Reviews
In this profound, engaging book, Deborah Jenson develops a comprehensive, highly original analysis of French romanticism... This exemplary study should greatly influence nineteenth-century French studies and the theory of social mimesis.
Read this book if you are interested in the legacy of the French Revolution... it will not disappoint.
This is an absolutely brilliant and original study of post-revolutionary France.
In this elegantly written and beautifully conceived work, Deborah Jenson reclaims the notion of mimesis to demonstrate how it informs nineteenth-century poetry and prose, epistemology and politics. This work is a dazzlingly ambitious and original attempt to reconceive nineteenth-century French literature as a working-out of the trauma inflicted on the national psyche by the Revolution and its legacies. It is by far the most pleasurable book about pain I have ever read.
Book Details
Contents:
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: ICONOCLASM: Setting Wounds in Stone at the Musée des Monuments Français, 1795-1816
Chapter 2: TRANSPOSITIONALITY: The Political Gets Personal in Constant
Contents:
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: ICONOCLASM: Setting Wounds in Stone at the Musée des Monuments Français, 1795-1816
Chapter 2: TRANSPOSITIONALITY: The Political Gets Personal in Constant's Cécile
Chapter 3: PLAGIARISM: Duras, Desbordes-Valmore, and the Scandalous Potency of the Woman Author
Chapter 4: "HARMONY" : Lamartine's Social Pain
Chapter 5: ANALOGY: Slavery to Duplicity in Sand's Indiana
Chapter 6: FETISHISM: Thinking with Things in Flaubert's "Un Coeur simple"
EPILOGUE: French Romanticism: Posttraumatic Utopia/ Post-Utopian Trauma
Notes
Index