| Sixty 
                years of Suzette
 
 
  The first Suzette n. 1, 1905
 
 
 
  1909
 
 
  1915
 
 
  Subsscription 
                card (front)
 
 
  Album 
                1925
 Cover by R de la Nezière
 
 
  1936
 
 
  1948
 
 
  Album1948
 cover by Manon Iessel
 
 
  1951
 
 
  Album 
                1951
 
 
  1956
 
 
  n. 
                2 June 1960
 ...mais il n'y aura pas de rentrée
 
 
  The 
                last Suzette cover
 25 August 1960
 
 
   La 
                Semaine de Suzette
 1959-1960
 
 
  Adieu!
 |  
                From La Semaine de Suzette
 to BIBLIOTHÈQUE DE SUZETTE
 Les 
                  Petites Filles Bien Sages
 
                   
                    |  
 Dominique Rolin
 Photo Jean Rolin, 1924
 courtesy ©François Nielsen
 |  
 A charming family group with an attentive Suzette reader
 courtesy JMC©1950
 |   
                    | Bibliothèque 
                        de Suzette is a children's book collection published 
                        in France between 1919 and 1965 by the publisher Gautier 
                        & Languereau. Its existence is strictly interconnected 
                        with that of La Semaine de Suzette. In fact 
                        all the books of the collection started life as feuilletons 
                        in La Semaine de Suzette, a French illustrated 
                        weekly for well-to-do little girls, published by the same 
                        publisher from February 2nd 1905 until June 6th 1940 and 
                        from May 30th 1946 to August 25th 1960.
 Each issue of La Semaine, which was aimed 
                        at an age range of 8-14, contained short stories, an episode 
                        of a serialized novel, an agony aunt column, games, cookery 
                        recipes, sewing patterns for the wardrobe of the doll 
                        Bleuette, a stylish French grand'mama of the yet to be 
                        born Barbie, competitions, crosswords, good manners and 
                        fashion features, in short anything deemed indispensable 
                        to make a proper little girl blossom into a proper grown 
                        up Madame, supporting manners, principles and ideals of 
                        the middle class milieu to which the readers belonged. 
                        It carried some discrete and tasteful advertising. By 
                        today's standards, it was a most gloriously politically 
                        incorrect magazine... Et alors!?... To paraphrase Larkin, 
                        political correctness began well after nineteen-sixty-three. 
                        Witness the alluring poise of M.lle Dominique Rolin, born 
                        1913 in a well-to-do Belgian family caught by her father 
                        Jean reading La Semaine de Suzette in this 
                        delightful photo circa 1924. (Courtesy Prof. François 
                        Nielsen, University of North Carolina, Miss Rolin's nephew) 
                        and the enchanting group of five little French brothers 
                        photographed (Suzette warrants!) on the 1st of June 1950.
 |   
                    | Amongst 
                        its readers La Semaine could boast children 
                        who became famous such as Michèle Morgan, André 
                        Malraux, Jeanne Moreau, Troyat, Sylvette Baudrot, Barjavel 
                        and others who in later years reminisced fondly about 
                        Suzette in books or interviews. On the other hand, Simone 
                        de Beauvoir relates in her memoirs that while the majority 
                        of children in her milieu read La Semaine, 
                        she had a subscription to L'Etoile Noëliste 
                        which her mother considered «d'un niveau moral plus 
                        élevé». As for Dominique Rolin, she 
                        became the acclaimed writer of more than forty books (see 
                        BNF). Suzette had also two royal readers: the English 
                        Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret Rose. In July 1938 their 
                        governess Marion Crawford (the infamous Crawfie) subscribed 
                        for a year to La Semaine de Suzette through 
                        a London bookshop. |   
                    |  |   
                    |  For 
                        those long summer terms, 1924 |   
                    |  Bécassine 
                        is the copyrighted property of ©Hachette Livre/Gautier Languereau
 |   
                    | One 
                      of the most interesting features of La Semaine 
                      is the agony aunt columns, edited in succession by:
 Tante Jacqueline (Jeanne Spallarossa, Mme Alexandre Bernhardt, 
                      the very first aunt). Wrote under the pseudonym of Jacqueline 
                      Rivière
 Tante Rolande (Mme Rolande Le Brun, born in 1880 in Paris, 
                      employed at G&L, in charge of advertising, a stopgap 
                      agony aunt, also wrote some features including the on on 
                      good manners as Edna Lor. She remained at La Semaine 
                      until her death in 1939.
 Tante Alice (Alice Piguet, b. 1 Sett. 1901 in Nîmes, 
                      aka Alice de Chavannes, pseud. of Alice Pourcherol, a Law 
                      graduate rapporteur à la Commission de contrôle 
                      de la Presse Juvénile). She became a writer inspired 
                      by Mme de Ségur. Prix Jeunesse 1945 for Le jardin 
                      de Thérèse.
 Tante Mad (Madeleine Giraud)
 Tante Mireille (Géneviève Néranval, 
                      she started working as a secretary for Jean Valmy-Baysse 
                      Secrétaire Général de la Comédie 
                      Française, collaborated with the writer Madeleine 
                      Chaumont and became a brilliant poet and writer) and the 
                      last, another
 Tante Jacqueline (Jacqueline Gaillard born 1934, who eventually 
                      became editor-in-chief at Les Veillées des Chaumières).
 After more than eighty years, the advice given to the little 
                      Suzettes makes appalling or appealing reading (whichever 
                      side of the divide one happens to be) all based on submission, 
                      blind obedience, reverence towards parents, through the 
                      complete annihilation of a child's personality, which  
                      the message is  can only be moulded by the experience 
                      of the grown-ups, on middle class models of behaviour. This 
                      is what Tante Rolande replies, on 16 December 1926 to a 
                      rebellious (and hapless) Libellule Verte, aged 14, who is 
                      asking for Tantine's help to convince her parents to let 
                      her: 1) change her first name (didn't we all wish 
                      to re-invent ourselves at 14?);  2) cut her plaits; 
                       3) go out without nanny. Not totally unreasonable 
                      desires for a girl of 14, one would imagine. Tantine's answer 
                      is a devastating blow to poor Libellule's hopes:
  
