Robin Howells; James Kearns; Malcolm Cook; Marie-Emmanuelle Plagnol-Diéval Peter Lang Ltd, International Academic Publishers (2006) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Hildegard Von Bingen; Edward Elgar; Jonathan Harvey; Herbert Howells; James Long; Hubert Parry; Christopher Robinson; Christophe Julkaisija: Signum CD-levy
Maney Publishing Sivumäärä: 148 sivua Asu: Kovakantinen kirja Julkaisuvuosi: 2007, 02.08.2007 (lisätietoa) Kieli: Englanti
In a cultural shift around the mid-point of the French eighteenth century, the mode of wit is increasingly displaced by bourgeois pathos. Social sophistication and sexual experience are rejected in favour of a retreat into ideal imagination. Instead of the novel of worldliness, we encounter fictions of better worlds: original, natural, familial, innocent and harmonious, protected against reality and time. The regressive shift is traced in this study in general terms, and then through detailed analysis of three of the best-selling novels of the period. The turning-point is represented by Mme de Graffignys Lettres dune Peruvienne (1747, 1752) with its profound ambivalence towards knowledge. A new order is revealed and set out, but still declared lacking, in Rousseaus Julie, ou la Nouvelle Heloise (1761). The visionary return to the organic wholeness of nature is offered by Bernardins Paul et Virginie (1788).