"What uniform will she wear?": Panic at the Académie Française when Marguerite Yourcenar is elected

Marguerite Yourcenar aboard the liner "Mermoz", in the Caribbean Sea, March 8, 1980. MICHELINE PELLETIER / GAMMA-RAPHO
Subscribing allows you to gift articles to your loved ones. And that's not all: you can view and comment on them.
Subscriber
Story For three and a half centuries, the Académie Française remained a circle of men. Until March 6, 1980, when the novelist of "Memoirs of Hadrian" defied the opposition of many adversaries.
To go further
"Single-sex" meetings didn't always scandalize the writers of "Le Figaro." A number of them were held every Thursday in a temple of national identity created by Richelieu in 1635, for nearly three and a half centuries. And it wasn't until March 6, 1980, that we finally heard on France-Inter: "Another hell of a wall of the stronger sex has just fallen. The Académie Française, the bastion of bastions for men, will finally welcome a woman. A historic first. It is the writer Marguerite Yourcenar, 77 years old, who will enter the immortal ranks."
Yourcenar under the Dome. The matter seems self-evident when one has read her "Memoirs of Hadrian" (1951) and her "Oeuvre au noir" (1968), whose masterful classicism made French literature shine throughout the world. And then this lady never had the bad taste to proclaim herself a revolutionary or a feminist, for example. Jean d'Ormesson is betting on it before the election: failing to attract Gracq, Aron, or Aragon to su…
Article reserved for subscribers.
Log inWant to read more?
All our articles in full from €1
Or
In the section French History from a Women's Perspective
Portrait Scandals, feminist, anti-racist and anti-colonialist struggles... Simone de Beauvoir, avant-garde philosopher
Interview with Philippe Collin: “At the root of every great resistance movement, there is a woman”
Portrait of Nepal, India, Tibet… The extraordinary life of explorer and anarchist Alexandra David-Néel
Portrait In the 1920s, Coco Chanel freed women from frills
Portrait of a survivor of racist lynchings in the United States, Josephine Baker, a survivor before becoming a resistance fighter
Portrait of Colette, an artist who scandalized her time and who ended up as an “apotheosis of respectability”
Topics related to the article