".


- Cardcaptor Sakura (1996), Magic Knight Rayhearth (1993) -

Magic Knight Rayearth starts like a rather traditional mahou shoujo manga: 3 schoolgirls visiting Tokyo Tower are suddenly transported into a magical world where they learn they're Magic Knights from the legend, they have elemental powers based on fire, wind and water and that they have to kill what they're told is an evil wizard who keeps the princess, ruler of the magic world captive. Pretty boring huh?! Well, don't forget it's a CLAMP manga, there's a twist somewhere. I don't want to spoil you though! So read it if you wish, it's very good in my opinion, despite the fact that it actually should have ended "badly" but due to the readers' disappointment at such a sad ending, CLAMP had to write a sequel which is far less interesting than the 1st arc of the manga in my opinion.

Cardcaptor Sakura is more like your traditional mahou shoujo. Sakura is cute, good at sports, very friendly and has a soft spot for her big brother's best friend. So she's a regular Japanese school girl, but she accidently discovers she has magic powers and blablabla. You probably know the story anyway! What's so interesting in this manga is not the magical girl aspect of it, well, in my opinion, it's how CLAMP manages to send powerful messages through an apparently very cute story. Cardcaptor Sakura teaches you that there are many different kinds of love and that age, gender, distance or cultural differences don't matter when it comes to love. (though the relationship between Lika and the head teacher of Sakura's division is a bit more problematic in a western point of view. Kaho x Eliol doesn't really count as Eliol voluntarily kept a very young appearance to be able to reach to Sakura).


Darker plots and parodies
Lately, the magical girl trend seems to have changed quite a lot since its origins. The plots are becoming more and more complex and often try to show the "darker" sides and reponsibilities being a magical girl implies. See Puella Magi Madoka Magica for instance. Or even Shojo Kakumei Utena. Both anime display violence, both psychological and physical and sometimes dwelve into the "horror" genre.


- Shojo Kakumei Utena (1996), Puella Magi Madoka Magica (2011), Magical Witch Punie-chan (2002), Panty and Stocking with Garterbelt (2010)

And the genre is even somtimes poking fun at its "clichés" like in Magical Witch Punie-chan or in Panty and Stocking with Garterbelt. Both are aimed for an older target. Magical Witch Punie-chan bends all of the mahou shoujo "clichés". Punie is sent to Earth to prove that she has all the qualities required to become the ruler of her home planet. Punie is a bubbly, cute and clueless young girl in appearance, but she can turn into a merciless and even cruel fighter if provoked. Her "cute" mascot is in fact trying to attempt at Punie's life every time he gets a chance and seems to display two polar opposite personnalities... Oh and Punie's incantation is "Lyrical tokarev, Kill them all!". How cute! Check it here if you wish.


Interesting links
- "Magical girls" playlists on 8 tracks.
- Sailormoon themed tumblrs.
- The magical girl project (another tumblr).
- Emily's Magical girls page.
- Sailormoon collectibles (as its name states).


So, any thoughts? Agree or disagree?
What's your favourite magical girl manga and why?

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La Belle et la Bête, a true story?
mercredi 23 avril 2014
I bet you've already heard of this famous fairytale, at least you might have watched Disney's rendition of this French fairytale. The tale was firstly published in 1740, written by Madame Barbot de Villeneuve, but the most know rendition of the tale was written by Madame Leprince de Beaumont in 1757, she actually abriged and rewrote Barbot de Villeneuve's tale.

Let me tell you more about "La Bête", In most illustrations, he's represented as a lion-like creature, grotesque in appearance, half animal, half human. In Madame de Villeneuve's tale, the Beast appears stupid to Beauty due to the enchantment that has been cast on him by an evil fairy. But in most versions of the tale, the Beast is actually wise and gentle, a true gentleman despite his horrible appearance. It seems like the fairytale was inspired by a "real story".


