- When I'm good, I'm very good. But when I'm bad I'm better.
- --Mae West
- --Mae West
She is typically portrayed as sexually insatiable. The prudery of our Victorian period ancestors imagined women to be sexless beings. Confronted with evidence that things were otherwise, Victorian men found themselves somewhat disconcerted. So it came to pass that the stereotype of the femme fatale was created. In the Anglo-Saxon world, she is often of foreign extraction. She is often portrayed as a sort of sexual vampire; her dark appetites were thought to be able to leach away the virility and independence of her lovers, leaving them shells of their former selves. Only by escaping her embraces could the hero be rescued. On this account, in earlier American slang femmes fatales were often called "vamps," a word that is associated with the fashions of the 1920s.
Femmes fatales are frequently encountered in film noir, in espionage thrillers, and in a number of adventure comic strips, such as The Spirit by Will Eisner, or Terry and the Pirates by Milton Caniff. This stock character is celebrated in the song Femme Fatale by the Velvet Underground.
Table of contents |
2 References |
Bram Dijkstra has written two shrill but nevertheless amusing books that discuss the femme fatale stereotype at great length:
Famous femmes fatales
Fictional characters
Historical figures
References