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Search Results for bourgeoi

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Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1984) 45 (3): 227–240.
Published: 01 September 1984
.... THE BOURGEOIS PIETY OF MARTHA IN THE PASSION OF JEAN MICHEL* By KATHLEENM. ASHLEY It is a commonplace of medieval scholarship that the great dra- mas of biblical history so popular in the fifteenth century through- out Europe are the products...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1997) 58 (2): 233–236.
Published: 01 June 1997
... is, and how historically suggestive are its failures to apply, not only its successes, Lamb’s book should amply reward his readers. Eric Rothstein, University of Wisconsin-Madison Stations of the Divided Subject: Contestation and Ideologacal IAeg2timationin German Bourgeois...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1972) 33 (1): 88–90.
Published: 01 March 1972
... Romance and ICealism: A Study in English Bourgeois Literature. By CHRIS- TOPHER GAUDWELL.Edited by SAMUELHYNES. Princeton: Princeton Univer- sity Press, 1970. I44 pp. $6.00. The stereotype of the thirties in England as a predominantly leftist literary decade has been abandoned...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2008) 69 (2): 221–243.
Published: 01 June 2008
...David Randall In Habermasian theory, the bourgeois public sphere was preceded by a literary public sphere whose favored genres revealed the interiority of the self and emphasized an audience-oriented subjectivity. This essay argues that the association of this early modern literary discourse...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2015) 76 (2): 181–199.
Published: 01 June 2015
...Gerard Cohen-Vrignaud Abstract The magical orientalism that saturates Honoré de Balzac’s Peau de chagrin (1831), seemingly at odds with its author’s reputation for sociological realism, indicts the capitalist ambitions ushered in by France’s bourgeois July Monarchy. Balzac’s ironic orientalization...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2015) 76 (4): 465–490.
Published: 01 December 2015
..., Isherwood’s place in the leftist and queer canons must be reconstituted, as should the relationship between certain strains of Soviet Marxism and queer writing of the period. Far from a lukewarm socialist in his youth who later became a middlebrow bourgeois figure in gay literature, Isherwood offers a queer...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2019) 80 (4): 403–425.
Published: 01 December 2019
... “bourgeois” modernism. It takes members of the British Writers’ International and their associated journals the Left Review and New Writing as case studies in the interplay between Moscow as putative “metropole” and the “periphery.” References Brennan Timothy . 2018 . “ Against Modernism...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1962) 23 (2): 115–119.
Published: 01 June 1962
...Spire Pitou Copyright © 1962 by Duke University Press 1962 MOLIkRE, DANCOURT, AND VALENTIN By SPIREPITOU Although nearly every eighteenth-century bibliographer of the French classical theater lists Valentin's Le franc bourgeois,1 historians...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1950) 11 (3): 361.
Published: 01 September 1950
...Clotilde Wilson Bourgeois André. Lille: Librairie F. Girard; Genève: Librairie E. Droz, 1950. Pp. 173. Copyright © 1950 by Duke University Press 1950 Clotilde Wilson 361 Renf Boylesve et le problbme de l’amour. By ANDR~BOURGEOIS...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2016) 77 (4): 581–589.
Published: 01 December 2016
...Jonathan Arac The Antinomies of Realism . By Jameson Fredric . New York : Verso , 2013 . 326 pp. The Bourgeois: Between History and Literature . By Moretti Franco . New York : Verso , 2013 . 224 pp. Copyright © 2016 by University of Washington 2016 Fredric...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1951) 12 (3): 377–380.
Published: 01 September 1951
... : Gallimard, Collection “Les Essais,” No. XXXVIII, 1949. Bernhard Groethuysen, whose excellent Origirtes de l’esprit bourgeois en France au XYllle si2cZe has been translated into all major languages except English, has not received the attention he deserves in our country. In this he...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1950) 11 (3): 361–362.
Published: 01 September 1950
... et le problbme de l’amour. By ANDR~BOURGEOIS. Lille : Librairie F. Girard; Gen6ve: Librairie E. Droz, 1950. Pp. 173. Those who are interested in RenC Boylesve will enjoy AndrC Bourgeois’ illuminating analysis of that novelist’s peculiar attitude toward love. M. Rour- geois’ recent...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1992) 53 (2): 173–199.
Published: 01 June 1992
... 175 Romantics, the man he would later call the “father of irony,” Friedrich Schlegel.4 In his analysis of the Ethical Order and his construction of gender paradigms, Hegel attempts to counter Lucinde’s seeming subver- sion of the social and ethical underpinnings of German bourgeois...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1981) 42 (3): 297–300.
Published: 01 September 1981
... something very like from heroic drama and comedy of manners to pathetic tragedy and sentimental comedy-arguing that the novel supplants drama as a major form because it can better embody bourgeois ideology. She looks for “shape and direction” (p. xii) in generic evolution, hoping to establish...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1967) 28 (4): 510–511.
Published: 01 December 1967
... in expanded form. In his introduction Wendler summarizes the results of previous Stern- heim scholarship. He is highly critical of the opinion that Sternheim’s objective was to belittle and ridia.de the bourgeois way of life: satire, he says, is simply Sternheim’s way to fight for a freer...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2012) 73 (3): 475–485.
Published: 01 September 2012
... (the Quijote is in fact itself a kind of mod- ernism, if not the latter’s rst form. Insofar, however, as historically realism has been identi ed with the bourgeoisie, with bourgeois lifestyle, and indeed with the bour- geois “cultural revolution” itself, it becomes the target of a modernist...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2020) 81 (4): 419–440.
Published: 01 December 2020
... of bourgeois discourse. 7 “A young man of eighteen, with long hair and holding a sketchbook under his arm, stayed by the rudder, immobile. Through the fog, he contemplated the clock towers, the buildings whose names he didn’t know; then, with a farewell glance, he took in the Île Saint-Louis, the Cité...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1958) 19 (2): 115–133.
Published: 01 June 1958
... reality separates this section from the realistic nar- rative of the second part. Beginning with this rough outline, we can proceed to bring some order into the work. The introduction is written by a young man who is revealed as a typical bourgeois both by his own words and by the brief...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (2005) 66 (4): 443–476.
Published: 01 December 2005
..., Eden’s Semi-Attached Couple, begun thirty years before its publication, revised Victorian images of the Regency and paid tribute to Austen, but with a twist. Locating new value systems in an emerging bourgeois society, it extended their adoption to deserving members of the upper classes...
Journal Article
Modern Language Quarterly (1973) 34 (1): 64–77.
Published: 01 March 1973
... 65 he bases his first love affair. Radiguet underlines throughout the inade- quacies and false imaginings in which these two modes are rooted. Yet his sympathies remain much more clearly with the hero, who at least yearns to create beauty, than with the aesthetically blind bourgeois so...