Charles-Marie-Georges Huysmans (US: /wsˈmɒ̃s/,[1] French: [ʃaʁl maʁi ʒɔʁʒ ɥismɑ̃s]; 5 February 1848 – 12 May 1907) was a French novelist and art critic who published his works as Joris-Karl Huysmans (French: [ʒɔʁis kaʁl -], variably abbreviated as J. K. or J.-K.). He is most famous for the novel À rebours (1884, published in English as Against the Grain and as Against Nature). He supported himself by way of a 30-year career in the French civil service.

Joris–Karl Huysmans
Huysmans, c. 1895
Huysmans, c. 1895
BornCharles-Marie-Georges Huysmans
(1848-02-05)5 February 1848
Paris, France
Died12 May 1907(1907-05-12) (aged 59)
Paris, France
OccupationNovelist
Literary movement
Notable works
Signature

Huysmans's work is considered remarkable for its idiosyncratic use of the French language, large vocabulary, descriptions, satirical wit and far-ranging erudition. First considered part of Naturalism, he became associated with the Decadent movement with his publication of À rebours. His work expressed his deep pessimism,[2] which had led him to the philosophy of Arthur Schopenhauer.[3] In later years, his novels reflected his study of Catholicism, religious conversion, and becoming an oblate. He discussed the iconography of Christian architecture at length in La cathédrale (1898), set at Chartres and with its cathedral as the focus of the book.

Huysmans' novel Là-bas (1891) concerns the novelist Durtal, who researches Satanism and the 15th-century child-murderer Gilles de Rais. It was followed by the Durtal trilogy,[4] comprising En route (1895), La cathédrale (1898), and L'Oblat (1903), in which Durtal takes a spiritual journey and eventually converts to Catholicism; in L'Oblat, he becomes an oblate in a monastery, as Huysmans himself was in the Benedictine Abbey at Ligugé, near Poitiers, in 1901.[5][6] La cathédrale was his most commercially successful work. Its profits enabled Huysmans to retire from his civil service job and live on his royalties.

Biography

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Early life

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Huysmans was born in Paris, France, in 1848. "His young mother, Élisabeth-Malvina Badin Huysmans, had been a schoolteacher before she married, and his father, Victor-Godfried-Jan Huysmans [Dutch: Huijsmans], was a Dutch immigrant who worked in Paris as a commercial artist."[7][8] Huysmans's father (1815-1856) died when Huysmans was eight years old. Constant Cornelis Huijsmans, the Dutch painter and art teacher (including of Vincent van Gogh), was his uncle.[9][10] Huysmans mother quickly remarried, and Huysmans resented his stepfather, Jules Og, a Protestant who, with Huysmans's mother, purchased a bookbindery on the ground floor of the building where they lived.[11]

During his childhood, Huysmans turned away from the Roman Catholic Church. He was unhappy at school but completed his coursework and earned a baccalauréat.

 
Portray of Huysmans by Louis Félix Beschere (1886)

Civil service career

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For 32 years, Huysmans worked as a civil servant for the French Ministry of the Interior, a job he found tedious. The young Huysmans was called up to fight in the Franco-Prussian War, but was invalided out with dysentery. He used this experience in an early story, "Sac au dos" (Backpack) (later included in his collection, Les Soirées de Médan).

After his retirement from the Ministry in 1898, made possible by the commercial success of his novel, La cathédrale, Huysmans planned to leave Paris and move to Ligugé. He intended to set up a community of Catholic artists, including Charles-Marie Dulac (1862-1898). He had praised the young painter in La cathédrale. Dulac died a few months before Huysmans completed his arrangements for the move to Ligugé, and he decided to stay in Paris.

In 1905 Huysmans was diagnosed with cancer of the mouth. He died in 1907 and was interred in the cimetière du Montparnasse, Paris.

 
Huysmans's grave
 
A portrait of Huysmans, by Jean-Louis Forain, c. 1878 (Musée d'Orsay)

Writing career

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He used the name Joris-Karl Huysmans when he published his writing, as a way of honoring his father's ancestry. His first major publication was a collection of prose poems, Le drageoir aux épices (1874), which were strongly influenced by Baudelaire. They attracted little attention but revealed flashes of the author's distinctive style.

