Reading the Chunksters discussion

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Les Misérables
Les Miserables
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Les Mis - Fantine, Books 4-6

Meanwhile, Fantine's life is in a phase of rapid descent. She loses her job, she can't pay for her room, furniture or child, she sells her beautiful hair and her top two front teeth and eventually becomes a prostitute with a taste for alcohol. When she attacks a man for putting snow down her back, she is dragged to jail by Javert.

Madeleine forces Javert to let Fantine go, but he is enraged. Madeleine tells Fantine he will ensure care for her and her child and she faints.

Madeleine:

In this Book Fantine is growing increasingly ill, and Madeleine's efforts to retrieve Cosette are proving unsuccessful as the Thenardiers do not want to lose their cash cow. Meanwhile, Javert visits Madeleine and insist that he be fired because he informed the police that he suspected Madeleine was in fact Jean Valjean. When the police informed Javert that they had the 'real' Jean Valjean in their possession, Javert felt the only just resolution was that he be fired. Madeleine refused, telling Javert he was an honorable man. Madeleine acts disinterested in the story of Jean Valjean.




I think Hugo is railing against a society which has no safety net for someone like Fantine. She loses her parents to illness, she's completely uneducated and illiterate. Her 'sins' are to love: first the student who gets her pregnant then abandons her, then Cosette for whom she sacrifices everything. Even when she is given some dignity and ability to earn money legitimately, that is stripped from her due to her so-called 'immorality'. If one of Hugo's aims is to rouse his readers against social injustice then it works for me everytime!



Only a guess, but he never reported in to (handed over his passport) the authorities in the town in which he lives, owns the factory, and has become mayor. That's probably a crime.


The little girl is Cosette being held in Fantine's arms as she arrives at the Thénardier's.
But the narrator says . . .
Ten months had passed since 'the great practical joke.' "
The great practical joke being the men leaving the women at the restaurant, Fantine abandoned and pregnant.
Cosette is aging quickly.

This is probably why the foreman (or whatever he is) fires Fantine. Valjean wants his workers to live morally and within the law. The foreman probably interprets this -- and given the era, why shouldn't he? -- to include one's past -- no chance of redemption.
Living when and where I do, it's easy for me to forget the cruelty of the time period. You could literally die in the gutter from neglect. Fantine is ruined by a mistake she made when young. Meanwhile, all the aristocrats and nobles are marrying for political reasons, having affair after affair, and leaving children born out of wedlock in their wake.

The little girl is Cosette being held in Fantine's arms as she arrives at..."
I think when Fantine is abandoned she already has Cosette, she's not pregnant. Hugo is usually meticulous with details of things like time and money.

I posted that because I'm a bit unclear with all the flashbacks what the situation is and am looking for input from others. Something's wrong, most likely with my reading. But I'm pretty sure Fantine is pregnant at the time the men abandon the women at the restaurant. Somehow i've messed up the timeline.

Hugo goes on to call them visible phantoms of our souls, which, I think, is a bit much. So imagine my surprise when I google this and find all kinds of stuff on humans, animals, and metaphors, including research papers. It's called zoomorph.
But we do use animals in metaphors for human behavior and looks.
vulpine
pig
skunk
feline
hyena
jackal
weasel
snake
rat
ass
squirrelly
sheep
lamb
lionize
eye of the tiger

Possibly it's a translation issue? The end of book 3, ch 9 (where the men abandon the women) in the Denny Penguin translation is 'It was her first love, as we have said. She had given herself to Tholomyes as to a husband, and the poor girl had a child'.

Mine (Julie Rose translation) says the same. That explains it. Goes to show how good my memory is.


I really didn't pay attention to the timeline. I just knew he dumped her and wouldn't reply to her letters, which is not uncommon. I may seem a bit too harsh with Fantine, but she knew about the "morality" clause. It was really common. Unwed mothers were considered unworthy by society, and not just in France.
Why didn't she talk to someone about her plight, instead of trying to hide it? And why did she give Cosette to Mrs. Thernadier? She didn't know the woman, and it seemed strange to me for a mother to just hand off her child. Though Cosette is a bastard, I do think a church would have looked for adoptive parents.
Yes, she is naive, but Hugo makes her too much of a victim. It's like she's more of a plot device than a person.


Point taken, but this has never made sense to me, handing her child over to a stranger. I understand there are people who have sold their children, but this is the only case I can think of in which someone pawns her child.

Yes, this is a weak point. Another is when fired she chooses not to confront Valjean and ask him for her job back. What's she got to lose? Given her daughter's plight (and her own) there isn't any good reason for her not to make the attempt.
Fantine (and Valjean before his epiphany) is Les Miserables in microcosm. She is the (female) embodiment of social injustice -- a little too saintly, a little too naive, a little too abused. Everything that could go badly for Fantine does go badly for her.
But are Valjean and Myriel any more authentic? All three experience epiphanies: Myriel during the revolution becomes the priest saint; Valjean, after receiving a kindness from Myriel, transforms into the employer/mayor saint, and Fantine is saved by Valjean at the police station. He absolves her of all wrongdoing, and she becomes what?

Yes, ..."
I thought it was just me. She's happy, but still doomed.

I can see what you mean about Fantine being a passive victim, but for me she still works. I can see why it wouldn't occur to her to speak to Valjean about her lost job: she's friendless and illiterate, he's the mayor and factory owner - his past is unknown and they move in different worlds. She's as amazed at his reaching out to her as he was by Myriel - neither of them have expectations of being helped or saved.


