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Playing Simplicity: Polemical Stupidity in the Writing of the French Enlightenment

150,59 
150,59 
2025-07-31 150.5900 InStock
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Knygos aprašymas

Polemical stupidity ¿ a critical concept drawn from Bakhtin ¿ denotes the strategic refusal to understand. It appears most familiarly in the character of the Fool (like Candide), who genuinely does not understand the world, thus unmasking its incoherence. But in literature it can cover too the stance of the narrator or author (who pretends to misunderstand). It also functions at the levels of genre and style, embracing parody and rewriting in general. It is a dialogic or open form of critical engagement. Though it can be found throughout Western literature, polemical stupidity is most richly characteristic of the writing of the French Enlightenment. This book suggests why, and traces its rise and fall as a discursive practice in the century from Pascal to Rousseau. Early chapters consider the concept itself, its emergence in Pascal¿s Lettres provinciales, worldliness and unworldliness, and the new writing of 1660-1700 (critical history to fairy tales). The main part of the book, on the age of Enlightenment itself, contains successive chapters on Regency theatre, Montesquieüs Lettres persanes, Marivaux, Voltaire, Diderot, and finally Rousseau who will not play.

Informacija

Autorius: Robin Howells
Serija: French Studies of the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries
Leidėjas: Peter Lang
Išleidimo metai: 2002
Knygos puslapių skaičius: 336
ISBN-10: 3906768368
ISBN-13: 9783906768366
Formatas: Knyga minkštu viršeliu
Kalba: Anglų
Žanras: Literary studies: c 1600 to c 1800

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