About this guide
The introduction, discussion questions, and suggested reading list that
follow are intended to enhance your group's reading and discussion of
Patrick Süskind's Perfume. We hope they will provide you
with a variety of approaches to this vividly imagined historical novel.
Set in eighteenth-century France, Perfume explores the evolution
of a remorseless killer during an era of intense contradictions, an age
in which poverty, filth, and superstition coexisted uneasily with the
Enlightenment's ideals of progress, liberty, and reason.
The novel's protagonist, Jean-Baptiste Grenouille, begins and ends his
life at the Cimeti¸re des Innocents. But in the meantime, a most
unusual--and unbelievable--life unfolds. Born with no odor of his own,
Grenouille soon develops a sense of smell capable of almost supernatural
olfactory distinctions. He wanders the reeking streets of Paris,
absorbing thousands of scents, until one day he is irresistibly drawn to
an odor of "pure beauty," a scent that he feels will provide the
principle for ordering all the others. The source is an adolescent girl,
and Grenouille coldly kills her in order to possess her smell. After
getting away with the murder, he goes to work for the perfumer Baldini
and quickly reveals a genius for creating fragrances of unsurpassed
subtlety and allure. He makes his master rich, but his contempt for
mankind drives him into the wilderness, away from the smell of humans,
and he spends seven years in a cave beneath France's loneliest mountain.
When he emerges, he travels to Grasse, the center of the perfume
industry, where he learns how to distill the essential scents of
objects, animals and, ultimately, of humans. Here he creates for himself
an arsenal of odors which he manipulates in order to make himself
unnoticeable, repellent, or pitiable. But he is driven to an even
greater goal and begins a ghastly series of murders, robbing the most
beautiful virgin girls in the town of their scents to concoct a perfume
capable of making everyone, even the father of one of his victims, love
and revere the wearer. Whether such powers will save him from his own
self-destructive emotions is not revealed until the novel's harrowing
final pages. A story in which the trajectories of genius, obsession, and
cruelty come together in one extraordinary character, Perfume offers a
fascinating look at the seething underside of the Age of Reason.
For discussion
- Jean-Baptiste Grenouille is born in a food market that had been
erected above the Cimeti¸re des Innocents, the "most putrid spot in the
whole kingdom" [p. 4]. He barely escapes death at his birth; his mother
would have let him die among the fish guts as she had her four other
children. But Grenouille miraculously survives. How would you relate the
circumstances of his birth to the life he grows up to live?
- When the wet nurse refuses to keep Grenouille because he has no
smell and therefore must be a "child of the devil" [p. 11], Father
Terrier takes him in. But he is exasperated. He has tried to combat "the
superstitious notions of the simple folk: witches and fortune-telling
cards, the wearing of amulets, the evil eye, exorcisms, hocus-pocus at
full moon, and all the other acts they performed" [p. 14]. In what ways
can Perfume be read as a critique of the eighteenth century's conception
of itself as the Age of Reason? Where else in the novel do you find
rationality being overcome by baser human instincts?
- Throughout the novel, Grenouille is likened to a tick. Why do you
think Süskind chose this analogy? In what ways does Grenouille
behave like a tick? What does this analogy reveal about his character
that a more straightforward description would not?
- Grenouille is born with a supernaturally developed sense of smell.
He can smell the approach of a thunderstorm when there's not a cloud in
the sky and wonders why there is only one word for smoke when "from
minute to minute, second to second, the amalgam of hundreds of odors
mixed iridescently into ever new and changing unities as the smoke rose
from the fire" [p. 25]. He can store and synthesize thousands of odors
within himself and re-create them at will. How do you interpret this
extraordinary ability? Do you think such a sensitivity to odor is
physically possible? Do you feel Süskind wants us to read his novel
as a kind of fable or allegory? Why do you think Süskind chose to
build his novel around the sense of smell instead of one of the other
senses?
- What motivates Grenouille to commit his first murder? What does he
discover about himself and his destiny after he has killed the
red-haired girl?
- Do the descriptions of life in eighteenth-century France--the
crowded quarters, the unsanitary conditions, the treatment of orphans,
the punishment of criminals, etc.--surprise you? How are these
conditions related to the ideals of enlightenment, reason, and progress
that figure so prominently in eighteenth-century thinking?
