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From Sleep Unbound portrays the life of Samya, an Egyptian woman who is taken at age 15 from her Catholic boarding school and forced into a loveless and humiliating marriage. Eventually sundered from every human attachment, Samya lapses into despair and despondence, and finally an emotionally caused paralysis. But when she shakes off the torpor of sleep, the sleep of avoidance, she awakens to action with the explosive energy of one who has been reborn.
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French fiction. --- Frans --- Literatuur --- French literature --- French fiction
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This book examines contemporary French literature in the light of a widely-held critical notion that it exists 'in the wake' of a period in which avant-garde experimental literature and postmodern writing-about-writing held sway.
French fiction --- French literature --- History.
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In France between 1641 and 1782 the romance developed into the novel. Mr. Showalter's intensive study of the novel, particularly during the critical period 1700-1720, shows that an important movement toward nineteenth century realism was taking place. To trace this development the author has selected five phenomena-time, space, names, money, and the narrator-and follows their treatment throughout the period to show why romance tended toward the novel. To show the working-out of these ideas there is a detailed analysis of one novel, Robert Challe's Les Illustres Francoises, which can be precisely located in the chain of literary influence. Its central theme of the individual in conflict with society was well suited to the forms available to the eighteenth century novelist. Consequently it appears repeatedly in important novels of the period, showing that the evolutionary process worked to some degree even on subject matter.Originally published in 1972.The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.
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Culture, politique, société, famille : la Révolution française marque un tournant sur tous les plans. C'est aussi vrai du don, puisqu'au lendemain de 1789 une question inédite se fait entendre. Qu'arrive-t-il quand ceux qui ont l'habitude de donner (les nobles) se retrouvent obligés, pour survivre, de recevoir les largesses d'autrui ? Pour répondre à cette question, Geneviève Lafrance a analysé la représentation des dons dans cinq romans parus à la fin du xviiie et au début du xixe siècle. Elle a aussi voulu savoir ce que pensaient les pouvoirs révolutionnaires de la bienfaisance, de la charité, de la dot, du legs. C'est du croisement de ces réflexions -- les romanesques comme les juridiques -- que naît l'étonnant portrait d'une époque où les dons sont souvent impuissants à rendre heureux ceux qui les reçoivent comme ceux qui les font. Chacun à sa manière, Gabriel Sénac de Meilhan, Isabelle de Charrière, Joseph Fiévée et Germaine de Staël mettent en cause l'idéal bienfaisant qui caractérisait le siècle des Lumières. Ils nous obligent par là à réfléchir à ce que donner veut dire, hier comme aujourd'hui.
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This collection of French short stories in translation expands our idea of French writing by including new stories by women writers and by authors of Francophone origin. Spanning the centuries from the late eighteenth to the late twentieth, the collection opens with a rumbustious tale from the Marquis de Sade, takes in the masters of the nineteenth century, from Stendhal and Balzac to Maupassant, and reaches to Quebec, Africa, and the French Caribbean in the twentieth century. Womenwriters include relatively well known figures such as Renee Vivien, Colette, and Beauvoir, and newer writers such
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Unlike other forms of fictional first-person narrative such as the memoir or epistolary novel, the French fictional journal or diary-novel has received inadequate critical attention. This is the first full-length analysis devoted to its particular features. Valerie Raoul bases her study on the premise that the interest of the fictional journal lies in its subjugation of one set of conventions, those of the diary, to another set, those of the novel, and the interference of each of those ‘codes’ in the function of the other. In this context she discusses more than fifty novels or short stories wholly or partly in diary form and written in France between 1800 and the present. In the first part of the book she deals with the fictivity of the diary-novel. Philippe Lejeune’s work on the functioning of autobiography serves as a point of comparison to elucidate the distinctive reading pact involved in this aspect of first-person fiction. The second part analyses the internal communication model: on this intradiegetic level the fictional diarist is narrator, actor, and narrate. In the third part, an abstract model is developed to illustrate the functioning of the fictional journal as a bi-textual form of communication, in which the internal communications process is a mise en abyme of the external one between author, character, and reader. The personal narcissism of the ‘intimiste’ is seen to give way in the fictional ‘journal intime’ to narcissistic fiction, since diary-novels are always the narration of the production of a ‘recit.’ This book is an important investigation into the very nature of fiction and the meaning of the activity of writing. It not only fills an important gap in the appreciation of French prose, but also adds to the comprehension of personal narrative in particular and narrative discourse in general.
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En 1775, à Paris, paraît un roman intitulé Le Philosophe sans prétention. L'auteur de ce « roman chimique » est Louis-Guillaume de La Folie, membre de l'Académie de Rouen et interlocuteur de quelques-uns des principaux chimistes de son temps. Du roman au mémoire académique, il n'y a qu'un pas : monsieur de La Folie invite ses lecteurs à consulter à la fois sa fiction et ses textes savants pour y trouver les démonstrations de ses théories. Son attitude est exemplaire de celle de plusieurs romanciers et scientifiques de la fin de l'Ancien Régime. Pendant que certains se méfient des « écarts de l'imagination », d'autres, au contraire, croient que le roman a quelque chose de propre à dire sur les sciences et leur avancement. Ce sont les représentations proposées par les uns et par les autres que met en lumière Joël Castonguay-Bélanger. Qui sont ces romanciers et ces scientifiques ? On croise dans Les écarts de l'imagination Buffon et Bernardin de Saint-Pierre, Lavoisier et le marquis de Sade, Condorcet et Rétif de La Bretonne, Lamarck et Casanova, sans oublier quelques savants fous et des charlatans comme Mesmer. Tous ces gens se sont passionnés pour le mouvement des marées, l'ascension des premiers ballons et les théories de la reproduction. Entre boudoirs et laboratoires, ils ont voulu comprendre l'attraction des corps, au sens newtonien comme au sens libertin. Les « pyrogues aérostatiques » les intéressaient autant que les voyages au centre de la terre. Pour eux, un « amusement » pouvait être « physique » et « géométrique ». Ils ont vécu à une époque, la fin du xviiie siècle, traversée de révolutions. Celles-ci ont été politiques, scientifiques, littéraires. Le moment était venu de les embrasser d'un seul regard.
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