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Justine (2003)

Justine (2003)

Book Info

Rating
3.43 of 5 Votes: 1
Your rating
ISBN
950877035X (ISBN13: 9789508770356)
Language
English
Publisher
ac

About book Justine (2003)

First impressions:Marquis de Sade...you are one crazy m*****f*****. So I had learned about Marquis de Sade, or at least first heard of him after watching the movie Quills and I immediately became really interested. Yes, his works are incredibly graphic and really go off the deep end, but he was added to my bucket list of authors I wanted to read just for the sake of reading.After doing a little research I chose Justine, a classic, and one of his more famous stories to give a try at but it was a failure. I got either really bored or completely confused. It took me up until a couple of weeks ago to finally get his prose which is a bunch of active narration and then about 10 pages of speeches/sermons articulating his ideals. Ah ha! So away I went onto this journey, knowing that this was going to be one heck of a messed up story but curiosity is a powerful thing....To start things off, before I really get into my opinion on Justine, a quick summary and yes this will contain spoilers, but I include them so everyone can understand where the heck I'm coming from here.(view spoiler)[Justine takes place in 17th or 18th century France and revolves around two sisters, Juliet and Justine. Both orphaned just a few years before they could be married off split their inheritance and separate ways due to their highly contrasting ideals. Juliet believes that to get what you want, you must be willing to do anything. Justine on the other hand believes that as long as you maintain perfect virtue, God will reward you with a perfect life. The sisters separate and Juliet immediately gives her inheritance to a Madame of a brothel where over the years she becomes famous for her skills and discretion. She marries several times and her fortune multiplies as each husband 'mysteriously' dies soon after the wedding and she gains their inheritances. However she soon meets her match in her mid thirties and both decide to have a fun trip around the country side when they pull up to an inn and see the most beautiful young woman bound in handcuffs and off to Paris to be hanged. Curiosity ignites in Juliet and she pays the jailers to stay the night at the inn to rest so that they can hear the girl's story.Shyly the girl introduces herself as Therese and tells them straightaway she will not reveal her lineage or the circumstances of her childhood but would rather begin when she became orphaned and her fate with vice began when she was at the age of 15. Her first employer she explains, hired her as a maid and took her in due to pity and on recommendation of a family friend. Soon though, Therese learns that her employer is robbing people and is asked to join. Refusing out of her love of virtue she is fired and blamed for the robberies that had occurred at the residence. On the run she is taken in by a group of bandits whom ask her to join them or die. Again she explains she cannot due to her virtue and they say she must stay with them since she knows who they are. An orgy then takes place but gets to keep her virginity after pleading mercy to the thieves. Yay?The next day, the thieves return to their lair bringing a young man with them whom they had just robbed. Nursing the man, Therese and him run away in the night where he promises to hire her as a maid after hearing of her misfortunes. But the next day he hits her over the head, rapes her and flees with all of her money and clothes. Walking aimlessly in the woods she encounters two male lovers, the richer of the two hiring her as a maid in trade for her silence on his debaucheries. For two years she works for this Lord Asshole (no pun intended) where he confides he will poison his aunt to get his inheritance sooner. Following her sense of virtue she confesses the plan to the aunt, but it is too late. She is soon after poisoned and the blame once more put onto Therese where she must run away into the woods. The Lord however soon catches up to her and makes his dogs torture her for an hour until she faints from the bites. Leaving her for dead, Therese awakens and travels to the nearest town and seeks a doctor. The doctor however is also crazy messed up for after healing her, she finds out he is really into BDSM with kids, including his daughter. Again she tries to rescue the victim of vice, the daughter, and again fails. Therese again runs away and on her travels seeks a monastery to confess everything that had happened to her. A women in the woods directs the way to the closest one and it isn't until nightfall Therese finds the place. An older monk takes her confession and after questioning whether anyone knew she was there or if she had any relatives, kidnaps her and takes her into a hidden prison near the monastery where four monks keep 32 women as prisoners for their every whim. Therese is raped and tortured by all four monks for a year before breaking out and immediately getting kidnapped AGAIN. This time by two young men who take her to a Count's chateau to be a maid for his ailing wife. Therese agrees, just happy to be away from the monastery, before she learns that the reason no maid stays around long is because the Count loves to bleed people. Yes, bleed people. Every four days he bleeds his wife close to death for his enjoyment. Hence why he goes through so many over the years.Again Therese barely escapes but is then kidnapped YET AGAIN but this time by coin counter-fitters who torture and rape her for a year. Eventually though they get caught, Therese gets arrested but let go since the judge believes her pitiful story. Some more harrowing things happen including a proposal and then instant poisoning before Therese ends up trying to save a baby from a fire, trips and the baby falls into it. She then gets charged for the murder of the baby and ends up arrested, yet again, and on her way to Paris for the execution. Throughout all of the Juliet begins to guess who Therese really is and both figure out that she is Justine! Her sister! Much rejoicing commences and Juliet vows to save Justine from all of her troubles and over the months nurses her back to health. However Therese soon gets depressed knowing that some calamity will soon befall her and sure enough she gets struck by lightening. The end. (hide spoiler)]