- Illustrations by Edmund Dulac, Mercer Mayer, Scott Gustafson, H.M. Brock -


Petrus Gonsalvus, the "wildman of the woods" (1537-1618)
Petrus Gonsalvus, or rather Pedro Gonzales, was born in the Canary islands in 1537. He was born with hypertrichosis or "werewolf syndrome" which resulted in an abnormal amount of hair growing all over his body.
Due to this rare genetic disease, he was soon sold to a circus, being brought from one place to another, where he was considered as a mmonstruosity provoking both disgust and fascination. He was finally sent to the court of the French king Henri II (1519-1559) when he was about 10 years old. At that time, many philosophers and writters were fascinated by the "myth" of the "Wild man" and Henri II was also very interested in this "monster" looking like half a man and half a monkey.

King Henri II decided to keep this "creature" whose name he had latinized as "Petrus Gonsalvus" and made him his "protégé". Most courtesans were afraid the wildman might turn into a werewolf and tear the castle appart, but much to their "disappointment", Petrus did not act wild at all! Au contraire, he was so gentle and nice, that Henri II decided to make an "experiment": he decided to "civilize" Petrus, he had the best masters teach him everything a French gentleman from the Renaissance era should know: latin, history, geography... And to his masters' greatest surprise, Petrus was very good at everything he was taught despite his bestial appearance.

When king Henri II died, as his sons were too young to rule by themselves, his widow, Catherine de Medicis was then designed regent of the young king François II. Catherine decided to carry on the "experiment" her late husband had started. She wanted to find a wife for Petrus. Around 1572, Petrus is married to Catherine Raffelin, daughter of a lesser noble man serving at the court. They had 7 children, 4 of them inherited their father's condition. They made the regent queen very proud and many princes from all over Europe wanted to see the family or have one of the children given to them, as the Gonsalvus were still not considered as human beings but as animals or some kind of educated monsters who had no human feelings.


- The Gonsalvus family by Ulisse Aldrovandi, Lavinia Fontana, Joris Hoefnagel and an anonymous German artist -


In 1589, when Catherine de Medicis died, the Gonsalvus fell into disgrace and they exiled themselves in Italy where they found "shelter" at the Farnese court in Parma. There, the were studied by Ulisse Aldrovandi and some of their children were given away as gifts to the Farnese's friends. Despite this pretty cruel destiny, it seems that the couple formed by Petrus and Catherine was happy. Catherine had apparently learned to love Petrus despite his appearance, achieving to see the beauty of this educated and gentle man hidden by this large amount of hair.

It's highly possible that this real story actually was the origin of the tale "Beauty and the Beast". In the end, the Beast did not transform into an actual handsome prince, but kept the same appearance but his true nature and inner beauty made Beauty fall in love with him (not to mention that in most versions of the tale, Beauty seems almost disappointed by the appearance of the handsome prince her love freed from the enchantment).



Other intresting interpretations of the tale
- "The courtship of Mr Lyon" in The bloody chamber by Angela Carter (the beast also has the appearance of a humanoid lion and he doesn't turn into a prince at the end of the tale)
- "La Belle et la Bête" 1946 film by Jean Cocteau (my favourite "Beauty and the Beast" movie ever).
- "La Belle et la Bête" 2014 film by Christophe Gans (not as eerie and fascinating than Cocteau's film but beautiful sets and mostly a retelling of the tale, loosely based on Madame de Villeneuve's tale).
- "Gonsalvus : Ou la véritable histoire de la Belle et la Bête" by Julian Pösler for ARTE (in French).

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La Barbe bleue and the Blood Countess
lundi 21 avril 2014
Let's talk about 2 controversial historic figures whose very special life story inspired many tales and horror stories: Gilles de Rais and Báthory Erzsébet. The only thing those two have in common, save from their fictional legacy, is that they're both said to be serial killers. You must have heard of Báthory Erzsébet already as she's mostly known today for supposedly being a "vampire" but you may not have heard of Gilles de Rais if you're not French or don't really know about Medieval history. Gilles de Rais is said to be the man who inspired Perrault's "Barbe bleue".


