Paris

Paris

by Emile Zola
Paris

Paris

by Emile Zola

eBook

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Overview

A human and social study of Paris, this novel uses the great city as the dramatic framework for a story about the masses that live and die within it. A social drama written in the Naturalist tradition, this is an exact and animated chronicle about French society in the late-19th century. Émile Zola's portrait of a modern Paris is a faithful one, and readers will be able to comprehend and identify with the class struggles of the time.
 
Un estudio humano y social de París, esta novela emplea la gran ciudad como marco dramático para una historia sobre la muchedumbre humana que vive y muere en ella. Un drama social escrito en la tradición naturalista, es una crónica exacta y animada de la sociedad francesa de finales del siglo XIX. El retrato que Émile Zola ha escrito sobre el París moderno es uno extremadamente fiel, y el lector podrá entender e identificarse con la lucha de clases representada en el mismo.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940000748787
Publisher: B&R Samizdat Express
Publication date: 12/01/2008
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Émile Zola (1840-1902) was a French novelist, journalist, and playwright. Born in Paris to a French mother and Italian father, Zola was raised in Aix-en-Provence. At 18, Zola moved back to Paris, where he befriended Paul Cézanne and began his writing career. During this early period, Zola worked as a clerk for a publisher while writing literary and art reviews as well as political journalism for local newspapers. Following the success of his novel Thérèse Raquin (1867), Zola began a series of twenty novels known as Les Rougon-Macquart, a sprawling collection following the fates of a single family living under the Second Empire of Napoleon III. Zola’s work earned him a reputation as a leading figure in literary naturalism, a style noted for its rejection of Romanticism in favor of detachment, rationalism, and social commentary. Following the infamous Dreyfus affair of 1894, in which a French-Jewish artillery officer was falsely convicted of spying for the German Embassy, Zola wrote a scathing open letter to French President Félix Faure accusing the government and military of antisemitism and obstruction of justice. Having sacrificed his reputation as a writer and intellectual, Zola helped reverse public opinion on the affair, placing pressure on the government that led to Dreyfus’ full exoneration in 1906. Nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1901 and 1902, Zola is considered one of the most influential and talented writers in French history.

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