- The perfumer Baldini initially regards Grenouille with contempt. He
explains, "Whatever the art or whatever the craft--and make a note of
this before you go!--talent means next to nothing, while experience,
acquired in humility and with hard work, means everything" [p. 74]. And
yet Grenouille is able to concoct the most glorious perfumes
effortlessly and with no previous experience or training. What do you
think the novel as a whole conveys about the relationship between genius
and convention, creativity and destruction, chaos and order?
- The narrator remarks, "Odors have a power of persuasion stronger
than that of words, appearances, emotions, or will. The persuasive power
of an odor cannot be fended off, it enters into us like breath into our
lungs, it fills us up, imbues us totally. There is no remedy for it" [p.
82]. Do you think this is true? Why would an odor have such power? In
what ways does Grenouille use this power to his advantage?
- Some reviewers have claimed that the Süskind's writing in
Perfume is "verbose and theatrical," while others have described it as
"sensuous and supple." Clearly, the writing is more extravagantly
imaginative than the pared down minimalism of much recent American
fiction. How do you respond to Süskind's prose? How do you respond
to the critical reactions outlined above?
- Grenouille is introduced as "one of the most gifted and abominable
personages in an era that knew no lack of gifted and abominable
personages" [p. 3]. Does Süskind manage to make him a sympathetic
character, in spite of his murders and obsessions? Or do you find him
wholly repellent? How might you explain Grenouille's actions? To what
extent do his experiences shape his behavior? Do you think he is
inherently evil?
- When Grenouille emerges from his self-imposed seven-year exile, he
is brought to the attention of the marquis de La Taillade-Espinasse,
whose theory that "life could develop only at a certain distance from
the earth, since the earth itself constantly emits a corrupting gas, a
so-called fluidum letale, which lames vital energies and sooner or later
totally extinguishes them" [pp. 139Š140] seems to explain Grenouille's
sad condition. This theory also contends that all living creatures
therefore "endeavor to distance themselves from the earth by growing"
upwards and away from the earth [p. 140]. What attitudes and beliefs is
Süskind satirizing through the character of Taillade-Espinasse?
- Grenouille becomes, toward the end of the novel, a kind of olfactory
vampire, killing young women to rob them of their scents. "What he
coveted was the odor of certain human beings: that is, those rare humans
who inspire love. These were his victims" [p. 188]. Why does he need the
scents of these people?
- In the novel's climatic scene, just as Grenouille is about to be
executed, he uses the perfume he's created to turn the townspeople's
hatred for him into love and to inspire an orgy which collapses class
distinctions and pairs "grandfather with virgin, odd-jobber with
lawyer's spouse, apprentice with nun, Jesuit with Freemason's wife--all
topsy-turvy, just as opportunity presented" [p. 239]. Grenouille is
revered and regards himself as godlike in this triumph. Does he enjoy
this moment, or is it a hollow victory? What is the novel suggesting
about the nature of human love? About order and disorder?
- After Grenouille leaves the town of Grasse, where he has caused so
much death and suffering, his case is officially closed and we're told,
"The town had forgotten it in any event, forgotten it so totally that
travelers who passed through in the days that followed and casually
inquired about Grasse's infamous murderer of young maidens found not a
single sane person who could give them any information" [p. 247]. Why do
the townspeople react this way? Why isn't it possible for them to
integrate what has happened into their daily consciousness?
- How do you interpret the novel's ending, as Grenouille returns to
the Cimeti¸re des Innocents and allows himself to be murdered and eaten
by the criminals who loiter there? What ironies are suggested by the
narrator's assertion that Grenouille's killers had just done something,
for the first time, "out of love" [p. 255]?
- Perfume is set in eighteenth-century France and tells an extravagant
story of a man possessed with a magical sense of smell and a bizarrely
destructive obsession. Do its historical setting and fantastic elements
make it harder or easier to identify with? What contemporary issues and
anxieties does the story illuminate?
Suggestions for further reading
Albert Camus, The Stranger; Fyodor Dostoevsky, Crime and Punishment,
Notes from Underground; Bret Easton Ellis, American Psycho; Michel
Foucault, Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of
Reason; David Holland, Murcheston: The Wolf's Tale; Edwin L. Morris,
Scents of Time: Perfume from Ancient Egypt to the 21st Century; Joyce
Carol Oates, Zombie; Edgar Allan Poe, Complete Tales & Poems; Mary
Shelley, Frankenstein.
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