Department of Modern European Languages, Faculty of Arts, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka.
World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2026, 30(01), 142-149
Article DOI: 10.30574/wjarr.2026.30.1.0600
Received on 03 February 2026; revised on 18 March 2026; accepted on 20 March 2026
This article explores the role of women in the Symbolist and Decadent movements through a critical analysis of selected poems from Les Fleurs du mal by Charles Baudelaire. Traditionally perceived as muses or objects of desire, women in Baudelaire’s poetry also emerge as complex, powerful, and at times unsettling figures who transcend their passive literary roles. By engaging with Symbolist aesthetics and the Decadent ethos, Baudelaire portrays women not merely as sensual icons but as active agents in the exploration of modernity, spiritual dualism, and aesthetic rebellion. Through poems such as “La Chevelure,” “Le Vampire,” and “Les Bijoux,” female figures are both revered and feared, embodying the contradictions of allure and destruction, divinity and decadence. This ambivalence reflects a subversive reimagining of womanhood that challenges 19th-century bourgeois norms, particularly regarding morality, sexuality, and artistic representation. Drawing on feminist literary criticism and cultural theory, the article argues that Baudelaire’s portrayal of women though at times voyeuristic or idealized nonetheless reveals a space for female emancipation through art and expression. In navigating between sacred and profane love, Baudelaire constructs a poetic world where women assert symbolic authority and aesthetic influence, often disrupting patriarchal boundaries. Their presence becomes central to Symbolist experimentation and Decadent transgression, functioning as both inspiration and mirror for the poet’s inner conflicts. Ultimately, this study reveals how Baudelaire’s Fleurs du mal contributes to a nuanced discourse on female agency, demonstrating how women in Symbolist literature both reflect and resist the ideological constraints of their time.
Female agency; Emancipation through art; Gender and literature; Transgression; Sexuality and morality
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Chinazom Sylvia Ezeaka and Cheryl Amaka Udogu. The role of women in symbolist and decadent movements: Emancipation through art and expression. World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2026, 30(01), 142-149. Article DOI: https://doi.org/10.30574/wjarr.2026.30.1.0600.