The classic : Sainte-Beuve and the nineteenth-century culture wars
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The classic : Sainte-Beuve and the nineteenth-century culture wars
Oxford University Press, 2007
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Note
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Focusing on a moment and a source in nineteenth-century France, Christopher Prendergast takes up a big question that is still with us: What is a classic? The question is, by virtue of its insistent recurrence, itself a classic question. It returns to haunt us. It provided the title of a text for French critic Charles-Augustin Sainte-Beuve in 1850 ('Qu'est-ce qu'un classique?'), as it did in the twentieth century for T.S. Eliot and John Coetzee. Centring on
Sainte-Beuve in his nineteenth-century context, Prendergast's inquiry takes us historically to many places (antiquity, the middle ages, the seventeenth and eighteenth as well as the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries). He also provides an intellectual history that travels across multiple disciplinary
territories (in addition to literary criticism and literary history, classical studies, comparative philology, historiography and political thought).
Against this background, The Classic maps the evolution of Sainte-Beuve's thought from an initially cosmopolitan conception of the classic (close in spirit to Goethe's notion of Weltliteratur) to an increasingly nationalist conception, with a strong emphasis on the heritage of Latinity and France as its principal legatee. This emphasis was taken up by the extreme right in France after Sainte-Beuve's death, in a determined mobilizing of a version of the 'classic' on behalf of a
proto-fascist agenda. The final chapter deals with this appropriation and ends with a question of our own about Sainte-Beuve's original question: in the light of this bleak history, perhaps the time has come to dispense with the term 'classic' altogether.
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction: The Profession of Criticism
- 2. The View from the Mountain
- 3. Classic and Nation
- 4. Latinity and the Second Renaissance
- 5. Homer or Virgil?
- 6. Origins and the Middle Ages
- 7. Romans, Gauls and Franks
- 8. Literature and Democracy
- 9. The Foundations of Culture
- 10. The Modern Classic
- 11. Postscript: The Good Frenchman
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