The Novel's Seductions: Staël's Corinne in Critical InquiryKaryna Szmurlo Corinne was published in more than forty editions between 1807 and 1872. More recently, it has given rise to a fresh series of interpretations in the context of women's studies. The Novel's Seductions: Stael's Corinne in Critical Inquiry not only documents an extraordinary revival of interest in this work demonstrated by American academia, but provides teachers of literature as well as students with an introduction to the novel's problematics and to bibliographical sources. From the essays written by both internationally known Staelians and younger scholars, the novel emerges as an ongoing communicative act, inviting a new generation of readers to reflect on the feminine condition. In order to capture the performative energy of Corinne as well as to indicate the directions in which Stael studies are evolving, the volume explores the transactional qualities of Stael's writing from various methodological and thematic perspectives. |
Contents
Acknowledgments | 11 |
Introduction | 17 |
Seeing Corinne Afresh | 26 |
Copyright | |
16 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
aesthetic artist Aurora Leigh Avriel Goldberger century chapter character Corilla Corilla Olimpica Corinne ou l'Italie Corinne's critics cultural daughter death Delphine discourse edited Elizabeth Barrett Browning emotional England English essay exile feeling Felicia Hemans female feminine Feminism feminist fiction French Freud gaze gender genius genre Germaine de Staël glory Gothic Hawthorne Hawthorne's Hemans hero heroine heroine's imagination improvisation improvisatrice Italian Italy Jewsbury Literary Women literature Lord Nelvil Lucile Madame de Staël Madelyn Gutwirth male Marble Faun Margaret Fuller Marguerite Yourcenar melancholy memory Miller mimesis Mme de Staël Moers mother narrative narrator Nathaniel Hawthorne nineteenth-century novelistic Oswald painting Paris passion paternal patriarchal poet poetic poetry political portrait Princesse de Clèves reader reading rinne Romantic Rome Rutgers University Sappho scene sensibility Simone Balayé social Staël's Corinne Staël's novel Staëlian story talent tion translation voice woman women writers writing Yourcenar