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Rousseau's Legacy - Emergence and Eclipse of the Writer in France (Hardcover)
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Rousseau's Legacy - Emergence and Eclipse of the Writer in France (Hardcover)
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In modern Western literary culture, the writer who combines
autobiographical witness with political critique has been the
object of particular veneration, as the careers of such celebrated
figures as Jean-Paul Sartre and Marguerite Duras among others
attest. Dennis Porter argues in Rousseau's Legacy that this
cultural idea of the writer - as distinct from the more traditional
"man of letters" - first emerged in France in the decades preceding
the French revolution, and has continued to exercise a nominative
power over intellectual life well into our own day. In Porter's
paradigm, Jean-Jacques Rousseau serves as a seminal figure who
combined radical critique of existing institutions with a new form
of confessional writing and a suspicion of the art of literature.
Rousseau inaugurated the idea of a heroic and committed writerly
life in which the opposition between public and private self is
collapsed. Porter combines a wide-ranging knowledge of contemporary
theory and cultural history over the past two centuries in his
readings of works by a number of major French writers; he situates
their work in larger cultural and political transformations. In
addition to the literary texts, he also touches on the "idea" of
the writer as represented in paintings, engravings, and
photographs. Examining the works of Stendhal, Baudelaire, Sartre,
Barthes, Duras, Althusser, and Foucault, Rousseau's Legacy is of
obvious interest to scholars and students of modern French
literature and culture, and, given the influence of French
philosophy and literary theory on literary and cultural studies in
this century, it will also appeal to a broader nonspecialist
readership. Porter concludes with the provocativeclaim that, with
the collapse among intellectuals of faith in revolution, and with
the degeneration of confession into the stuff of TV talk shows, the
idea of the writer as an agent for moral and political change is
also in eclipse.
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