La Midinette, la cage et l’oiseau

The "midinette", a Parisian fashion worker, heir to the "grisette" who inspired writers, painters, engravers and sculptors, gave rise at the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries to numerous representations featuring her, alone or accompanied. These representations then...

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Main Author: Anne Monjaret
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Centre d´Histoire et Théorie des Arts 2025-05-01
Series:Images Re-Vues
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/imagesrevues/15133
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author Anne Monjaret
author_facet Anne Monjaret
author_sort Anne Monjaret
collection DOAJ
description The "midinette", a Parisian fashion worker, heir to the "grisette" who inspired writers, painters, engravers and sculptors, gave rise at the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries to numerous representations featuring her, alone or accompanied. These representations then remain in place for a long time. And among the symbolic attributes of particular interest to us here is the bird (or birds) and the cage. How can such an association be explained? What does this language of birds refer to? What does it tell us about this female figure? A canary in a cage, a pretty couple or a flock of sparrows - these scenes seem to paint a metaphorical picture of the moments in the life of this figure, in love and working, between a gendered and social confinement from which she is trying to free herself, and the freedom to emancipate herself and access another world. Are these images not the expression of a bourgeois and masculine morality, conveying norms of convenience?
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publisher Centre d´Histoire et Théorie des Arts
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series Images Re-Vues
spelling doaj-art-3f83bedfb2ae4f1a9cfdb246e86ab1142025-08-20T03:23:12ZfraCentre d´Histoire et Théorie des ArtsImages Re-Vues1778-38012025-05-012110.4000/140jlLa Midinette, la cage et l’oiseauAnne MonjaretThe "midinette", a Parisian fashion worker, heir to the "grisette" who inspired writers, painters, engravers and sculptors, gave rise at the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries to numerous representations featuring her, alone or accompanied. These representations then remain in place for a long time. And among the symbolic attributes of particular interest to us here is the bird (or birds) and the cage. How can such an association be explained? What does this language of birds refer to? What does it tell us about this female figure? A canary in a cage, a pretty couple or a flock of sparrows - these scenes seem to paint a metaphorical picture of the moments in the life of this figure, in love and working, between a gendered and social confinement from which she is trying to free herself, and the freedom to emancipate herself and access another world. Are these images not the expression of a bourgeois and masculine morality, conveying norms of convenience?https://journals.openedition.org/imagesrevues/15133representationmoralitycageconfinementgrisettemidinette
spellingShingle Anne Monjaret
La Midinette, la cage et l’oiseau
Images Re-Vues
representation
morality
cage
confinement
grisette
midinette
title La Midinette, la cage et l’oiseau
title_full La Midinette, la cage et l’oiseau
title_fullStr La Midinette, la cage et l’oiseau
title_full_unstemmed La Midinette, la cage et l’oiseau
title_short La Midinette, la cage et l’oiseau
title_sort la midinette la cage et l oiseau
topic representation
morality
cage
confinement
grisette
midinette
url https://journals.openedition.org/imagesrevues/15133
work_keys_str_mv AT annemonjaret lamidinettelacageetloiseau