                        Hélas! 
                          ma pauvre petite Libellule, Je suis loin de partager 
                          vos idées. Je les trouve même blâmables... 
                          Je me demande où vous pouvez avoir gagné 
                          de telles pensées d'indépendence...et 
                          pourquoi vous osez supposer que je suis capable de vous 
                          donner raison... Pauvre petite fille!... Vous vous coyez 
                          assez grande, à quatorze ans, pour vous diriger 
                          seule... Eh bien vous vous trompez. Une jeuen fille 
                          n'est jamais assez raissonable pour se libérer 
                          de l'autorité des siens: Elle a toujours besoin 
                          des conseils avisés de paroles sensées 
                          de vigilance active à ses côtés. 
                          Elles doit se soumettre sans répliquer et sans 
                          révolte, aux exigeances des siens.  Though 
                        highly prolific and successful in the genre  some 
                        winning prestigious literary prizes  with a few 
                        exceptions little is known about Suzette's authors who 
                        fell into more or less deserved oblivion. At first glance 
                        Suzette's writers, editors and columnists  basically 
                        an in-house female team  seem upper class or aristocratic 
                        women (their surnames are prefixed by a profusion of "de") 
                        who had received some sort of education, proto-feminists 
                        unhappy to be just glorified housewives. In reality the 
                        majority were middle-class "girls of slender means", 
                        more or less obliged to use their talent to earn a living 
                        or subsidize teaching jobs.Most were spinsters. Ashamed of their writing  any 
                        money making activity being socially unacceptable for 
                        a woman of the time  they hid under impenetrable 
                        male pseudonyms and were exploited shamelessly by their 
                        publishers (for instance G&L owned the copyright of 
                        all its authors, except Marie Delly's) who dumped them 
                        when their style went out of fashion. Many died in abject 
                        poverty.
 The matter of the authors' identities was raised by Anne 
                        des Déserts who in 2001 wrote to Les Veillées 
                        des Chaumières, (the big sister of La 
                        Semaine still going in 2012):
 « 
                        Les auteurs, les illustrateurs de La Semaine de Suzette 
                        m'intéressent. Qui étaient-ils ? Des femmes 
                        seules qui écrivaient pour gagner leur vie, des 
                        mères de famille qui avaient envie d'écrire, 
                        des professionnels ? Etaient-ce des salariés, attachés 
                        à la rédaction, ou bien des personnes qui 
                        travaillaient à la vacation ou au contrat ? Comment 
                        choisissait-on les manuscrits ? etc. »
 Surely 
                        no Balzacs, yet they write in an elegant polished French, 
                        still readable today. What made them fade into obscurity 
                        is certainly the context of their stories depicting the 
                        way of life of a limited section of society "univers 
                        de marquises et de baronnes menant grand train grâce 
                        à leurs rentes et à leurs fermages, et servies 
                        par une foule de domestiques" (cit. Hachette Jeunesse 
                        website) which started to disappear in 1914, its conduct 
                        dictated by strong Catholic principles, the result too 
                        anachronistic for a modern reader. However one feels that 
                        if not for their literary merits they should have been 
                        remembered for their contribution to the social history 
                        of the times.
 One of Gautier&Languereau's authors who stood the 
                        test of time and was financially successful is Berthe 
                        Bernage: catholic, grande-dame of good manners, editor 
                        at Les Veillées des Chaumières, contributor 
                        to La Semaine, she created the character 
                        of Brigitte who first saw the light in 1925 as a serial 
                        in Les Veillées. Published in book format, 
                        Brigitte's adventures lasted 35 years following the protagonist 
                        from adolescence to maturity and are still very much in 
                        print and on sale. Bernage who was unmarried, remained 
                        tied to G&L all her life, published in their various 
                        collections and on her death she made them her heirs.
 On the other hand, the illustrators, who much contributed 
                        to the success of Suzette, famous artists such as Avélot, 
                        Thiriet, Morin, Berty, Lorioux, Giffey, Le Rallic, Raffin, 
                        Zier, active in the artistic movements of the XX Century, 
                        not just as children illustrators saw a revival in the 
                        Sixties becoming even more famous with the passing years, 
                        their work highly collectible.
 In the first issue of La Semaine was born, 
                        almost by accident, one of the most enduring long lasting 
                        characters of the French bande dessinée: Bécassine, 
                        the Disaster Maid, the Queen of Malapropism, who continuously 
                        misunderstood her mistress' orders with hilarious results, 
                        interpreting life according to her own philosophy of little 
                        paysanne Brétonne.
 «Pour 
                        quelles raisons La Semaine de Suzette est-elle incontestablement 
                        le premier périodique du genre?»  asks 
                        Polybiblion: Revue bibliographique universelle in 1920 
                         «Ces raisons sont multiples. D'abord elle 
                        comporte des illustrations fort nombreuses, en couleurs 
                        et en noir, très variées et très 
                        vivantes: les enfants aiment les images; leurs parents 
                        aussi, du reste. Puis le texte est irréprochable 
                        au double point de vue moral et religieux. Ajoutons que 
                        la note patriotique résonne fréquemment 
                        dans cet ensemble toujours attachant».
 These multiple good reasons were going to last another 
                        forty-five years.
 |   
                    | 
                         