Gilles de Rais (1404-1440)
Gilles de Rais was a Breton knight, he was a companion in arms of Joan of Arc and a commander of the French army during the 100 years' war. Gilles de Rais was fierce in battle but according to many contemporary sources he seemed to be well liked by the king Charles VII and by Joan of Arc. He was devout and generous but seemed to be pretty uncontrollable sometimes, spending very large amounts of money in fine clothing and jewellery.


Gilles de Rais by Eloi Firmin (19th century) - Vincent Cassel as Gilles de Rais in "The Messenger"


In 1440, Gilles de Rais was arrested and found guilty of a count of about 60 gruesome murders of children whose age was ranging from 6 to 18. Both of his bodyservants and said accompliced confessed the crimes, adding very gruesome details, and peasants from the neigbouring villages said that they had seen many children going through the gates of Gilles' castle and were never seen again. He was also charged with sodomy and heresy and was sentenced to death by hanging and burning.

Nowadays the veracity of Gilles de Rais' guiltiness is subject to controversy. The bodyservants' confessions were indeed obtained through torture, and both the Church and the duke of Britany, who was the secular judge at Gilles' trial, really wanted him dead as they both had much to gain from it (the bishop of Nantes did not like Gilles and they were often fighting and the duke of Britany wanted Gilles' territory for his own). So much for the so-called serial killer...


Erzsébet Báthory (1560-1614)
Erzsébet was an educated woman who could read and speak 4 languages. She was married to Ferenc Nadasdy when she was only 14. While her husband was at war (fighting against the Ottomans), Erzsébet had to manage her husband's huge estate by herself and she was apparently very good at it. After her husband's passing, in 1604, Erzsébet found herself to be the most powerful widow of Hungary.


Anna Friel in "Báthory"


Between 1602 and 1604, rumors reached the court in Vienna, these rumors said that several young girls living near the countess' castle had been reported missing. King Mathias II assigned György Thurzo to investigate. Several witnesses were questionned and most of them said that many young girls had been lured to Csejte castle by offers of well-paid work. Some witnesses added that the young girls were tortured in several ways and killed or left to starve to death. It seemed that the count of her victims was more than 600, Erzsébet would then be the most prolific serial killers of history. The countess was never put on trial for her "crimes" tbough as her powerful family had her imprisonned in her own castle, immured in a set of rooms while her accomplices were put to death and burned.

Later, Erzsébet's story inspired many legends and tales. Some say she used to bleed her victims and bath in their blood to retain her beauty and youth. She was then associated with the vampire myths. Nowadays it seems that Erzsébet was most likely not as sadistic or as prolific as she was said to be. Some historians tend to consider she was "evicted" by the king Mathias II mostly because he owed her a great amount of money he could not pay back. Moreover, Erzsébeth was a powerful and educated woman in a country and society ruled by men so she was not really kindly considered by her male counterparts.

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Beauty is only skin deep
mercredi 16 avril 2014
Beauty ideals evolved a lot through the course of history. For instance, a woman considered "beautiful" nowadays would have been deemed as "ugly" according to the 17th century standards when being "plump" was a sign of good health and "pale", a sign of nobility and wealth.
I don't pretend to write a very elaborate entry about the evolution beauty ideals through the ages as whole books have been written on the subject already. But I just wanted to share some of my discoveries concerning make-up and generally "crazy" and unealthy things women would do for the sake of being considered "beautiful".


Antiquity beauty ideals
Light skin has almost always been considered beautiful as it was a sign of your rank in society (only the ones who had to work to earn their living had tanned kin) and it was indeed the case in Greek/Roman/Egyptian times. To make their skin look whiter/paler, women used foundation made of a mix of fat, oil and white lead or Venetian ceruse.
The problem is that lead and ceruse are highly toxic and can cause very heavy damage to your body, causing among other health hazards: scars, damage to your nervous system, brain disorders and plain blood poisoning due to the accumulation of lead in your body through your skin.


