Aeneas Takes the Metro: The Presence of Virgil in Twentieth-century French LiteratureThis study traces Virgil's journey through twentieth-century France by examining his profile in the works of Gide, Aragon, Valery, Pagnol, Klossowski, Butor, Simon and Pinget, and by looking at how their Virgilian appropriations complement and modify current readings of the "Aeneid" and other works. His presence in these works provides insights not only into modern French culture but into the Virgilian oeuvre itself. This process of mutual illumination is highlighted in Cox's argument by theories of intertextuality and dialogism. Although Virgil's presence in French literature is characterized by its focus on exile and uncertainty, Cox's study reaffirms the multivalency of this great European poet and his continuing relevance at the turn of the millennium. |
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Page 21
... never coincides with a single con- sciousness or a single voice . The life of the word is in its transferral from one mouth to another , one context to another , one social collective to another , and one generation to another . In the ...
... never coincides with a single con- sciousness or a single voice . The life of the word is in its transferral from one mouth to another , one context to another , one social collective to another , and one generation to another . In the ...
Page 190
... never find their final tonic chord , never come home to their final destination . The various voices blend and merge but the result is a whirlwind of chattering , the Babel of confusion : Le roman pingétien nous fait ainsi entendre un ...
... never find their final tonic chord , never come home to their final destination . The various voices blend and merge but the result is a whirlwind of chattering , the Babel of confusion : Le roman pingétien nous fait ainsi entendre un ...
Page 205
... never his face , he moves away , he walks slowly , he will never arrive anywhere since every time I see him again in the same place moving away . ] According to Dante the map of our afterlife consists of a series of circles spiralling ...
... never his face , he moves away , he walks slowly , he will never arrive anywhere since every time I see him again in the same place moving away . ] According to Dante the map of our afterlife consists of a series of circles spiralling ...
Contents
Intertextual Virgil | 16 |
French Virgilian Criticism and the Importance of Broch | 29 |
Songs of War | 57 |
Copyright | |
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Aeneas Aeneid Alastair Duncan André Gide Aragon autre avait Bakhtin Bataille de Pharsale Bellessort bien Brasillach Broch Broch's Virgil Bucolics Bucoliques c'est Caesar Cécile centre chante Christian Claude Simon d'une Dante Dante's Death of Virgil Delmont depicts Diane française Dido epic Euvres evokes exile fait fama fama and fata fate figure France French Gallimard Georgics Géorgiques Gide's Giono Hermann Broch intertextual Jamie Masters Klossowski L'Apocryphe l'homme language Latin literary literature livre Lucan maître memory Michel Butor Minuit modern mort mots narrative nouveau roman novel nuit œuvre Orpheus Pagnol Paris passage past pastoral Paul Valéry perceived Pierre Pinget poem poésie poet poète present qu'il reader references Robert Pinget Rome sense shade shepherd shield Sibyl sing song story temps Théo Tityrus tout tradition translation Troy Turnus twentieth century umbra Underworld University Press Valéry vers verse Virgil's poetry Virgilian voice voix words writing Yeux d'Elsa