George Sand
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4,0 • 1 note
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- 10,99 €
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- 10,99 €
Description de l’éditeur
"Je suis l’enfant de mon siècle ; j’ai subi ses maux, j’ai partagé ses erreurs, j’ai bu à toutes ses sources de vie et de mort."
Amandine-Aurore-Lucile Dupin (1804-1876), devenue George Sand en 1832, avec la publication d’Indiana, fut, dès l’enfance imprégnée des traditions et des légendes de son Berry natal. Observatrice attentive de son temps, elle fume la pipe, s'habille en homme, affiche ses convictions républicaines, est l’amante enflammée de Musset et de Chopin, en un mot fait scandale. Son œuvre, de Consuelo à La Mare au diable, en passant par La Petite Fadette, culmine dans Histoire de ma vie, et fonde un genre littéraire : l’autobiographie au féminin. Amoureuse éperdue de la vie, George Sand écrit en 1831 à Sainte-Beuve : "Vivre ! Que c’est bon! malgré les chagrins, les maris, l’ennui, les dettes, les parents, les cancans, malgré les poignantes douleurs."
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Reid, a professor of French language and literature, homes in on the essential threads of author Sand's life and work, and makes a strong case for her continuing relevance. Sand (1804 1876), born Amantine Lucile Aurore Dupin, was famously a cross-dresser and experimented with gender roles throughout her life, not least in adopting a male nom de plume. A celebrity as much for an audacious lifestyle that included numerous affairs (Fr d ric Chopin was one of her paramours) as for her writing, she attempted to embody the French Revolution's ideals of freedom, equality, and brotherhood in a period of monarchy and repression. While her books, notably including the pastoral novels La Mare au Diable and La Petite Fadette, are not much read today, Reid points out how popular and well-regarded they were in Sand's own time, and defends her romantic idealism in contrast to the more realist vision of writers like Sand's friend Gustave Flaubert. Reid, at least implicitly, raises important questions: how are women who defy social norms treated now, and should more value be placed on literature that envisions a better future? This biography offers an excellent point of entry into Sand's life and thought, encouraging reevaluation of a famed but perhaps underrated author who felt "for humanity... because they are me."