                          | 
                               The 
                              first episode of La Tutelle de Cousine Linotte
 by Berthe Bernage in
 La Semaine de Suzette 3rd August 1926.
 | 
                               The 
                              book version 1931 |   
                          | 
                               Jerry 
                              dans l'Ombre by M. Giraud in La Semaine de Suzette, May 1946 and in 
                              Bibliothèque de Suzette, 1948.
 | 
                               Jerry 
                              dans l'Ombre was the novel serialised in 
                              La Semaine when it reappeared in a four pages 
                              format after the war in May 1946: "Un événement 
                              important pour toutes les petites filles ! Après 
                              six ans d'interruption La Semaine de Suzette 
                              reparait provisoirement deux fois par mois" |  |   
                    | Not all Suzette feuilletons were published in volume, 
                        for instance (in brackets the year in which some were 
                        serialized): Le Charmeur des serpents, Léon Lambry 
                        (1919); A la conquète de l'Atlas, Myriam Catalany 
                        (1919); Les Péripéties des petites Dalsie, 
                        P. Bresbre (1920); Une bien bonne idée, G. Louza 
                        (1929); Musette, M. de Carnac (1929); La Petite fille 
                        de Sainte-Hélène, E. de Cys et J. Rosmer 
                        (1929); Histoire véridique de M.me Chelmi et de 
                        son chat, P. Perrault (1929).
 La Semaine has become the subject of a number 
                        of books and graduation papers (Thèse de Doctorat 
                        or Maîtrise). The vast narrative body of La 
                        Semaine is a fertile ground for a sociological 
                        or historical analysis of many aspects of life during 
                        the sixty years of its existence, to name a few: means 
                        of transport, fashion, food, games, holidays, war, religion, 
                        homes, etc.
 La 
                        Semaine de Suzette dans lentre-deux-guerres, 
                        VINCENT Véronique, Maîtrise, Histoire, Université 
                        de Paris X- Nanterre.La Semaine de Suzette ou le Journal des petites filles 
                        bien élevées, COUDERC Marie-Anne, Université 
                        de Toulouse Le Mirail, 1992
 La représentation de la première guerre 
                        mondiale dans les histoires en images de deux grands périodiques 
                        pour enfants: L'Epatant et La Semaine de Suzette (1914-1918), 
                        PALUEL-MARMONT Julie, 1999, Université François 
                        Rabelais-Tours
 L'influence de la Grande Guerre sur un illustré 
                        pour enfants: La Semaine de Suzette (1905-1918), GARDENER 
                        Thierry, 1994, Université de Paris X-Nanterre
 La Semaine de Suzette: sources et lectures, GAUCHET-PLAT, 
                        Hélène, Maîtrise Lettres, Université 
                        de Paris X-Nanterre
 Mme Couderc has also published two books on La Semaine:
 Bécassine inconnue, CNRS ÉDITIONS, 
                        2000
 La Semaine de Suzette, Histoires de filles, CNRS 
                        ÉDITIONS, 2005
 
 
 La 
                        petite poste
 
                         
                          | 
  only «Cathol. 
                              bon. famille» need reply.
 (La Semaine de Suzette no 39, 27 Sept. 
                              1928)
  Twenty 
                                four years on... and...
 «Cathol. bon. fam» pen-pals are still 
                                de riguer
 (La Semaine de Suzette, 1952)
 
 |  
                            Abstract 
                          from: Storia della Biblioteca dei Miei Ragazzi 
                          by Anna Levi, Pontedera, Bibliografia e Informazione, ©Anna Levi, 
                          2012.
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