Charlotte Lennox, The female Quixote

Fiche technique

Format : Broché
Nb de pages : 251 pages
Poids : 304 g
Dimensions : 15cm X 20cm
Date de parution :
ISBN : 979-10-358-3120-2
EAN : 9791035831202

Charlotte Lennox, The female Quixote

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Collection(s) : Belin-CNED agrégation , Major

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Charlotte Lennox, The Female Quixote

Picture a resolute heroine from a seventeenth-century French romance who has been unknowingly teleported to mid-eighteenth-century Britain. Equipped with her worldview fashioned by the beliefs an values of those romances, how would she navigate this unfamiliar world ? Would her journey be a seamless progression from one comically ridiculous error to the next ? How would she assess the morals and customs of her newfound society, and how would its members perceive her ?

In The Female Quixote, Charlotte Lennox embarks on this imaginative experiment. Her Cervantean parody fosters a dynamic reading experience, swinging between complicity and detachment. It projects an image of the parodied romances but also of the social world of eighteenth-century Britain. Encouraging readers to contemplate the fluid interplay between fiction and the real, the novel prompts reflection on the disparities between the social norms of both realms.

This study takes a multifaceted approach to Lennox's novel, situating the work in its literary-historical context and examining the narrative features aligning it both with realist novels and romances. Additionally it analyses key themes and provides summaries of characters and chapters. The study also offers a selection of texts that shed light on the debates accompanying the transition from an older codification of pros fiction to a new contender : the realist novel. The overarching objective is to showcase The Female Quixote's significance in shaping the modern novel's early history.

Biographie

Orla Smyth holds the position of Senior Lecturer at the University of Le Havre Normandie. She obtained her primary degree in English Literature from Trinity College Dublin, pursued her master's degree in Comparative Literature at New York University and completed her doctorate at the École des Hautes Études in Paris. In her teaching and research, she approaches the study of eighteenth-century literature and culture from an interdisciplinary perspective. Her academic work reflects her keen interest in the history of literary theory from the past to the present.