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Lost Illusions by Honoré de Balzac: Used
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eBay-Artikelnr.:364271435348
Artikelmerkmale
- Artikelzustand
- Publication Date
- 2020-07-01
- Pages
- 624
- ISBN
- 9781517905439
Über dieses Produkt
Product Identifiers
Publisher
University of Minnesota Press
ISBN-10
1517905435
ISBN-13
9781517905439
eBay Product ID (ePID)
2309608537
Product Key Features
Book Title
Lost Illusions
Number of Pages
624 Pages
Language
English
Publication Year
2020
Topic
Classics, Literary, Coming of Age
Genre
Fiction
Format
Trade Paperback
Dimensions
Item Height
1.6 in
Item Weight
28.4 Oz
Item Length
8.9 in
Item Width
5.9 in
Additional Product Features
Intended Audience
Trade
Dewey Edition
23
Reviews
"Whether or not Lost Illusions counts as the greatest novel ever written, as the literary scholar Franco Moretti claims, it's a pretty magnificent one. You can read it for its combination of social scope and psychological insight, and for its cinematically vivid portraits of faces . . . and many fine phrases. . . . And then you can read Lost Illusions , as Marx read Balzac, for its account of the double-edged nature of early capitalism."--Benjamin Kunkel, Salon.com
Dewey Decimal
843.7
Table Of Content
Contents Translator's Introduction Raymond N. Mackenzie Lost Illusions 1. The Two Poets 2. The Parisian Adventures of a Great Man from the Provinces 3. The Ordeals of an Inventor Introduction: The Sorrowful Confessions of a Child of the Century Part One. The History of a Legal Case Part Two. The Fatal Member of the Family Translator's Notes
Synopsis
A new annotated translation of the keystone of Balzac's Comédie Humaine --a sweeping narrative of corrupted idealism in a cynical urban milieu Lost Illusions is an essential text within Balzac's Comédie Humaine , his sprawling, interconnected fictional portrait of French society in the 1820s and 1830s comprising nearly one hundred novels and short stories. This novel, published in three parts between 1837 and 1843, tells the story of Lucien de Rubempré, a talented young poet who leaves behind a scandalous provincial life for the shallow, corrupt, and cynical vortex of modernity that was nineteenth-century Paris--where his artistic idealism slowly dissipates until he eventually decides to return home. Balzac poured many of his thematic preoccupations and narrative elaborations into Lost Illusions, from the contrast between life in the provinces and the all-consuming world of Paris to the idealism of poets, the commodification of art, the crushing burden of poverty and debt, and the triumphant cynicism of hack journalists and social climbers. The novel teems with characters, incidents, and settings, though perhaps none so vivid as its panoramic and despairing view of Paris as the nexus of modernity's cultural, social, and moral infection. For Balzac, no institution better illustrates the new reality than Parisian journalism: "amoral, hypocritical, brazen, dishonest, and murderous," he writes. In this new translation, Raymond N. MacKenzie brilliantly captures the tone of Balzac's incomparable prose--a style that is alternatingly impassioned, overheated, angry, moving, tender, wistful, digressive, chatty, intrusive, and hectoring. His informative annotations guide the modern reader through the labyrinth of Balzac's allusions., A new annotated translation of the keystone of Balzac's Com die Humaine --a sweeping narrative of corrupted idealism in a cynical urban milieu Lost Illusions is an essential text within Balzac's Com die Humaine , his sprawling, interconnected fictional portrait of French society in the 1820s and 1830s comprising nearly one hundred novels and short stories. This novel, published in three parts between 1837 and 1843, tells the story of Lucien de Rubempr , a talented young poet who leaves behind a scandalous provincial life for the shallow, corrupt, and cynical vortex of modernity that was nineteenth-century Paris--where his artistic idealism slowly dissipates until he eventually decides to return home. Balzac poured many of his thematic preoccupations and narrative elaborations into Lost Illusions, from the contrast between life in the provinces and the all-consuming world of Paris to the idealism of poets, the commodification of art, the crushing burden of poverty and debt, and the triumphant cynicism of hack journalists and social climbers. The novel teems with characters, incidents, and settings, though perhaps none so vivid as its panoramic and despairing view of Paris as the nexus of modernity's cultural, social, and moral infection. For Balzac, no institution better illustrates the new reality than Parisian journalism: "amoral, hypocritical, brazen, dishonest, and murderous," he writes. In this new translation, Raymond N. MacKenzie brilliantly captures the tone of Balzac's incomparable prose--a style that is alternatingly impassioned, overheated, angry, moving, tender, wistful, digressive, chatty, intrusive, and hectoring. His informative annotations guide the modern reader through the labyrinth of Balzac's allusions.
LC Classification Number
PQ2167.I6E5 2020
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