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Le Grand Transit Moderne : mobility, modernity and French naturalist fiction / Larry Duffy.

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Literature and Cultural Studies - Book Archive 2000-2006 Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Duffy, Larry, author.
Series:
Faux titre ; 260.
Faux Titre ; 260
Language:
English
French
Subjects (All):
French literature--19th century--History and criticism.
French literature.
City and town life in literature.
Physical Description:
1 online resource.
Place of Publication:
Amsterdam : Editions Rodopi, 2005.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
This book explores fictional responses to the changing transport and urban infrastructure of nineteenth-century France, arguing that networks of movement (and an accompanying 'culture of networks') which had become firmly established by the time of the Second Empire constitute a privileged subject for representation, and that naturalist fiction in particular is that representation's privileged form. Contextualizing the study's critical focus by way of a brief historical outline of the development of infrastructural networks in nineteenth-century France and a delineation of the problematical parameters of French naturalism, Duffy examines literary representations of new forms and conceptualisations of movement, principally in works by Flaubert, Zola, and Maupassant. Other authors discussed include the Goncourt brothers, Huysmans, Baudelaire and Claretie. Literary texts are examined alongside a range of related scientific, sociological and medical texts. What emerges strikingly from consideration of these works and the discourses they - often subversively - incorporate, is that movement, central to nineteenth-century industrial society's view of itself, is frequently perceived and presented self-deludingly in the idealised metaphorical terms of smoothly-functioning systems of perpetual motion, and that naturalist fiction, by exploiting to their full potential the same metaphors in its narratives, challenges this 'anti-entropic' vision.
Contents:
Acknowledgments
Author's Note
Introduction: 'Le Grand Transit Moderne'
Chapter 1 A Complex Kind of Training : L'Éducation sentimentale, Modernity, and the Changing Phenomenology of Motion
Chapter 2 An Evolutionary Naturalist Intertext: The Traffic Jam as Exemplary Taxonomic Motif
Chapter 3 Haussmannization, Circulation and the Ideal City of Au Bonheur des Dames
Chapter 4 Convulsions, Détraquement and the Circulus: Zola's Dehystericisation of Prostitution
Chapter 5 Beyond the Pressure Principle: Bestialisation, Anthropomorphism and the 'Thermodynamic' Death Instinct in Naturalist Fiction
Chapter 6 Maupassant, Doxa and the Banalisation of Modern Travel
Conclusion: 'Ce Parasite Supplémentaire'
Bibliography
Index.
Notes:
Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
94-012-0212-5
1-4175-9111-0
OCLC:
60074625
Publisher Number:
10.1163/9789401202121 DOI

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