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A parvenu is a person who is a relative newcomer to a high-ranking . The word is borrowed from the ; it is the past participle of the verb parvenir (to reach, to arrive, to manage to do something).


Origin
The word parvenu typically describes a person who recently , especially a or "new money" individual. The famous , who survived the sinking of the Titanic in 1912, was portrayed as a "new money" individual, most notably in the "climbing social classes" musical The Unsinkable Molly Brown, because of her impoverished roots and lack of social .

The Oxford English Dictionary defines a parvenu as: "A person from a humble background who has rapidly gained wealth or an influential social position; a nouveau riche; an upstart, a social climber. Also in extended use. Generally used with the implication that the person concerned is unsuited to the new social position, esp. through lacking the necessary manners or accomplishments."

The term designates individuals not socially accepted by individuals already established in their new class. It expresses a form of .


Social climber
A social climber is a derogatory term that denotes someone who seeks social prominence through aggressive, fawning, or obsequious behavior.
(2025). 9780313337192, Greenwood Publishing Group.
The term is sometimes used as synonymous with parvenu, and may be used as an insult, suggesting a poor or disloyalty to roots.


Examples
Several examples might include athletic and entertainment professionals born and raised in and suddenly finding themselves with significantly higher income due to their new-found celebrity status.


Royalty
Established royal families of Europe regarded the Bonaparte family as parvenu royalty. tried to marry into Swedish and German royalty, but was unsuccessful because he was a parvenu. For instance, his plan to marry Anna Pavlovna, one of the sisters of the Emperor Alexander, did not push through because the Empress Mother objected to the union on account of Napoleon's status as a parvenu. The reason given for the misalliance was difference of religion.

This was also said to be the case with the marriage of Egyptian Princess Fawzia to the future , Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. One of the reasons speculated for their divorce is that Fawzia's family, including King Farouk I, viewed the Pahlavis as parvenus. Though the Muhammad Ali dynasty of and , to which Fawzia belonged, had humble beginnings, it had solidified its status in Egypt and the since 1805. In contrast, the Pahlavis were a far more recent dynasty, owing their position entirely to the coup d'état of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's father, , in 1921.


In the United States
Many parvenus in the arrived there as poor immigrants, then worked their way up the social ladder. Beginning as laborers, they took advantage of better economic opportunities in the U.S., moving on to become civil servants, "white collar" (business/office) workers and finally members of respectable society.


In France
In the 19th century, the French aristocracy viewed Jewish women who converted to Christianity upon marriage as parvenus. Professor Catherine Nicault of the University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne has argued that this exemplified the way in which the French aristocracy was hostile toward Jews.


In literature
  • Vanity Fairs is considered an archetype of the social climber, having flirted her way up the British upper class. The character was not born to affluence or the aristocracy, but climbed the social ladder through opportunism and her personal ambition.
    (2025). 9781433105951, Peter Lang.
  • In the novel by Romanian writer George Călinescu, Stănică Rațiu represents the newly rich. He obtains his wealth by stealing money from a rich old man and by marrying into the elite.
  • In the novel The Great Gatsby, Gatsby represents the newly rich. He obtains his wealth through , spends it lavishly, and struggles to gain the acceptance of older money.
  • In the novel The Red and the Black, the provincial protagonist Julien Sorel thinks of himself as a parvenu after establishing himself in the service of the Marquis de la Mole.
  • In The Cherry Orchard, Gayev regards Lophakhin as a parvenu, as many critics interpret his remarks.
  • Pip, from Dickens's Great Expectations, would be considered a parvenu by many.
  • Edmond Dantès as The Count of Monte Cristo in ' work.
  • John and Alisoun in "The Miller's Tale" by Geoffrey Chaucer.
  • The Franklin in "The Franklin's Tale" by Geoffrey Chaucer.
  • Mrs. Bennet, and the Bingleys, in 's novel Pride and Prejudice.
  • Philip Elton in 's novel Emma.
  • Jane Wilson in Anne Brontë's novel The Tenant of Wildfell Hall.
  • Barry Lyndon, the protagonist of the novel The Luck of Barry Lyndon by William Makepeace Thackeray.
  • by Guy de Maupassant tells the story of Madame Mathilde Loisel and her husband. Mathilde always imagined herself in a high social position with wonderful jewels. However, she has nothing and marries a low-paid clerk who tries his best to make her happy.
  • "William Wilson", a short story by Edgar Allan Poe.


Philosophy
  • Friedrich Nietzsche in The Gay Science section 176 on Compassion "les souverains rangent aux parvenus" translated "the sovereign put themselves before the parvenu".


Film and television
  • In , refers to her parents as "Parvenus...social climbers" after they attempt to prevent her from marrying her publisher Norman Warne since he is a tradesman, despite them coming from a trading background.
  • In Downfall, furiously accuses Hermann Göring of being a parvenu.
  • In The Crown, Queen Mary says "represents a royal family of and parvenus".
  • , the protagonist of the British sitcom Keeping Up Appearances
  • In Stan & Ollie, calls a parvenu when he refuses to give them a raise.


See also


External links
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