I found the opinion on Fantine as a plot device interesting. I found her story very sad and I think it is an extreme portrayal of what was happening to women in poverty in this time. She is a plot device in the sense that all the bad things happen to her but all of them are realistic occurrences.
I think the reason she didn’t go to Monsieur Madeleine about her job is that she thought it was him who had fired her. Maybe there was an element of pride in that she didn’t want to beg for her job. Maybe she thought she would find a way to solve her problems, perhaps demonstrating her naivety. I wonder if her previous experience of meeting the Tholomyes and the others in Paris had saved her from poverty before and maybe she thought it would happen again.
I was also confused about the timeline. I had assumed the affair with Tholomyes was short lived. I did wonder, is Cosette not his child? I don’t understand how Fantine could have concealed a pregnancy and child from a man she was in love with. Or if he knew, then he is even more of a scoundrel than Hugo led us to believe!
I find Javert annoying. The section where he was begging to be fired just irritated me, as surely he should see that he is lucky to be in a job when there are people like Fantine selling her teeth and body just to scrape by. Maybe it is because he cannot see that there could be a similarity between them.
I am really enjoying this, and finding it much easier going than I expected. Looking forward to the next section.
I think the reason she didn’t go to Monsieur Madeleine about her job is that she thought it was him who had fired her. Maybe there was an element of pride in that she didn’t want to beg for her job. Maybe she thought she would find a way to solve her problems, perhaps demonstrating her naivety. I wonder if her previous experience of meeting the Tholomyes and the others in Paris had saved her from poverty before and maybe she thought it would happen again.
I was also confused about the timeline. I had assumed the affair with Tholomyes was short lived. I did wonder, is Cosette not his child? I don’t understand how Fantine could have concealed a pregnancy and child from a man she was in love with. Or if he knew, then he is even more of a scoundrel than Hugo led us to believe!
I find Javert annoying. The section where he was begging to be fired just irritated me, as surely he should see that he is lucky to be in a job when there are people like Fantine selling her teeth and body just to scrape by. Maybe it is because he cannot see that there could be a similarity between them.
I am really enjoying this, and finding it much easier going than I expected. Looking forward to the next section.
Fantine handing Cosette over to the inn keepers further demonstrates her naivety. She assumes that they will look after her child as they appear to look after their own daughters.
Why couldn’t she go back to her home town and tell them she is a widow with a child?
Why couldn’t she go back to her home town and tell them she is a widow with a child?

But he is a victim too. He was born and raised in a prison. Even oppressors can be victims. Both Valjean and Fantine had better chances than he had.

very true- there is no safety net to protect the poor without means, so if an unfortunate circumstance were to befall them, they couldn't easily climb out of it. Even in countries today with programs for the poor it is often a vicious cycle when one problem afflicting the poor results in another, etc. A leg up can help some but many remain trapped. In Fantine's case, if she had received aid she would have been able to live a life of modest means - but I presume she still could not have lived with Cosette unless she didn't have to work.

I thought that Hugo's 'hints' about Jean Valjean's identity were a little too overt - and there were several of them! By the time he lifted the cart it was pretty clear who he was. Also, you just KNEW he was going to lift the cart!

The little girl is Cosette being held in Fantine's arms as she arrives at..."
She is aging quickly! you know it seemed to me that she 'gave up' once she had to surrender her last treasure - her beauty. After she gave up her hair and her teeth she seemed to lose the identity that she had. It's amazing how gullible she was - I was hoping that the neighbor who taught her to live modestly but also have warned her about the likelihood of being duped by the unscrupulous like the Thenardiers!

I think the foreman guy really didn't have a choice - given the societal expectations at that time that is just what would have been expected. Hugo is challenging those moral standards and expectations, but those kind of changes usually take considerable time to really evolve.

Hugo goes on to call them visible phantoms of our souls, which, I think, is a bit much. So imagine my surprise when I goog..."
this is too bizarre!

I honestly don't know how any human could do this. It's like he was a sociopath.

I think she was just desperate and didn't see any other options. She wasn't really savvy or bright, and probably just saw the kids laughing and playing and thought - I want that for my child, and I can't provide for her.

I can see what you mean about Fantine being a passive victim, but for me she still works. I can see why it wouldn't occur to her to speak to Valjean..."
It's a good point RC, given the different levels of society they operate on, she might not have thought that questioning her fate was even possible. Hugo refers to her acceptance of the firing, she felt she 'deserved' it.

Laughing, so true! This guy is a total freak. He is totally obsessive and literally can't wait to bring JV down. He reminds me a bit of the underground man in Notes from Underground.

Good point - he has to be punished. He lives in a world of domination and submission, right and wrong, and he subjects himself to the harsh judgment he passes on everyone else.

Why couldn’t sh..."
She must have not had any family there who could take her in? it does seem bizarre.

In a way, it's amazing he didn't go in the other direction. He is trying desperately to overcome his circumstances and do right.

He was probably ordinary for the time, a time when "illegitimate" meant exactly that. The reactions here are a corollary to condemning the woman for having the child out of wedlock -- painting that big, bright, red "A" on the forehead --while the guy gets away free.
Book Four:
In this book we encounter Fantine with her young daughter, and she is unable to obtain work as an unmarried mother. She comes across a family with two young girls and offers to pay them if they will take Cosette. They agree, but Fantine has no knowledge of how unscrupulous and uncaring the Thenardiers are. Cosette becomes a child slave and watches the Thenardier children live a carefree life. The Thenardiers continually ask Fantine for more money, which she scrounges up, but she doesn't realize that the funds do not go to her own child but towards the expenses of the Thenardiers.