Perfume (novel)

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Perfume: The Story of a Murderer
LC Class
PT2681 .U74

Perfume: The Story of a Murderer (

sense of smell
and its relationship with the emotional meanings that scents may have.

The story follows Jean-Baptiste Grenouille, an unloved

scents in the world around him. Grenouille becomes a perfumer but later becomes involved in murder
when he encounters a young girl with an unsurpassed wondrous scent.

With translations into 49 languages and more than 20 million copies sold worldwide to date, Perfume is one of the best-selling German novels of the 20th century.[2] The title remained in bestseller lists for about nine years and received almost unanimously positive national and international critical acclaim. It was translated into English by John E. Woods and won both the World Fantasy Award and the PEN Translation Prize in 1987. Some editions of the novel, including the first, have as their cover image Antoine Watteau's painting, Jupiter and Antiope, which depicts a sleeping woman.

Plot

Part One

A boy is born in

tanner. Unknown to other people, Grenouille has a remarkable sense of smell
, giving him an extraordinary ability to discern subtlest odors from complex mixtures of scent and across great distances.

One day, long after having memorized nearly all the smells of the city, Grenouille is surprised by a unique smell. He finds the source of the scent: a young virgin girl. Entranced by her scent and believing that he alone must possess it, he strangles her and stays with her body until the scent has left it. In his quest to learn more about the art of perfume-making, he becomes apprenticed to one of the city's finest perfumers, Giuseppe Baldini, an aging, unskilled perfumer who has managed a successful business from two perfumes: one given to him by a relative and one that he bought from a traveling agent. Baldini eventually finds himself increasingly outperformed by rival perfumers and considers moving back to Italy with his wife.

However, Grenouille proves himself a prodigy by copying and improving a rival's perfume in Baldini's laboratory, after which Baldini offers him an apprenticeship. Baldini teaches Grenouille the basic techniques of perfumery while selling Grenouille's masterful new formulas as his own, restoring his flagging reputation. Baldini eventually reveals to Grenouille that there are techniques other than distillation that can be used to preserve a wider range of odours, which can only be learned in the heartland of the perfumer's craft, in the region of Grasse in the French Riviera. Shortly after, Grenouille elects to leave Paris, and Baldini dies when his shop collapses into the river Seine.

Part Two

On his way to Grasse, Grenouille travels the countryside and is increasingly disgusted by the scent of humanity. Avoiding civilization, he comes instead to live in a cave inside the Plomb du Cantal, surviving off the mountain's sparse vegetation and wildlife. However, his peace is ended when he realizes after seven years that he himself does not possess any scent: he cannot smell himself and neither, he finally understands, can other people. Traveling to Montpellier with a fabricated story about being kidnapped and kept in a cave for seven years to account for his haggard appearance, he creates a body odour for himself from everyday materials and finds that his new "disguise" tricks people into thinking that it is the scent of a human; he is now accepted by society instead of shunned. In Montpellier, he gains the patronage of the Marquis de La Taillade-Espinasse, who uses Grenouille to publicize his pseudoscientific theory about the influence of "fluidal" energies on human vitality. Grenouille manufactures perfumes which successfully distort the public perception of him from a wretched "caveman" into a clean and cultivated patrician, helping to win enormous popularity for the Marquis' theory. Seeing how easily humanity can be fooled by a simple scent, Grenouille's hatred becomes contempt. He realizes that it is within his ability to develop scents described as "superhuman" and "angelic" that will affect in unprecedented ways how other people perceive him.

Part Three

In Grasse, Grenouille discovers a young woman named Laure whose scent has the same captivating quality of the girl he killed before. Determined to preserve it, Grenouille starts working as an apprentice at a workshop and starts learning how to preserve scents by enfleurage, determined to kill Laure and extract her scent in a year's time. Meanwhile, he kills 24 other young women, to practice how to preserve human scents and to use them as a base for the perfume that he will make with Laure's scent. Laure's father deduces that Laure will eventually be killed and tries to flee to save his daughter, but Grenouille tracks them and kills Laure as well. Despite his careful attention to detail, the police trace Laure's murder to him, and the hair and clothing of his previous victims are all discovered at his cabin near Grasse. He is caught soon afterwards and sentenced to death. However, on the way to his execution in the town square, Grenouille wears the new perfume he has created from his victims, and the scent immediately causes the crowd of spectators to fawn in awe and adoration of him, and although the evidence of his guilt is absolute, the townspeople become so fond of him, so convinced of the innocence he now exudes, that the magistrate reverses the court's verdict and he is freed; even Laure's father is enthralled by the new scent and asks if he would consider being adopted as his son. Soon the crowd is so overcome with lust and emotion that the entire town participates in a mass orgy of which no one speaks afterwards and which few can clearly remember. The magistrate reopens the investigation into the murders and they are eventually attributed to Grenouille's employer Dominique Druot, who is tortured into making a false confession and later hanged without ceremony. Afterwards life returns to normal in Grasse.

Part Four

The effect his scent has had now confirms to Grenouille how much he hates people, especially as he realizes that they worship him now and that even this degree of control does not give him satisfaction. He decides to return to Paris, intending to die there, and after a long journey ends up at the fish market where he was born. He pours the bottle of perfume he created on himself, and the people are so drawn to him that they are compelled to obtain parts of his body, eventually tearing him to pieces and eating him. The story ends with the crowd, now embarrassed by their actions, agreeing that they did it out of "love".

