| Author | Pauline Réage |
|---|---|
| Country | France |
| Language | French |
| Genre(s) | Erotic novel |
| Publisher | Jean-Jacques Pauvert |
| Publication date | 1954 |
| Media type | |
Histoire d'O (English title: Story of O) is an erotic novel published in 1954 about sadomasochism by French author Anne Desclos under the pen name Pauline Réage. Desclos did not reveal herself to be the author until four years before her death, forty years after its initial publication. Desclos said that she had written the novel as a series of love letters to her lover Jean Paulhan, who had admired the work of the Marquis de Sade.
Contents |
Plot
Published in French by Jean-Jacques Pauvert, éditeur, it is a story of female submission about a beautiful Parisian fashion photographer, O, who is blindfolded, chained, whipped, branded, pierced, made to wear a mask, and taught to be constantly available for oral, vaginal, and anal intercourse. Despite her harsh treatment, O grants permission beforehand for everything that occurs, and her permission is constantly sought. While her friend and lover, Jacqueline, is repulsed by O's chains and scars, O herself is proud of her condition as a willing slave. O's lover, René, brings her to the château of Roissy, where she is trained to serve the men of an elite group. After the training is finished, René hands O to Sir Stephen, an even more dominant master. O falls in love with him. As final proof of her love O decides to move to Samois, an old mansion solely inhabited by women for advanced training. There she agrees to receive a branding and a labia piercing with rings as a final sign of dedication to her lifestyle. At the climax, O appears as a slave, nude but for an owl-like mask, before a large party of guests.
Publishing history
In February 1955, it won the French literature prize Prix des Deux Magots, although this did not prevent the French authorities bringing obscenity charges against the publisher. The charges were rejected by the courts, but a publicity ban was imposed for a number of years. The prose style is terse, simple, and blunt. Rhetorical devices are avoided, although several levels of symbolism can be inferred. The first English edition was published by Grove Press, Inc. in 1965. Eliot Fremont-Smith (of the New York Times) called its publishing "a significant event." A sequel was published in 1969 in French, again with Jean-Jacques Pauvert, éditeur, Retour à Roissy (Return to Roissy, but often translated as Return to the Chateau, Continuing the Story of O). It was published again by Grove Press, Inc., in 1971. It is not known whether this work is by the same author as the original. The English edition is published by Grove Press, as An Evergreen Black Cat Book, printed in the United States, and distributed by Random House, Inc., New York. A critical view of the novel is that it is about the ultimate objectification of a woman. The heroine of the novel has the shortest possible name, consisting solely of the letter O. Although this is in fact a shortening of the name Odile, it could also stand for "object" or "orifice", an O being a symbolic representation of any "hole". The book has been the source of various terms that are used in the BDSM subculture such as SAMOIS, the name of the estate belonging to the character Anne-Marie, who brands O.
Adaptations
Mainstream
French director Henri-Georges Clouzot wanted to adapt the novel to film for many years. It was eventually adapted by director Just Jaeckin in 1975 as Histoire d'O or in English as The Story of O , starring Corinne Clery and Udo Kier. The film met with far less acclaim than the book. It was banned in the United Kingdom by the British Board of Film Censors until February 2000. In 1975, American director Gerard Damiano, well-known for Deep Throat (1972) and The Devil in Miss Jones (1973) created the movie The Story of Joanna, highly influenced by the Story of O, by combining the motifs from one of the book's chapters and from Jean-Paul Sartre's No Exit. In 1979, Danish director Lars von Trier made a short movie, which is a homage to Story of O and Anne Desclos, entitled Menthe—la bienheureuse. A Brazilian miniseries in ten episodes with Claudia Cepeda was made in 1992 by director Eric Rochat, who was the producer of the original 1975 movie.
Documentary
Writer of O, a 2004 documentary film by Pola Rapaport, mixed interviews with reenactments of certain scenes from the book. In 1975, Jean-Jaeques Pauvert published in France "Confessions of O", a long interview of the (still anonymous) author of the Story of O by French author Regine Deforges. An English-language edition was released in the United States in 1979 by Viking Press.
Other
In 1975 it was adapted for comics by the Italian artist Guido Crepax. There is also reference to the characters "O" and "Rene" in Deus Ex, where in flat 12 of the Paris level the two can be found in conversation.
See also
- Sadism and masochism in fiction
- Domination and submission
- 1975 in film
- Compare with Venus in Furs, The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty


