Welcome to Loot.co.za!
Sign in / Register |Wishlists & Gift Vouchers |Help | Advanced search
|
Your cart is empty |
|||
Showing 1 - 3 of 3 matches in All Departments
Amidst a revival of interest in the novels of the abbe Prevost, this study addresses some of the interpretive issues that are being raised concerning his work, namely what intellectual, moral and aesthetic meaning should we seek in works that were designed as entertainments, and should we persist in rating Manon Lescaut more highly than the rest of Prevost's output? The narrative strategies and types of distortion inherent in each of Prevost's narrators are examined. More general observations are made on the mechanics of Prevost's narration such as the deceptive rhetorical devices of juxtaposing different accounts of the same event by two or more narrators and the use of the double registre or separation of narrator from protagonist. Other aspects of Prevost's fictional technique are considered - for example, the extent to which he drew upon contemporary traditions in the novel. Another important theme is the relationship between Prevost's fictional world and the real world in which topics such as other-portrayal and the handing of time reflect the degree of unreliability of the narrator's vision. Parallel episodes and interpolations are also used to illuminate subtly the work's central themes. The latter part of this study is dedicated to the moral dilemmas raised in Prevost's work in which the world - and the author's heroes - appear to be governed by three complex and often conflicting codes of behaviour - those of religion, honour, and 'love' or 'sensibility'. In particular, the problems of women are represented as well as the failure of the heroic ideal amongst the aristocracy. In religious matters, Prevost is revealed as a man of tolerance, ultimately concerned with human nature. The Prevost who emerges from this study combines a high degree of technical mastery with a serious moral interest in the human heart. His demystification of the ideal of heroism and his fragmented vision of the human personality are likely to appeal to the modern reader. The powerful dramatisation of moral conflict, familiar in Manon Lescaut, is indeed to be found throughout his work.
Reunissant le travail d'une nouvelle generation de chercheurs et des prevostiens les plus etablis, cette collection d'etudes permet de faire le point sur l'image que se forme notre epoque de l'abbe Prevost, dont l'art subtil et parfois ironique reflete un monde en transition, et s'insere dans une tradition litteraire qu'il fait evoluer mais qui le comprend mal. L'oeuvre de Prevost, tel que les auteurs de ce recueil nous la decouvrent, revele un univers mouvemente qui ne se borne plus a l'image captivante de Manon Lescaut qu'une certaine tradition litteraire a voulu nous leguer.
Romain Rolland's life coincided closely with the span of the French
Third Republic, an age of which he was an acute and critical
observer. A mind combining an unusual breadth of sympathies with
uncompromisingly lofty values and a novelist's eye for detail, his
interests cover a wide range of areas - history, musicology,
biography, politics, religion, the East - and his correspondence
with both the famous and the obscure, is exceptionally rich. He is
remembered for his plays on the French Revolution, his work on
Beethoven, his novels, his biographies, his opposition to the First
World War, his desperate attempts between the wars to reconcile
Gandhism and Leninism and, during the Occupation, his nostalgia for
the Catholic faith of his forbears. Drawing on the wealth of the
unpublished Archives Romain Rolland, this book offers a fresh
perspective on the events of an often turbulent life and traces the
changing patterns of his thought, which disconcerted his friends by
its constant evolution. Rolland's work is unified by a fierce
desire for independence, an insistence that the psychological force
of faith is more important than its content, by an obsession with
historical process and by a constant musicianly quest for harmony,
or the reconciliation of discords within a synthetic whole. The
author attempts to do justice to every side of Romain Rolland's
output, showing how each of his works in their diverse genres
contributes to the overall thrust of his developing thought. Though
covering his political thought, the author avoids over-stressing
it, as much previous criticism has done, and gives due weight to
the work of his last years, which so far has been very imperfectly
studied.
|
You may like...
|