Characters

In order of appearance:

  • Grenouille's mother – Jean-Baptiste Grenouille was her fifth baby. She had claimed her first four were
    consumption
    , she was still quite pretty.
  • Jean-Baptiste Grenouille – The novel's protagonist, born 17 July 1738 with an innate prodigious sense of smell (and also for unexplained reasons no personal scent of his own). His awareness of scent eventually causes him to conceive of capturing human scents, specifically those able to inspire love, which he lacks in his life. When he does succeed in this goal, he discovers it gives him no pleasure, and causes him only to despise others for being so easily fooled. Unable to find happiness, he is killed by a crowd after he pours his final perfume over himself. Grenouille's motivation for killing is described in the novel as purely the result of his desire to possess those rare scents capable of inspiring love towards their possessor:

"Grenouille let it go at that. He refrained from overpowering some whole, live person ... that sort of thing would have ... resulted in no new knowledge. He knew he was master of the techniques needed to rob a human of his or her scent, and knew it was unnecessary to prove this fact anew. Indeed, human odour was of no importance to him whatsoever. He could imitate human odour quite well enough with surrogates. What he coveted was the odour of certain human beings: that is, those rare humans who inspire love. Those were his victims."[3]

Possible inspiration

The real-life story of Spanish serial killer, Manuel Blanco Romasanta (1809-1863), also known as the "Tallow-Man", who killed several women and children, sold their clothes, and extracted their body-fat to make soap, resembles Grenouille's methods in some ways.

The name of Jean-Baptiste Grenouille might be inspired by the French perfumer Paul Grenouille, who changed his name into Grenoville when he opened his luxury perfume house in 1879.

Style

The style of the novel can be characterized by the way it blends fantasy and fiction with factual information.[4] That combination creates two distinguishable narrative lines[5] - the fantastic one, which is conveyed in Grenouille's supernatural sense of smell, his odorlessness, and fairy-tale tones in the story, as well as the realistic one, composed of the socio-historical circumstances of the plot and naturalistic descriptions of the environment, the perfume production and murders.[6] The novel’s realism is also visible in thorough descriptions of historical perfumery practices.[7] According to Rindisbacher, the work "gathered together and phrased in popular terms the state of the art of olfactory and perfumistic knowledge and spun it into the realm of fantasy and imagination".[7]

The diction of the novel evokes vivid sensory images.[8] It links typically visual cognitive activities with the sense of smell, which is represented by the way Grenouille perceives the world.[9] He understands more through olfaction, rather than vision, and that is reflected in the language of the novel, as the verbs in the literature normally associated with visual perception relate, in Grenouille’s case, to the process of smelling.[10]

Another conspicuous stylistic feature of the work is an extensive use of intertextuality, which has been met with both positive and negative critical response.[11] Literary allusions identified by the critics include references to works by Flaubert, Balzac, Baudelaire, E.T.A. Hoffmann, Thomas Mann,[12] and Goethe. In the literature, for instance, there were observed some resemblances to the story of Faust.[13] While Perfume received much praise for being original and imaginative,[14] its citational structure has been either received enthusiastically for speaking to the literary acumen of the reader,[15] or recognized as problematic, due to the overload of constant allusion and pastiche,[16] or being considered a “parody” of other works.[15]

Adaptations

Film

Television

Music

Sport

  • Russian figure skater
    Daniil Gleikhengauz.[21]

References

  • Süskind, Patrick. Perfume. Translator: John E. Woods. New York: Vintage International, 1986.
  1. ^ "Rococo » Blog Art Nu". Archived from the original on 2014-03-15. Retrieved 2014-02-24. Retrieved 2014-02-24
  2. ^ Pressedossier Patrick Süskind. Diogenes Verlag Zürich, Stand November 2012
  3. ^ Novel, chapter 38 (p. 195 in Woods translation, paperback edition)
  4. JSTOR 24369777
    . Retrieved 8 February 2021. p. 87.
  5. . Retrieved 8 February 2021. p. 39.
  6. ^ Donahue 1992, pp. 36-37.
  7. ^ a b Rindisbacher 2015, p. 87.
  8. S2CID 148355465
    . Retrieved 8 February 2021. p. 102.
  9. . Retrieved 8 February 2021. p. 141.
  10. ^ Popova 2003, pp. 141-143.
  11. JSTOR 25594403
    . Retrieved 8 February 2021. p. 208.
  12. ^ Rarick 2009, p. 208.
  13. JSTOR 406721
    . Retrieved 8 February 2021. p. 398.
  14. ^ Ryan 1990, pp. 398-399.
  15. ^ a b Rarick 2009, p. 209.
  16. ^ Ryan 1990, p. 399.
  17. Decider
    . Retrieved 26 November 2022.
  18. ^ Andrusenko, Yelena (December 7, 2010). "18:37 Moscow Time "Perfumer": Russian Version (English language)". Voice of Russia. Archived from the original on April 1, 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  19. ^ "One of Kurt Cobain's Final Interviews - Incl. Extremely Rare Footage". Archived from the original on 2021-12-12. Retrieved 20 August 2021 – via source: YouTube.com.
  20. ^ "Anna SHCHERBAKOVA RUS Short Program Lombardia Trophy 2019". YouTube. 13 September 2019.
  21. ^ "Беззащитная красота - "Парфюмер" Анны Щербаковой". Sports.ru. 17 September 2019. Retrieved Aug 14, 2020.