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Representing the Self: Arnold and Brontë on Rachel

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2008

Extract

Like Proust's Berma, Vashti in Charlotte Brontë's Villette is a literary image of an actress who was legendary to begin with. Rachel (1821–58), before Sarah Bernhardt, was “one of the greatest actresses France, or perhaps the world, has ever known.” Named Élisa- or Élisabeth-Rachel Félix at her birth, she chose to be called “Rachel” tout court, professionally, and only that name is carved on her monument in the Paris cemetery of Pere Lachaise – marking a victory of choice over accident, art over nature. Single like a queen's, the name reflects her singularity and also suggests her emblematic, hypostasized dimension, her status as an abstraction. “Mlle Rachel est un principe,” wrote one enthusiast of her time, arguing that she symbolized the theater.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1985

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References

1. The Oxford Companion to the Theatre, ed. Hartnell, Phyllis (London: Oxford University Press, 1957).Google Scholar

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35. Benjamin, Walter, in “Paris: Capital of the Nineteenth Century,” might be characterizing the remarkable popularity of Rachel the “Greek-soul'd artist” playing Racine in the nineteenth century. As if beginning to account for the sources of her myth, he writes that “it is precisely modernity that is always quoting primeval history. This happens through the ambiguity attending the social relationships and products of this epoch. Ambiguity is the pictorial image of dialectics, the law of dialectics seen at a standstill. This standstill is Utopia and the dialectic image therefore a dream image.” Benjamin sees this image presented “by the pure commodity: as fetish,” and by “the prostitute, who is saleswoman and wares in one” - as, one might argue, the actress is. Benjamin's essay is reprinted in Reflections, tr. Jephcott, Edmund (New York: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1979).Google Scholar