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Books in the Cambridge Studies in French series

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  • - Universe in Mind
     
    £36.49

    The most recently acknowledged - and the most private - of the masters of modernity, Paul Valery is perhaps the most radical and wide-ranging. This 1999 volume of essays by internationally recognised scholars offered the first comprehensive account of Valery's work in English or French.

  • - In Different Words
    by Leslie (University of Warwick) Hill
    £29.99

    This is a new account of the prose fiction of Samuel Beckett from Murphy (1938) to Worstward Ho (1983). Drawing on contemporary literary theory, the book rejects the idea that Beckett is an author committed to expressing a particular view of the world.

  • by Rhiannon Goldthorpe
    £29.99

    In this major study Rhiannon Goldthorpe takes up the challenge of Sartre's diversity in an original and provocative way. In addition, by reference to recently published fragments from Sartre's earlier work, Goldthorpe calls into question existing views of Sartre's intellectual development and provides a new history of the crucial Sartrean concept of 'commitment'.

  • - Studies in Mythological Narrative in Sixteenth-Century France
    by Ann Moss
    £29.99

    This book is a major study of the development of French poetry in the Renaissance, which examines changes in style and vision by looking both at how poetry was read in this period and how it was written.

  • by Ann Jefferson
    £32.99

    This book poses the question: what happens when reading enters the realist process?

  • - From Genesis to Jules Verne
    by Andrew Martin
    £29.99

    This highly original study is concerned with the theory of knowledge. It approaches the subject in a new way by exploring the recurrent paradox which equates pure ignorance with perfect knowledge, twin ideals free from the impurities and imperfections of discourse.

  • - The Language of Illusion
    by Diana Knight
    £29.99

    This major new study takes issue both with the traditional critical view that Flaubert's central characters are weak and with the approach adopted by a number of contemporary critics who claim that character is deliberately undermined in the interests of non-representational writing.

  • - Visual and Aural Signs and the Generation of Meaning
    by Penny Florence
    £29.99

    This study, first published in 1986, examines the many facets of Mallarmes relationship to the visual arts.

  • by Michael Moriarty
    £29.99

    This book analyses the use of the crucial concept of 'taste' in the works of five major seventeenth-century French authors, Mere, Saint Evremond, La Rochefoucauld, La Bruyere and Boileau. It combines close readings of important texts with a thoroughgoing political analysis of seventeenth-century French society in terms of class and gender.

  • - Feminism and Manon Lescaut
    by Naomi Segal
    £35.49

    This 1986 study of Manon Lescaut draws on various debates in psychoanalysis, feminism and literary criticism. It aims to analyse the narrator's presentation of this story of a young man's passion for a femme fatale and to suggest ways in which feminist criticism can help explain how the text operates.

  • - Dialogue and Discourse in Four "Modern" Novels
    by Stirling Haig
    £29.99

    This is the first book-length study of Flaubert's use of dialogue, an important but neglected component of his fictional texts. Professor Haig's starting point is Sartre's observation that 'Flaubert does not believe that we speak: we are spoken'.

  • - Writing the Visible
    by Celia Britton
    £29.99

    This is a major study of the Nobel prize-winning French novelist Claude Simon. Simon is a complex figure: for all that he writes in a distinctively modern fictional tradition (exemplified by Proust, Joyce, Beckett and Robbe-Grillet), his novels contain strong elements of visual representation alongside a very different king of free-floating, anti-realist writing.

  • - A Study in the Sources of Poetic Creativity
    by Richard D. E. Burton
    £29.99

    This book is an intensive study of what was by far the most productive year in Baudelaire's literary career. It combines biographical investigation with detailed textual analysis in order to locate the sources of the extraordinary 'explosion' (Baudelaires' own word) of poetic creativity that he experienced during that year.

  • - Structures of Subversion
    by Jerome Schwartz
    £29.99

    Since the appearance of Bakhtin's famous study of Rabelais and popular culture, Rabelais's writings have been a major focus of debate in literary and cultural criticism. Jerome Schwartz draws on both sides of the historical/formalist debate in this new reading of the four authentic books of Rabelais's Gargantua and Pantagruel.

  • by Christopher Johnson
    £29.99

    An important new critical analysis of Derrida's theory of writing, based upon close readings of key texts.

  • - Essays on Seventeenth-Century French Literature
     
    £29.99

    David Bellos's introduction sets Spitzer's method of textual and stylistic interpretation in its historical context and sketches out the career of this supremely knowledgeable reader for whom knowledge was less important than understanding.

  • - Balzac, Stendhal, Nerval and Flaubert
    by Christopher Prendergast
    £36.49

    Drawing on a range of theoretical perspectives developed in and around the work of Barthes, Kristeva, Genette and Derrida, Dr Prendergast explores approaches to the concept of mimesis and relates these to a number of narrative texts produced in the period which literary history familiarly designates as the age of realism.

