Narrative, catastrophe and historicity in eighteenth-century French literature

書誌事項

Narrative, catastrophe and historicity in eighteenth-century French literature

Jessica Stacey

(Oxford University studies in the Enlightenment, 2022:02)

Published by Liverpool University Press on behalf of Voltaire Foundation, University of Oxford, c2022

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. 341-353) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

How do communities tell and retell stories of catastrophe to explain their own origins, imagine their future, and work for their survival? This book contends that such stories are central to how communities claim a position within history. It explores this question, so vital for our present moment, through narratives produced in eighteenth-century France: a tumultuous period when a new understanding of a properly 'modern' national history was being elaborated. Who gets to belong to the modern era? And who or what is relegated to a gothic, barbarous or medieval past? Is an enlightened future assured, or is a return to a Dark Age inevitable? Following barbarians, bastards, usurpers, prophets and Revolutionary martyrs through stories of catastrophes real and imagined, the book traces how narrative temporalities become historicities: visions of the laws which govern the past, present and future. Ultimately it argues that the complex temporality of catastrophe offers a privileged insight into how a modern French historical consciousness was formed out of the multiple pasts and possible futures that coexisted alongside the age of Enlightenment. Further, examining the tension between a desire to place the imagined community definitively beyond catastrophic times, and a fascination with catastrophe in its revelatory or regenerative aspect, it offers an important historical perspective on the presence of this same tension in the stories of catastrophe that we tell in our own multiple, tumultuous present.

目次

A Note on Translation Preface and Acknowledgements Introduction: Authors of Catastrophe Chapter 1. Bringing Catastrophe: barbare (br)others, in and around the Encyclopedie Chapter 2. Suffering Catastrophe: legitimate and illegitimate lines in Baculard d'Arnaud's medievalist works Chapter 3. Prophesying Catastrophe, Predicting Utopia: the time travellers of Mercier's prose tableaux Chapter 4. Witnessing Catastrophe as Revelation: doing time with Latude and Sade, modern martyrs Conclusion Works Cited

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