رواية (جوستين) للمركيز دو ساد أحد أكثر الروايات إنحرافًا ، مجونًا ، وشذوذًا. لذلك ظلت محرمة على العامة في فرنسا وإنجلترا والولايات المتحدة لمدة تزيد عن قرنٍ ونصف. كانت الحكومات الفرنسيّة المتعاقبة خلالها تصادر وتتلف كل ما تجده من نسخٍ شعبية كان يتداولها العامّة بشكلٍ سريّولد المركيز ساد في القرن الثامن عشر ، وكان نموذجًا مصغرًا - أو ربما مضخمًا - لحياة المجون والتفسخ التي كان يعيشها أبناء الطبقة الأرستقراطيّة. مارس كل ما يخطر وما لا يخطر على بال بشر من طقوس جنسية منحرفة وشاذة دخل بسببها السجن والمصحة العقلية عدة مراتكتب روايته (جوستين) وهو في السجن ، ووضع فيها عصارة أفكاره المنحرفة وخيالاته المريضة. ومع ذلك لم يرض ساد مطلقًا عن جوستين بصورتها الأولى. فأعاد بعد سنوات كتابتها وتوسّع فيها حتى صارت عملاً ضخمًا من أربعة مجلدات أسماه "جوستين الجديدة" لكنه لم يصدر سوى مرة واحدة فقط واختفت نسخه جميعها ، لتبقى النسخة الأولى التي يقارب عمرها الآن حوالي 220 سنة!من الجدير بالذكر أن مصطلح السادية ينسب إلى الماركيز دو ساد. وهو نوع من الإضطراب فى الممارسة الجنسية تغذيه خيالات جنسية شديدة أو رغبات جنسية أو سلوك جنسي يتضمن تعذيب أحد أطراف العلاقة الجنسية جديًا ونفسيًا.جوستين قصة شقيقتين تنفصلان بعد موت والديهما. تختار إحداهما - وتدعى جولييت- الإنخراط في حياة الرذيلة والرفاهية ، بينما تسلك الأخرى -جوستين- طريق الفضيلة والعفة. وكل أحداث الرواية بعد ذلك بإمكاني أن أختصرها بعبارة واحدة: "كل شيءٌ سيء يمكن أن يحدث في هذا العالم ، يحدث لجوستين" حيث أنّها تتعرض طوال الرواية لضروب من الممارسات الجنسية الشريرة ، التعذيب الجنسي ، الإضطهاد\الإستغلال الجنسي ... إلخ وكل رغبات\شهوات ساد المريضة التي تمكن أو لم يتمكن من ممارستها في الواقع.وكما بدأت الرواية بانفصال الشقيقتين ، تنتهي كذلك بانفصالهما بعد أن تلتقيان بالصدفة ، حيث تخترق صاعقة الشقيقة الصغرى جوستين وترديها قتيلة منهية بذلك حياةً مثقلة بالعذابات!لو أتيحت لي إعادة تسمية الرواية فسأسميها "فلسفة الشر" أو "فلسفة الرذيلة"؛ فبعيدًا عن الثيمة المبتذلة (صراع الخير والشر) للرواية، وهي الثيمة التي كانت تلون معظم الأعمال الأدبية في القرن الثامن عشر، فإن للرواية بعدًا فلسفيًا عميقًا وغريبًا في آنفـ"ساد" يبدو في الرواية كرسول للرذيلة ، يروج لها ، ويبررها في قالب فلسفي على لسان شخصيات الرواية. ربما لهذا السبب أصبحت الرواية مصدرًا سيكولوحيًا هامًا لكل من يريد أن يفهم تجليات الشر ودوافعه لدى المجرمين أو المنحرفين. شخصيًا لم أستمتع بأحداث الرواية (المقرفة في معظم الأحيان) بقدر استمتاعي بالنقاشات التي كانت تدور بين جوستين وجلاديها

