"A dream of stone" : fame, vision, and monumentality in nineteenth-century French literary culture

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"A dream of stone" : fame, vision, and monumentality in nineteenth-century French literary culture

Michael D. Garval

University of Delaware Press, c2004

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Includes bibliographical references ( p. 249-257) and index

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内容説明

With democratization of fame in the wake of the French Revolution, writers enjoyed ever greater celebrity status. But in nineteenth-century France, the availability and perceived impermanence of such renown cheapened it, and prompted longing for enduring fame, exemplified by monuments - commemorative sculptural or architectural works, helping a nation in flux define itself, its past, and anticipated future. Within this cultural climate, there evolved an ideal of great writers and their work as immortal, that envisioned literary greatness through the metaphor of monuments and monumentality. In reconstructing such as pervasive ""dream of stone,"" this interdisciplinary study draws upon wide-ranging evidence, from journalism to poetry, caricature to statuary. Focusing on the lives, work, and fame of Honore de Balzac, George Sand, and Victor Hugo, it uncovers the salient features, and traces the rise and fall of this monumentalizing vision of literary greatness, largely forgotten today yet so central to nineteenth-century French culture. Illustrated. Michael D. Garval is Associate Professor of French Studies at North Carolina State University.

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