* Parutions | Critique
Juliette Cherbuliez, The Place of Exile: Leisure Literature and the Limits of Absolutism

Juliette Cherbuliez (Univ. of Minnesota)


The Place of Exile:
Leisure Literature and the Limits of Absolutism

Bucknell University Press
(The Bucknell Studies in Eighteenth-Century Literature and Culture)
2005
282 pages
ISBN 0-8387-5603-4
$ 52.50

Table des Matières:

Introduction: Louis XIV's Masterpiece: The Romance of Exile

1. Diversions: Montpensier's Exilic Communities

2. Detours: Ovidian Fantasies of Community and Villedieu's Les Exilez de la Cour d'Auguste

3. Periphery: Zayde and the Domestic Conquest of the Nation

4. Diaspora: Francophone Refugee Fiction from Hortense Mancini to Anne de La Roche-Guilhen

Epilogue: The Return of Place

At once political institution, lived experience, and discursive figure, exile defined Louis XIV's absolutist France. The Place of Exile connects the movements of both people and books through and around this absolutist territory in order to understand the deliberate construction of real and imagined marginal cultures. Four case studies of everyday, sociable writing called leisure literature guide us through an ever-widening territory of disaffection and alienation, from the center of absolutism at Louis XIV's first court to Europe's international communities of refugees. Those least likely to be considered political writers—banished noble women, novel writers, poor refugees—used literature to consider the viability of a world beyond authority's reach. More importantly, leisure literature confronted one of the major paradoxes of the grand siècle: the shifting possibilities for selfhood available in a society increasingly defined by radical divisions, whether beyond exile and grace, inside and out, interiority and exteriority.

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[ Mis en ligne le 31 juillet 2006 par Volker Schröder ]