Middle Ages & Renaissance beauty ideals
Pale skin was a must for noble ladies (just as it was before). Showing your hair and applying makeup were considered "sinful" and associated with prostitutes and actresses. But noble and wealthy women sometimes used foundation mixed with mercury (another highly poisonous metal). And some went so far as to bleed themselves to appear paler! Medieval women would also pluck or shave their forehead and eyebrows to widen their brow as it was considered beautiful.
Agnès Sorel, mistress of French king Charles VII, was considered as the most beautiful lady of her times (see below, bottom right picture) and she died of Mercury poisoning after giving birth. Some considered she had been vonluntarily poisoned but it rather seems that she ingested a lot of heavy metals during her life such as mercury or gold which were considered to be good for health and beauty (which was indeed not the case).


Beauty ideals during Renaissance (Primavera), Middle Ages (Agnès Sorel) and Victorian era (queen Victoria)


18th century & Victorian beauty ideals
Pale skin is still a must. As you can see in the Victorian ads below, most of the foundation used during the Victorian era was highly poisonous, mixing arsenic, mercury with lead. The use of these poisonous mix raised concern among the medical community as it caused some women's death!
Dilated pupils were also considered as beautiful and attractive, so women used belladonna drops to make their pupils bigger but it caused visual distortion, increased heart rate and even blindness if used regularly.



Interesting links to learn more about beauty ideals
- Evolution of corsetry and its impact on health.
- Suffering for beauty - Killer cosmetics through the ages.
- Regency cosmetics.
- History of beauty review of Umberto Ecco's book.
- Victorian era beauty tips for the lolita.


So, what's your opinion about all of this. Nowadays, women still do pretty "crazy" and unealthy things to appear beautiful (examples: 1 - 2 - 3 and many more...). Any thoughts about this?

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Dancing is silent poetry (Simonides)
samedi 12 avril 2014

When I was a little girl, one of my dreams was, how original, to become a ballerina, or rather a "danseuse étoile". I was not really conscious of how much work and dedication was behind these two words, I just liked the way they sounded as in my childish mind, it meant that I would someday be able to dance among the stars, I mean litteraly, in the middle of the night sky.



Fashion editorial by ELLE Sweden featuring dancers from the Swedish Royal Ballet



I practiced ballet for a very long time but I'm not a very good dancer, ballet was just the sport I enjoyed the most. What remain from that part of my child and teenage years is a taste for ballet-inspired photos or fashion editorials, a love for tutus, tulle and soft pink and a strange and probably very unhealthy fascination for the instrument of torure called "pointe shoes".



Ballet editorial for Vogue Girl Korea


Luckily for me, I'm not the only one who seems to find ballet-inspired fashion appealing. I suppose you probably heard of the brand Repetto. I remember when my mother first took me to the Repetto shop rue de la Paix in Paris. Back then the shop employees were all wearing dance attire. Today, Repetto still does dance wear but it's mostly known for being a high-street (but pretty expensive) fashion brand.
Some ballet-inspired accessories are sometimes used by well-known stylists. Such as the pointe shoes worn by the models for Junko Shimada's spring 2009 collection (see below). The seem to be pretty unconfortable and must be overpriced though.




Fortunately for me/us, melissa the famous Brasilian brand released ballet flats which actually look like pointe shoes. And they're pretty affordable (found them going for about £60 on several webstores). They even made a high-heel version which looks like Junko Shimada's shoes.





Ballet also is a mostif often used in lolita. Metamorphose, Bssb, Angelic Pretty (Ballerina print + Etoile twins) all made Swan Lake inspired prints and Juliette et Justine released a "Copelia" dress, a "Ballerine" and their latest release also is strongly ballerina inspired and named "robe de ballerine fascinante", even if it's a bit too much of a tutu / "ballerina costume" to be worn as lolita dress in my opinion.
Many lolita shoes are also reminiscent of ballet shoes. Angelic Pretty's tea party shoes for instance or Bssb's "Odette toe shoes" or Alice and the Pirates "Prima shoes" and so on. Not to mention Angelic Pretty's famous ballerina socks.