  • - Truth and Propaganda in Stael's 'De l'Allemagne', 1810-1813
    by John Claiborne Isbell
    £31.99 - 95.99

    An important study of the book which invented European Romanticism, Stael's De l'Allemagne.

  • - Collected Essays, 1953-1988
    by F. W. Leakey
    £36.49 - 104.99

    This book of linked essays contains the first critical study of Baudelaire's development as a poet, from his youth onwards. It also includes studies of the development of Baudelaire's aesthetic, detailed commentaries on a number of his finest poems, and accounts of three intriguing and crucial 'encounters' with notable contemporaries.

  • - The Temporality of Lying and Forgetting
    by James H. Reid
    £39.99 - 104.99

    This book demonstrates instead the writers' use of irony and allegory in struggling against the deceitfulness of their own texts.

  • - Freud, Lacan and Derrida
    by John Forrester
    £38.49

    The Seductions of Psychoanalysis explores the most seductive of all recent psychoanalytic traditions, that inspired by Jacques Lacan, whose radical questioning of previously accepted psychoanalytic effects has been continued implicitly by Michel Foucault and explicitly by Jacques Derrida.

  • - Dissecting the Exquisite Corpse
    by Elza (Queen Mary University of London) Adamowicz
    £41.99

    This book offers a new analysis of Surrealist collage, both as a technique of cutting and pasting ready made material, and as a subversive and creative strategy. Illustrating many of the collages under discussion, it offers close readings of individual collages and proposes a radical reassessment of Surrealism.

  • - Sites of Imaginary Space
    by Dee (University of Bristol) Reynolds
    £37.49

    This innovative analysis of the role of imagination as a central concept in both literary and art criticism studies works by Rimbaud, Mallarme, Kandinsky, and Mondrian.

  • by Roberta L. (Hamilton College Krueger
    £35.49

    This study challenges the view that all courtly literature promoted the social status of women. Unlike previous books which focused on knights, it starts from the perspective of the woman reader/listener. Using reader-response theory, feminist criticism and recent historical studies, it suggests that romances taught gender roles, often inviting readers to criticise and resist them.

  • by Sarah (University of Cambridge) Kay
    £40.99 - 100.49

    The medieval troubadours of the south of France profoundly influenced European literature for many centuries. This book is a full-length study of the first-person position adopted by many of them in its relation to language and society. Using theoretical approaches, Sarah Kay discusses to what extent this first person is a 'self' or 'character', and how far it is self-determining.

  • by Nicholas White
    £39.99 - 88.49

    The Family in Crisis in Late Nineteenth-Century French Fiction, first published in 1999, focuses on a key moment in the construction of the modern view of the family in France. Nicholas White's analysis of novels by Zola, Maupassant, Hennique, Bourget and Armand Charpentier is fashioned by perspectives on a wide cultural field, including legal, popular and academic discourses on the family and its discontents. His account encourages a close rereading of canonical as well as overlooked texts from fin de siecle France. What emerges between the death of Flaubert in 1880 and the publication of Bourget's Un divorce in 1904 is a series of Naturalist and post-Naturalist representations of transgressive behaviour in which tales of adultery, illegitimacy, consanguinity, incest and divorce serve to exemplify and to offer a range of nuances on the Third Republic's crisis in what might now be termed 'family values'.

  • by Michèle Longino
    £39.99 - 100.49

    Michele Longino examines the ways in which Mediterranean exoticism inflects the themes represented in French classical drama. Longino explores plays by Corneille, Moliere and Racine, and offers a consideration of the role the staging of the near Orient played in shaping a sense of French colonial identity.

  • - The Dramatic Word
    by Gillian (University of Cambridge) Jondorf
    £29.99 - 83.49

    The tragedies produced in France in the sixteenth century by writers such as Garnier, La Taille, and Jodelle are increasingly accessible in good modern editions. Their subject matter included Bible stories and recent history, as well as Greek legend and Roman history. Until now, scholars have tended to regard them as a staging post on the road to Corneille and Racine.

  • - The Collection and Consumption of Curiosities
    by Professor Janell Watson
    £41.99 - 88.49

    Janell Watson shows how the sudden prominence given to curiosities and collecting in nineteenth-century literature signals a massive change in attitudes to the world of goods, which in turn made a great impact on literary texts. Her study makes an important contribution to the literary history of material culture.

  • - Essays in Nineteenth-Century French Verse
    by Clive Scott
    £31.99 - 95.99

    Dr Scott argues that only by attending to the precise locations of words in line or stanza, and to the specific value of syllables, or by understanding the often conflicting demands of rhythm and metre, can the reader of poetry acquire a real grasp of the intimate life of words in verse with all their fluctuations of meaning, mood and tone.

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