Grisette

/ɡrɪˈzɛt/ noun

Definition

A young, usually working-class woman or girl in 18th-19th century France, often known for her modest dress and sometimes loose morals in literature.

Etymology

From French grisette, derived from gris (gray) because these young women typically wore simple gray dresses. The term appeared in French literature from about the 1700s onward.

Kelly Says

Balzac and other French authors made 'grisettes' famous in novels as charming working girls—the word became shorthand for a romantic type that captivated Paris, even though real grisettes just needed to earn a living.

Ethical Language Guidance

Gender History

Grisette refers to a working-class French woman (19th century), particularly one of loose morals in period literature. The term gender-codes an entire social class and presumes female sexuality as a defining characteristic.

Inclusive Usage

Use 'working-class Parisian woman' or 'grisette' with historical context only—acknowledge the term's moralizing baggage rather than treating it as neutral description.

Inclusive Alternatives

["working-class woman","Parisian woman of the 1800s"]

Empowerment Note

Grisettes were economically independent, self-supporting women in urban contexts—a fact historically buried under moral judgment. Reclaim their agency: they navigated labor and society on their own terms.

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