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Pleasure and Pain in Nineteenth-Century French Literature and Culture
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From Sade at one end of the nineteenth century to Freud at the other, via many French novelists and poets, pleasure and pain become ever more closely entwined. Whereas the inseparability of these t...
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01 January 2008

From Sade at one end of the nineteenth century to Freud at the other, via many French novelists and poets, pleasure and pain become ever more closely entwined. Whereas the inseparability of these themes has hitherto been studied from isolated perspectives, such as psychoanalysis, sadism and sado-masochism, melancholy, or post-structuralist textual jouissance, the originality of this collaborative volume lies in its exploration of how pleasure and pain function across a broader range of contexts. The essays collected here demonstrate how the complex relationship between pleasure and pain plays a vital role in structuring nineteenth-century thinking in prose fiction (Balzac, Flaubert, Musset, Maupassant, Zola), verse and the memoir as well as socio-cultural studies, medical discourses, aesthetic theory and the visual arts. Featuring an international selection of contributors representing the full range of approaches to scholarship in nineteenth-century French studies – historical, literary, cultural, art historical, philosophical, and sociopolitical – the volume attests to the vitality, coherence and interdisciplinarity of nineteenth-century French studies and will be of interest to a wide cross-section of scholars and students of French literature, society and culture.
Price: $113.00
Pages: 286
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Faux Titre
Publication Date:
01 January 2008
ISBN: 9789042025028
Format: Paperback
David Evans is Lecturer in French at the University of St Andrews. His publications include Rhythm, Illusion and the Poetic Idea: Baudelaire, Rimbaud, Mallarmé (Rodopi, 2004) and articles on nineteenth and twentieth-century French poetry, in particular Théodore de Banville and Michel Houellebecq.
Kate Griffiths is Lecturer in French at Swansea University. She has published widely on the questions of adaptation, citation and borrowing in nineteenth-century contexts and recently completed an AHRC-supported monograph: Emile Zola: Authorship and Adaptation.
Kate Griffiths is Lecturer in French at Swansea University. She has published widely on the questions of adaptation, citation and borrowing in nineteenth-century contexts and recently completed an AHRC-supported monograph: Emile Zola: Authorship and Adaptation.