Walking and the French Romantics
Rousseau to Sand and Hugo
©2003
Monographs
164 Pages
Series:
French Studies of the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries, Volume 13
Summary
Walking and the French Romantics explores for the first time the relationship between walking and Romanticism in France. It maps this relationship as theme and practice, no social history of pedestrian tours in nineteenth-century France having been written. In this connection, the legacy of Rousseau and Senancour proves stronger than has been recognized, in spite of the pull of Paris and its legendary urban flâneurs. The author brings out the role of painters and of figures like Nodier, Didier and Dumas in encouraging writers to go (or imagine themselves) on the road and shows how and why pedestrian touring became popular with authors in the late 1830s. He discusses the impact of this fashion on major Romantic writers such as Nerval, Sand and Hugo. Finally he describes how walking lost its particular cultural connection with Romanticism in the 1840s.
Details
- Pages
- 164
- Publication Year
- 2003
- ISBN (Softcover)
- 9783039100781
- Language
- English
- Keywords
- Jean-Jacques Rousseau Französisch Literatur Reise (Motiv) Geschichte 1800-1850 George Sand Charles Didier Gérard de Nerval Victor Hugo Étienne Pivert de Senancour Charles Nodier
- Published
- Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., New York, Wien, 2003. 164 pp.
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