The Family in Crisis in Late Nineteenth-Century French Fiction

The Family in Crisis in Late Nineteenth-Century French Fiction - Cambridge Studies in French

Hardback (13 Jan 1999)

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Publisher's Synopsis

The Family in Crisis in Late Nineteenth-Century French Fiction, first published in 1999, focuses on a key moment in the construction of the modern view of the family in France. Nicholas White's analysis of novels by Zola, Maupassant, Hennique, Bourget and Armand Charpentier is fashioned by perspectives on a wide cultural field, including legal, popular and academic discourses on the family and its discontents. His account encourages a close rereading of canonical as well as overlooked texts from fin de siècle France. What emerges between the death of Flaubert in 1880 and the publication of Bourget's Un divorce in 1904 is a series of Naturalist and post-Naturalist representations of transgressive behaviour in which tales of adultery, illegitimacy, consanguinity, incest and divorce serve to exemplify and to offer a range of nuances on the Third Republic's crisis in what might now be termed 'family values'.

Book information

ISBN: 9780521562744
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Imprint: Cambridge University Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 843.709355
DEWEY edition: 21
Language: English
Number of pages: 214
Weight: 450g
Height: 229mm
Width: 152mm
Spine width: 17mm