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Guilt and Shame - Essays in French Literature, Thought and Visual Culture

English, French · Paperback / Softback

Description

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As theoretical positions and as affective experiences, the twin currents of contrition - guilt and shame - permeate literary discourse and figure prominently in discussions of ethics, history, sexuality and social hierarchy. This collection of essays, on French and francophone prose, poetry, drama, visual art, cinema and thought, assesses guilt and shame in relation to structures of social morality, language and self-expression, the thinking of trauma, and the ethics of forgiveness. The authors approach their subjects via close readings and comparative study, drawing on such thinkers as Adorno, Derrida, Jankélévitch and Irigaray. Through these they consider works ranging from the medieval Roman de la rose through to Gustave Moreau's Symbolist painting, Giacometti's sculpture, the films of Marina de Van and recent sub-Saharan African writing. The collection provides an état-présent of thinking on guilt and shame in French Studies, and is the first to assemble work on this topic ranging from the thirteenth to the twenty-first century. The book contains nine contributions in English and four in French.

List of contents

Contents: Jenny Chamarette/Jennifer Higgins: Introduction - Bill Burgwinkle: Guilt, Shame and Masculine Insufficiency: The Case of La Fille du Comte de Pontieu - Irène Fabry : 'Si en i ot de teus qui i conterent plus lor honte que leur honour' : Enadain et Gauvain, les chevaliers transformés en nains dans la Suite Vulgate du Merlin - Mary Flannery: The Shame of the Rose : A Paradox - Emilia Wilton-Godberfforde: Guilt's Reconfiguration of Time and Relational Ties in Seventeenth-Century French Theatre: A Study of Molière's Dom Juan , Rotrou's Cosroès , Tristan L'Hermite's La Mariane and Racine's Phèdre - Frédéric Miquel : Quand le langage spirituel plaide coupable : linguistique et péché au XVII e siècle - Natasha Grigorian: Guilt and Desire in the Dream World: Gustave Moreau and Jean Moréas - Najate Zouggari : L'Impardonnable, l'imprescriptible et l'exigence éthique de pardon - Eszter Horváth : Psyché : le péché originel - Ruth Kitchen: Guilt and Shame in Occupation Narrative: Reading the Open Secret and Cultural Amnesia in Blanchot's L'Instant de ma mort and Grimbert's Un secret - Timothy Mathews: Trauma, Witness, Form: Thinking Walter Benjamin with Alberto Giacometti - Davina Quinlivan: 'Whispering on the threshold of the flesh': The Breathing Body, Silence and Embodied Shame in Marina de Van's Dans ma peau (2002) - Lucy Bolton: Remembering Flesh: Morvern Callar as an Irigarayan Alice - Charlotte Baker: 'For a minute, their sense of the ways of the world was ruptured. Just by looking': The Black African Albino in the Novels of Didier Destremau, Patrick Grainville and Williams Sassine.

About the author










The Editors: Jenny Chamarette is a College Lecturer and Director of Studies in French at Murray Edwards College, Cambridge. She specialises in French and European cinema and time-based media, film and art theory, and twentieth-century French thought.
Jennifer Higgins is a Junior Research Fellow at St Anne's College, Oxford. She specialises in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century French poetry, and particularly English responses to this poetry via translation.

Product details

Assisted by Jenny Chamarette (Editor), Jennifer Higgins (Editor), Jenny Higgins (Editor)
Publisher Peter Lang
 
Languages English, French
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 30.06.2016
 
EAN 9783039115631
ISBN 978-3-0-3911563-1
No. of pages 223
Dimensions 150 mm x 13 mm x 225 mm
Weight 330 g
Series Modern French Identities
Modern French Identities
Subject Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > Romance linguistics / literary studies

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