Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 On the novel and the writing of literary history
- 2 Novels of testimony and the 'invention' of the modern French novel
- 3 Reality and its representation in the nineteenth-century novel
- 4 Women and fiction in the nineteenth century
- 5 Popular fiction in the nineteenth century
- 6 Decadence and the fin-de-siècle novel
- 7 The Proustian revolution
- 8 Formal experiment and innovation
- 9 Existentialism, engagement, ideology
- 10 War and the Holocaust
- 11 From serious to popular fiction
- 12 The colonial and postcolonial Francophone novel
- 13 The French-Canadian novel
- 14 Gender and sexual identity in the modern French novel
- 15 Postmodern Frenchfiction
- General bibliography
- Index
9 - Existentialism, engagement, ideology
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- 1 On the novel and the writing of literary history
- 2 Novels of testimony and the 'invention' of the modern French novel
- 3 Reality and its representation in the nineteenth-century novel
- 4 Women and fiction in the nineteenth century
- 5 Popular fiction in the nineteenth century
- 6 Decadence and the fin-de-siècle novel
- 7 The Proustian revolution
- 8 Formal experiment and innovation
- 9 Existentialism, engagement, ideology
- 10 War and the Holocaust
- 11 From serious to popular fiction
- 12 The colonial and postcolonial Francophone novel
- 13 The French-Canadian novel
- 14 Gender and sexual identity in the modern French novel
- 15 Postmodern Frenchfiction
- General bibliography
- Index
Summary
'What should I do?' 'What can I do?' 'What will it mean for me?' Personal and urgent, these questions are at the core of story-telling and fictional narration cast in terms of plot and action as a thematics of difficult ('hard') choices. Scenes of men and women faced with such choices recur throughout the history of the novel in France, from Madame de La Fayette's La Princesse de Clèves (1678) and Balzac's Le Père Goriot (1835) to André Malraux's La Condition humaine (1933) and Annie Ernaux's Une Femme (1988). As a set, these scenes provide literary expressions to concerns with personal identity that vary over time more in detail and circumstance than in essence. For the novels mentioned, the decisions range from remaining in or retreating from courtly society (La Fayette) to moving with a spouse to another part of France or staying instead in one's native region (Ernaux). Both cases provide dramatic content for metaphysical concerns with existence set forth as a problematics of the individual in his or her world.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to the French NovelFrom 1800 to the Present, pp. 145 - 160Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997