Huysmans followed it with the novel, Marthe, Histoire d'une fille (1876). The story of a young prostitute, it was closer to Naturalism and brought him to the attention of Émile Zola. His next works were similar: sombre, realistic and filled with detailed evocations of Paris, a city Huysmans knew intimately. Les Sœurs Vatard (1879), dedicated to Zola, deals with the lives of women in a bookbindery. En ménage (1881) is an account of a writer's failed marriage. The climax of his early work is the novella À vau-l'eau (1882) (translated as With the Flow, Downstream, and Drifting), the story of a downtrodden clerk, Monsieur Folantin, and his quest for a decent meal.

 
A caricature showing Huysmans as a somewhat eccentric sort of literary dandy, by Coll-Toc, 1885

Huysmans's 1884 novel À rebours (Against the Grain or Against Nature or Wrong Way) became his most famous, or notorious. It featured the character of an aesthete, des Esseintes, and decisively broke from Naturalism. It was seen as an example of "decadent" literature. The description of des Esseintes's "alluring liaison" with a "cherry-lipped youth" was believed to have influenced other writers of the decadent movement, including Oscar Wilde.[12]

Huysmans began to drift away from the Naturalists and found new friends among the Symbolist and Catholic writers whose work he had praised in À rebours. They included Jules Barbey d'Aurevilly, Villiers de L'Isle Adam, and Léon Bloy. Stéphane Mallarmé was so pleased with the publicity his verse had received from the novel that he dedicated one of his most famous poems, "Prose pour des Esseintes", to its hero. Barbey d'Aurevilly told Huysmans that after writing À rebours, he would have to choose between "the muzzle of a pistol and the foot of the Cross."[13] Huysmans, who had received a secular education and abandoned his Catholic religion in childhood, returned to the Catholic Church eight years later.[14]

Huysmans's next book after Á rebours was the novella Un dilemme, which tells "the story of a poor working-class woman who gives birth out of wedlock. When her bourgeois lover, the father of the baby, dies, his heartless family members refuse to help, leaving the mother and her child destitute."[15] Huysmans next novel, En rade, an unromantic account of a summer spent in the country, did not sell as well as its predecessor. "The novel's originality lies in its abrupt juxtaposition of real life and dreams."[16]

His Là-bas (1891) attracted considerable attention for its portrayal of Satanism in France in the late 1880s.[17][18] He introduced the character Durtal, a thinly disguised self-portrait. The later Durtal novels, En route (1895), La cathédrale (1898) and L'oblat (1903), explore Durtal/Huysmans's conversion to Roman Catholicism.[19] En route depicts Durtal's spiritual struggle during his stay at a Trappist monastery. In La cathédrale (1898), the protagonist is at Chartres, intensely studying the cathedral and its symbolism. The commercial success of this book enabled Huysmans to retire from the civil service and live on his royalties. In L'Oblat, Durtal becomes a Benedictine oblate. He finally learns to accept the world's suffering.

In addition to his novels, Huysmans was known for his art criticism in his books L'Art Moderne (1883)[20][21] and Certains (1889). An early advocate of Impressionism, he admired such artists as Gustave Moreau and Odilon Redon. "[H]e was a perceptive and talented art critic who was among the first to recognize the genius of Degas and the Impressionists."[22] But after Huysmans sent a copy of L'Art Moderne to Camille Pissarro, Pissarro wrote to him, "How is it that you don't say one word about Cézanne, whom not one of us has failed to acknowledge as one of the most singular temperaments of our time, and one who has had a very great influence on modern art? I was extremely surprised by your articles on Monet. How can such astonishing vision, such phenomenal execution and such rare and extensive decorative feeling not have struck you back in 1870 ...?"[23]

Huysmans was a founding member of the Académie Goncourt.

Huysmans's work was known for his idiosyncratic use of the French language, extensive vocabulary, detailed and sensuous descriptions, and biting, satirical wit. It also displays an encyclopaedic erudition, ranging from the catalogue of decadent Latin authors in À rebours to the discussion of the iconography of Christian architecture in La cathédrale. Huysmans expresses a disgust with modern life and a deep pessimism. This had led him first to the philosophy of Arthur Schopenhauer. Later he returned to the Catholic Church, as he noted in his Durtal novels.