So, what do you think about ballet-inspired coordinations either in lolita or in other fashion styles? And what's your opinion about the shoes? Would you wear them or is it a "no"?

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La belle au bois dormant / Sleeping Beauty
vendredi 11 avril 2014
As my blog layout is currently Sleeping beauty-themed I though I'd start my fairytales-related entries with that one. You probably know Disney's take on Sleeping Beauty but it's a seriously toned-down and "soft" version of this famous fairytale.

Origins and alternative versions of the tale
There are many similarities between a French 14th century tale called Perceforest. It's also believed that Il Pentamerone (1636) contained an early version of "Sleeping Beauty" which strongly influenced Charles Perrault's famous tales. The Grimm brothers published another version of Sleeping Beauty: Briar Rose which is VERY tame and which I belived is the version used for Disney's movie and the one most people heard of: at the end of the tale, the Prince kisses the sleeping princess awake (and they live happily ever after)...



Illustrations by Edmond Dulac, Arthur Rackham, Edward Frederick Brewtnall, Edward Burne-Jones, Herbert Cole


Perrault's version of Sleeping Beauty
First of all, Perrault did not write for children, like La Fontaine's well-knowed Fables they were just a way to avoid censorship and to send messages to the nobility living at king Louis XIV's court. Hence Perrault's tale does not stop when the sleeping princess wakes-up.
After the princess wakes-up, she marries the prince and they have several children. But the prince's mother actually is an ogre and while the prince is away she asks her cook to kill every one of her grand children and cook them for dinner. The cook who does not have the courage to kill the innocent children, instead hide them and gives fawns to the ogre. But she's still not satisfied and asks the cook to kill her daughter-in-law and cook her for dinner. The cook who's a good man decides not to kill the princess and hides her and gives the old queen some deer for dinner.
But some day, as the princess and her children are playing, hidden in the cook's house, the old queen hears them and have them brought. She then decides not to eat them but to throw them in a pit filled with snakes. But as she intends to do so, the prince comes back from war or whatever he was away for... And in rage and fear of punishment, the old queen jumps in the pit and dies. THE END. This version is pretty dark as cannibalism is a theme which has been often forgotten in most children's books.

Alternative version of Sleeping Beauty (NSFW)
In other older and alternative versions of the tale, as in Perceforest, the prince discovers the sleeping princess while hunting in the woods. He falls in love with her and then instead of trying to wake her up, he just rapes her. Yes, he rapes her in her sleep and he comes back several time, not telling anyone what/who lied in the midst of the woods. The princess soon gets pregnant and gives brith, still not waking-up. But her child getting hungry grabs one of her mother's finger and starts sucking on it hence removing the pin which had condemned her to eternal slumber. The princess then woke-up and the prince who had come to the woods again discovers the princess awake with their child and decides to marry her (how convenient)!




Sleeping Beauty used in lolita: Bssb, Angelic Pretty, Hanuli and Infanta


Sleeping Beauty in other media
As seen above, Sleeping beauty has been used in lolita several times by differnt brands and is a reccurent theme as many other fairytales (Juliette et Justine also made a Rpbe de la belle au bois dormant).
You might also have heard of the ballet based on Sleeping Beauty. The music was composed by Tchaikovsky and the choregraphy created by Marius Petipa. Disney's movie uses some of Tchaikovsky's music in their animated movie. The ballet is pretty famous and the part of Princess Aurora is quite a challenge for dancers, especially its Rose adagio which is one of the most difficult variation.
Edward Burne-Jones made a several paintings based on Sleeping beauty: "The legend of Briar Rose". Each panel comes with a poem written by William Morris.
Sleeping beauty is also sometimes used as a motif in fashion editorials even if it's not the most used fairytale in fashion (see below).



Credits: Dakota Fanning by Karl Lagerfeld, Ad for Harrods by Patrick Naik, Annie Leibovitz for Disney

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