Friday 9 December 2011

DURAND OR DUMONT

On the 9th December 1897, activist Marguerite Durand founds the feminist daily newspaper, La Fronde, in Paris.

There is some resemblance between this Marguerite and Margaret Dumont. I'm sure that Durand was probably a blueprint for Groucho’s Dumont.
 







Born into a middle-class family, Marguerite Durand was sent to study at a Roman Catholic convent. After finishing her primary education, she entered the Conservatoir de Paris before joining the Comédie-Française.
In 1888, she gave up her career in the theatre to marry an up-and-coming young lawyer, Georges Laguerre. A friend and follower of the politically ambitious army general George Boulanger, her husband introduced her to the world of radical politics and involved her in writing pamphlets for the "Boulangists" movement. However, the marriage was short-lived and in 1891 the couple separated after which Durand took a job writing for Le  Figaro, the leading newspaper of the day.  The Boulangists and Le Figaro were very conservative politically. In 1896, the paper sent her to cover the Congrès Féministe International (International Feminist Congress) ostensibly to write a humorous article.  She came away from the event a greatly changed person, so much so that the following year on the 9th December 1897 she founded a feminist daily newspaper, La Fronde to pick up where Hubertine Auclert’s La Citoyenne left off. It amazing what a little conference can do.
Durand's newspaper, run exclusively by women, advocated for women's rights, including admission to the Bar Association and the École des Beaux-Arts. As well, its editorials demanded women be allowed to be named to the Legion of Honour and to participate in parliamentary debates. This included, later in 1910, Durand's attempt to organise female candidates for the legislative elections. At the 1900 World’s Fair in Paris, she organized the Congress For The Rights of Women. As well as establishing a summer residence for female journalists in Pierrefonds in the Picardie region, Durand turned to activism for working women, helping to organize several trade unions.
Marguerite Durand, consumed by a passion for the equality of women, was also an attractive woman of style and elegance who was famous for walking the streets of Paris with her pet lion she named "Tiger." Instrumental in the establishing of the zoological Cimetière des Chiens in the Parisian suburb of Asnières-sur-Seine where her lion was eventually interred, her activism raised the profile of feminism in France and Europe to an unprecedented level of respectability. Along the way, she compiled an enormous collection of papers that she gifted to the government in 1931. The following year, the Bibliothèque Marguerite Durand opened in Paris and remains to this day one of the best sources in the world for research into feminism and women's history.

Another of the many forgotten great ladies. See Blog entry ‘Women of 1838’ on 7th April 2011

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