Style and influence

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Commemorative plaque in 31 rue Saint-Placide, Paris, 6e
 
A caricature of Huysmans, by Félix Vallotton, c. 1898

"It takes me two years to 'document' myself for a novel – two years of hard work. That is the trouble with the naturalistic novel – it requires so much documentary care. I never make, like Zola, a plan for a book. I know how it will begin and how it will end – that's all. When I finally get to writing it, it goes along rather fast – assez vite."[24]

"Barbaric in its profusion, violent in its emphasis, wearying in its splendor, it is — especially in regard to things seen – extraordinarily expressive, with all the shades of a painter's palette. Elaborately and deliberately perverse, it is in its very perversity that Huysmans's work — so fascinating, so repellent, so instinctively artificial — comes to represent, as the work of no other writer can be said to do, the main tendencies, the chief results, of the Decadent movement in literature." (Arthur Symons, The Decadent Movement in Literature)

"Continually dragging Mother Image by the hair or the feet down the worm-eaten staircase of terrified Syntax." (Léon Bloy, quoted in Robert Baldick, The Life of J.-K. Huysmans). Critical reviews by Léon Bloy of À rebours, En rade, and Là-bas published contemporaneously, in various journals or reviews, as Huysmans's novels came out over the years, in 1884, 1887, 1891, can be found, collected and published six years after Huysmans's death, in book form, in On Huysmans' Tomb.[25]

"It is difficult to find a writer whose vocabulary is so extensive, so constantly surprising, so sharp and yet so exquisitely gamey in flavour, so constantly lucky in its chance finds and in its very inventiveness." (Julien Gracq)

"In short, he kicks the oedipal to the curb" (M. Quaine, Heirs and Graces, 1932, Jowett / Arcana)

Huysmans's novel, Against the Grain, has more discussions of sound, smell, and taste than perhaps any other work of literature. For example, one chapter consists entirely of smell hallucinations so vivid that they exhaust the book's central character, Des Esseintes, a bizarre, depraved aristocrat. A student of the perfumer's art, Esseintes has developed several devices for titillating his jaded senses. Besides special instruments for re-creating any conceivable odour, he has constructed a special "mouth organ" designed to stimulate his palate rather than his ears. The organ's regular pipes have been replaced by rows of little barrels, each containing a different liqueur. In Esseintes's mind, the taste of each liqueur corresponded to the sound of a particular instrument.

"Dry curaçao, for instance, was like the clarinet with its shrill, velvety note: kümmel like the oboe, whose timbre is sonorous and nasal; crème de menthe and anisette like the flute, at one and the same time sweet and poignant, whining and soft. Then to complete the orchestra, comes kirsch, blowing a wild trumpet blast; gin and whisky, deafening the palate with their harsh outbursts of cornets and trombones: liqueur brandy, blaring with the overwhelming crash of the tubas."[26]

By careful and persistent experimentation, Esseintes learned to "execute on his tongue a succession of voiceless melodies; noiseless funeral marches, solemn and stately; could hear in his mouth solos of crème de menthe, duets of vespertro and rum."[27]

The protagonist of Submission (2015), a novel by Michel Houellebecq, is a literary scholar specializing in Huysmans and his work; Huysmans's relation to Catholicism serves as a foil for the book's treatment of Islam in France.

Personal life

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Huysmans never married or had children. He had a long-term, on-and-off relationship with Anna Meunier, a seamstress.[28][29][30]

Huysmans was made a Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur in 1892, for his work with the civil service. In 1905, his admirers persuaded the French government to promote him to Officier de la Légion d'honneur for his literary achievements.

Works

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Cover of Trois Primitifs (1905)

Current editions:

