The nineteenth-century French novel has long been seen as the
heroic production of great men, who confronted in their works the
social consequences of the French Revolution. And it is true that
French realism, especially as developed by Balzac and Stendhal, was
one of the most influential novelistic forms ever invented.
Margaret Cohen, however, challenges the traditional account of the
genesis of realism by returning Balzac and Stendhal to the
forgotten novelistic contexts of their time. Reconstructing a key
formative period for the novel, she shows how realist codes emerged
in a "hostile take-over" of a prestigious contemporary sentimental
practice of the novel, which was almost completely dominated by
women writers.
Cohen draws on impressive archival research, resurrecting scores
of forgotten nineteenth-century novels, to demonstrate that the
codes most closely identified with realism were actually the
invention of sentimentality, a powerful aesthetic of emerging
liberal-democratic society, although Balzac and Stendhal
trivialized sentimental works by associating them with "frivolous"
women writers and readers. Attention to these gendered struggles
over genre explains why women were not pioneers of realism in
France during the nineteenth century, a situation that contrasts
with England, where women writers played a formative role in
inventing the modern realist novel. Cohen argues that to understand
how literary codes respond to material factors, it is imperative to
see how such factors take shape within the literary field as well
as within society as a whole. The book also proposes that attention
to literature as a social institution will help critics resolve the
current, vital question of how to practice literary history in the
wake of poststructuralism.
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