Cover of His Exellency Eugène Rougon

His Exellency Eugène Rougon

by Émile Zola

4.1
(6 ratings)
384 pages2018Oxford University PressISBN 9780198748250

About this book

Son Excellence Eugène Rougon est le portrait d'un parvenu, d'un " homme nouveau " devenu homme du et de pouvoir sous le Second Empire. Le scalpel de l'écrivain naturaliste fouille la chair et l'âme du personnage qui incarne ce pouvoir, et interroge les mystérieux rapports du pouvoir et du sexe : Eugène Rougon, ministre autoritaire et répressif, " idolâtre " de lui-même et de sa force, est aussi un " chaste ". Son face à face avec l'autre " idole " féminine, Clorinde, est au centre de l'œuvre. Et autour de cette guerre des sexes le roman décrit impitoyablement la comédie et les rouages de la machine à machinations : intrigues, coteries, groupes de pression, " théâtre " de la Chambre, coulisses de la cour impériale de Compiègne, revirements d'alliances, retournements cyniques de politique, espionnage, manipulations policières. Roman de la politique, l'œuvre conclut à la politique comme roman, comme théâtre, comme fiction : le pouvoir est partout et nulle part, tout le monde est à la fois manipulateur et manipulé, spectateur éberlué et acteur de la pièce. L'un des romans les plus méconnus de la série des Rougon-Macquart.

Publication Details

Publisher
Oxford University Press
Published
2018
Pages
384
ISBN
9780198748250
Language
en

About Émile Zola

Emile Zola was a French journalist and novelist known for his series of 20 novels known collectively as Les Rougon-Macquart (1871-93). Zola's style was called literary naturalism; his novels were attacked and even banned for their frankness and sordid detail, and caused quite a bit of controversy in their day. The same traits made him a best-selling author and a star of French literature in his day. In 1898 he then further incurred the wrath of French officials when he published the open letter "J'Accuse," in defense of Alfred Dreyfus, an Army officer who had been convicted of treason. Zola was sentenced to prison for libel, fled to England, and was granted amnesty a few months later. He died in Paris from carbon monoxide poisoning -- the victim of a stopped-up chimney -- a few months before Dreyfus was officially exonerated. [(Source)][1] [1]: http://www.infoplease.com/biography/var/emilezola.html

Track your reading journey with BookOwl