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Huysmans". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 13 August 2019.
  2. ^ Eugene Thacker, "An Expiatory Pessimism," Transactions of the Flesh: An Homage to Joris-Karl Huysmans (edited by D.P. Watt & Peter Holman, Ex Occidente Press, 2014).
  3. ^ Twenty–three year–old Schopenhauer, who had a great influence on Huysmans, told Wieland, "Life is an unpleasant business. I have resolved to spend it reflecting on it. (Das Leben ist eine mißliche Sache. Ich habe mir vorgesetzt, es damit hinzubringen, über dasselbe nachzudenken.)" (Rüdiger Safranski, Schopenhauer and the Wild Years of Philosophy, Chapter 7).
  4. ^ Huysmans - The Durtal Trilogy (En Route, The Cathedral, The Oblate)
  5. ^ Keeler, Sister Jerome (1950). "J.–K. Huysmans, Benedictine Oblate," American Benedictine Review, Vol. I, pp. 60–66.
  6. ^ The Cathedral, Introduction, Dedalus 1997
  7. ^ Antosh, Ruth (2024). J.-K. Huysmans. London: Reaktion Books, p. 8.
  8. ^ Information in the Dutch Archives of the birth on 8 July 1815 in Breda of Victor Godefridus Johannes.
  9. ^ Constant Huijsmans
  10. ^ "Uncle and nephew", in A gentle touch of his soul's life. On 'true' and 'false' mysticism around 1900 (2008), Peter J. A. Nissen, p. 9.
  11. ^ Antosh, Ruth (2024). J.-K. Huysmans, p. 10.
  12. ^ McClanahan, Clarence (2002). "Huysmans, Joris-Karl (1848–1907)". Retrieved 11 August 2007.
  13. ^ Aurevilly, Jules Barbey d' (1884). Le Constitutionnel, "Á rebours", 28 July 1884.
  14. ^ Baldick, Robert (1959). Introduction to Against Nature, his translation of Huysmans's Á rebours. Harmondsworth: Penguin, p. 12.
  15. ^ Antosh, Ruth (2024). J.-K. Huysmans, p. 50.
  16. ^ Antosh, Ruth (2024). J.-K. Huysmans, p. 56.
  17. ^ Rudwin, Maxmilian J. (1920). "The Satanism of Huysmans," The Open Court, Vol. XXXIV, pp. 240–251.
  18. ^ Thurstan, Frederic (1928). "Huysmans' Excursion into Occultism," Occult Review, Vol. XLVIII, pp. 227–236.
  19. ^ Hanighan, F. C. (1931). "Huysmans Conversion," The Open Court, Vol. XLV, pp. 474–481.
  20. ^ In "Robespierre's Chamber Pot", Julian Barnes writes that the 2019 translation by Huysmans biographer Robert Baldick that he reviews (titled Modern Art) is the first translation of L'Art Moderne into English. London Review of Books, 2 April 2020.
  21. ^ Julian Barnes (2 April 2020) writes that L'Art Moderne comprises Huysmans's reviews of "the Salons of 1879-82 and the Independent Exhibitions of 1880-1882".
  22. ^ Antosh, Ruth (2024). J.-K. Huysmans, p. 7.
  23. ^ Muhlstein, Anka, Camille Pissarro: The Audacity of Impressionism. New York: Other Press, 2023, p. 125.
  24. ^ Henry, Stuart (1897). Hours with Famous Parisians. Chicago: Way & Williams, p. 114.
  25. ^ Bloy, Léon (1913). Sur la tombe de Huysmans, Paris: Collection des Curiosités Littéraires.
  26. ^ Huysmans, 1884/1931, p. 132 [citation needed]
  27. ^ Sekuler, Robert, and Blake, Randolph (1985). Perception. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, pp. 404–405.
  28. ^ Satanism, Magic and Mysticism in Fin-de-siècle France, Robert Ziegler, Palgrave Macmillan, 2012, pp. 2, 7, 125
  29. ^ The Mirror of Divinity: The World and Creation in J.-K. Huysmans, Robert Ziegler, University of Delaware Press, 2004, p. 159
  30. ^ Gollner, Adam (12 November 2015). "What Houellebecq Learned from Huysmans". The New Yorker. Retrieved 18 November 2015.
  31. ^ "Review of De Tout by J. K. Huysmans". The Athenæum (3903): 215. 16 August 1902.
  32. ^ Vivian, Herbert (26 July 1902). "The Genius of the Monastery: M. Huysmans at home". Black & White.

