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Narrative Responses To The Trauma Of The French RevolutionNarrative Responses To The Trauma Of The French Revolution

Narrative Responses To The Trauma Of The French Revolution

Katherine Astbury

About this book

"During the French Revolution, traditional literary forms such as the sentimental novel and the moral tale dominate literary production. At first glance, it might seem that these texts are unaffected by the upheavals in France; in fact they reveal not only a surprising engagement with politics but also an internalised emotional response to the turbulence of the period. In this innovative and wide-ranging study, Katherine Astbury uses trauma theory as a way of exploring the apparent contradiction between the proliferation of non-political literary texts and the events of the Revolution. Through the narratives of established bestselling literary figures of the Ancien Régime (primarily Marmontel, Madame de Genlis and Florian), and the early works of first generation Romantics Madame de Staël and Chateaubriand, she traces how the Revolution shapes their writing, providing an intriguing new angle on cultural production of the 1790s."--Publisher's website.

Details

OL Work ID
OL17376243W

Subjects

France, history, revolution, 1789-1799, literature and the revolutionFrench literature, history and criticism, 18th centuryFrench fictionHistory and criticismFrench Revolutionary literaturePsychic trauma in literatureHistoryInfluenceLiterature and the revolutionLITERARY CRITICISMEuropeanFrenchInfluence (Literary, artistic, etc.)French literatureThemes, motives

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