Do You like book Justine (2003)?

This is primarily a book of philosophy...which is not to say that it isn't also filled with fairly graphic (in an 18th century kind of way) scenes of every kind of sex act imanginable. The philosophy is that of the merits of vice vs. virtue. The protagonist (a virtuous woman) falls prey to a series of libertines who use and abuse her in whatever ways they deem pleasurable to themselves. Some of these tribulations are inflicted as the result of chance events while others result from Justine/Therese's exercise of her virtue, but each of her abusers spends a good deal of time explaining to her why the exercise of their vices is their right, is inevitable, and cannot be thwarted by appeals to virtue. The constant falling of Therese into peril reminded me of the storyline Voltaire employed in attacking the philosophy of "the best of all possible worlds" in Candide. It's hard to tell throughout the book on which side of the vice/virtue argument de Sade falls but most people - based on "conventional wisdom" - assume that it's on the side of vice. The ending to this story will surprise you.
—Dan Porter

Set in the 18th Century, this book was very controversial for its time and now I understand why.But, nowadays, I think that it is difficult to shock anyone due to the information we can get.So, my opinion of this book is that it is not a great story, but rather a philosophical quest to find what is good and evil and, what kind of gains can be obtained by choosing one of them. While Justine is good in her heart she is treated under all the evils in the world, she suffers alot but she remains true to her beliefs; on the other hand, the perpetradors of her misfortunes become rich and successful.But somehow she becomes annoying because she is too naive, too innocent, too good, too everything!...noone is like that after what she has been through!...
—Diana Marques

It is precisely the Misfortunes of Virtue which Sade illuminates in Justine. Virtue, personified in Justine, is perpetually confronted by misfortune, and subdued by an omnipresent force, which, as expected from the Marquis, drips animalistic eroticism. Justine is, inarguably, a novel on depravity, but beyond its blatant decadent literature, Justine is also to be seen and appreciated as a historical document -- a passionate chronicle and assessment of a culture not governed by law, but through the despotic monarchy of King Louis XVI. It is, essentially, a work of political philosophy and a critique of Revolutionary France.Despite its ardent imagery the novel expands beyond the prurient joyride evident in its erotic style. That is to say, Justine is a candid rebuttal of Rousseau’s views of the noble savage and the social contract. The Marquis expounds man's unfettered indulgence as being fueled by momentary impulse and pleasure-- blind to consequence, or affliction to others. In the Sadean demimonde, characters (and people), were placed in either a position to impose their desires or as the objects upon which the desires of others were imposed upon -- occasionally a character enjoys the magnificence of the two. The Marquis’s savage is not noble in any perceivable sense, but rather merely a bundle of lustful appetites sulking underneath the patina of civilization, anticipating the occasion to be satiated. Sade not only boldly decorated the macabre side of humanity, but he also glorified it and gave it a name—libertinism. He did so by drafting the most luxurious, nauseating, and magnetizing piece of writing since Ovid’s Erotic Poems. Justine is, arguably, the most extraordinary novel of the Marquis; the horrors narrated evoke a plethora of emotions in the reader—one minute inducing uninhibited sexual arousal, shortly after the arousal gives way to anguish, anguish to desperation, desperation into repudiation, until repudiation finally precipitates into cholera. It’s grotesque, inhumane, fascinating, and extraordinarily compelling. Admittedly, I was simultaneously horrified and strangely captivated by Justine.
—Claudia Hernandez

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