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Proust, the Body and Literary Form

Part of the Cambridge Studies in French series
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This study examines the connections between Proust's fin-de-siecle 'nervousness' and his apprehensions regarding literary form.

Michael Finn shows that Proust's anxieties both about bodily weakness and about novel-writing were fed by a set of intriguing psychological and medical texts, and were mirrored in the nerve-based afflictions of earlier writers including Flaubert, Baudelaire, Nerval and the Goncourt brothers.

Finn argues that once Proust cast off his concerns about being a nervous weakling he was freed to poke fun both at the supposed purity of the novel form.

Hysteria - as a figure and as a theme - becomes a key to the Proustian narrative, and a certain kind of wordless, bodily copying of gesture and event is revealed to be at the heart of a writing technique which undermines many of the conventions of fiction.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
0521641896 / 9780521641890
Hardback
843.912
25/03/1999
United Kingdom
English
xiii, 207 p.
24 cm
research & professional Learn More