Further reading

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  • Addleshaw, S. (1931). "The French Novel and the Catholic Church," Church Quarterly Review, Vol. 112, pp. 65–87.
  • Antosh, Ruth B. (1986). Reality and Illusion in the Novels of J.-K. Huysmans. Amsterdam: Rodopi.
  • Antosh, Ruth (2024). J.-K. Huysmans. London, UK: Reaktion Books.
  • Baldick, Robert (1955). The Life of J.-K. Huysmans. Oxford: Clarendon Press (new edition revised by Brendan King, Dedalus Books, 2006). Eric Ormsby (September 2006) writes that the book is "able to hold its own with Painter's Proust or Ellman's Joyce".
  • Banks, Brian R. (1990). The Image of Huysmans. New York: AMS Press.
  • Banks, Brian R. (2017). J.-K. Huysmans and the Belle Époque: A Guided Tour of Paris. Paris, Deja Vu, introduction by Colin Wilson.
  • Barnes, Julian (2 April 2020). "Robespierre's Chamber Pot," a review of Modern Art, by J.K. Huysmans, translated by Brendan King. London Review of Books.
  • Bloy, Léon (1913). Sur la tombe de Huysmans. Paris: Collection of Literary Curiosities. (On Huysmans' Tomb: Critical reviews of J.-K. Huysmans and À Rebours, En Rade, and Là-Bas. Portland, OR: Sunny Lou Publishing, 2021. Includes Jules Barbey d'Aurevilly's review of À rebours from Le Constitutionnel, 28 July 1884, in appendix.)
  • Blunt, Hugh F. (1921). "J.K. Huysmans." In: Great Penitents. New York: The Macmillan Company, pp. 169–193.
  • Brandreth, H. R. T. (1963). Huysmans. London: Bowes & Bowes.
  • Brophy, Liam (1956). "J.–K. Huysmans, Aesthete Turned Ascetic," Irish Ecclesiastical Review, Vol. LXXXVI, pp. 43–51.
  • Cevasco, George A. (1961). J.K. Huysmans in England and America: A Bibliographical Study. Charlottesville: The Bibliographical Society of the University of Virginia.
  • Connolly, P. J. (1907). "The Trilogy of Joris Karl Huysmans," The Dublin Review, Vol. CXLI, pp. 255–271.
  • Crawford, Virginia M. (1907). "Joris Karl Huysmans", The Catholic World, Vol. LXXXVI, pp. 177–188.
  • Donato, Elisabeth M. (2001). Beyond the Paradox of the Nostalgic Modernist: Temporality in the Works of J.-K. Huysmans. New York: Peter Lang.
  • Doumic, René (1899). "J.–K. Huysmans." In: Contemporary French Novelists. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, pp. 351–402.
  • Ellis, Havelock (1915). "Huysmans." In: Affirmations. Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, pp. 158–211.
  • Garber, Frederick (1982). The Autonomy of the Self from Richardson to Huysmans. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.
  • Highet, Gilbert (1957). "The Decadent." In: Talents and Geniuses. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 92–99.
  • Huneker, James (1909). "The Pessimists' Progress: J.–K. Huysmans." In: Egoists. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, pp. 167–207.
  • Huneker, James (1917). "The Opinions of J.–K. Huysmans." In: Unicorns. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, pp. 111–120.
  • Kahn, Annette (1987). J.-K. Huysmans: Novelist Poet and Art Critic. Ann Arbor, Mich.: UMI Research Press.
  • Laver, James (1954). The First Decadent: Being the Strange Life of J.K. Huysmans. London: Faber & Faber.
  • Lavrin, Janko (1929). "Huysmans and Strindberg." In: Studies in European Literature. London: Constable & Co., pp. 118–130.
  • Locmant, Patrice (2007). J.-K. Huysmans, le forçat de la vie. Paris: Bartillat (Goncourt Prize for Biography).
  • Lloyd, Christopher (1990). J.-K. Huysmans and the fin-de-siecle Novel. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
  • Mason, Redfern (1919). "Huysmans and the Boulevard," The Catholic World, Vol. CIX, pp. 360–367.
  • Mourey, Gabriel (1897). "Joris Karl Huysmans," The Fortnightly Review, Vol. LXVII, pp. 409–423.
  • Olivero, F. (1929). "J.–K. Huysmans as a Poet," The Poetry Review, Vol. XX, pp. 237–246.
  • Ormsby, Eric (September 2006). "Delousing the Soul", The New Criterion.
  • Peck, Harry T. (1898). "The Evolution of a Mystic." In: The Personal Equation. New York and London: Harper & Brothers, pp. 135–153.
  • Ridge, George Ross (1968). Joris Karl Huysmans. New York: Twayne Publishers.
  • Shuster, George N. (1921). "Joris Karl Huysmans: Egoist and Mystic," The Catholic World, Vol. CXIII, pp. 452–464.
  • Symons, Arthur (1892). "J.–K. Huysmans," The Fortnightly Review, Vol. LVII, pp. 402–414.
  • Symons, Arthur (1916). "Joris–Karl Huysmans." In: Figures of Several Centuries. London: Constable and Company, pp. 268–299.
  • Thacker, Eugene (2014). "An Expiatory Pessimism." In: Transactions of the Flesh: An Homage to Joris-Karl Huysmans Bucharest: Ex Occidente Press, pp. 132–143.
  • Thorold, Algar (1909). "Joris–Karl Huysmans." In: Six Masters of Disillusion. New York: E.P. Dutton & Company, pp. 80–96.
  • Ziegler, Robert (2004). The Mirror of Divinity: The World and Creation in J.-K. Huysmans. Newark: University of Delaware Press.
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