Victor Hugo

Przednia okładka
W. W. Norton & Company, 1998 - 682
The life of a writer whose books were such powerful social and political statements that he lived in exile from both France and England.Victor Hugo was the most important writer of the nineteenth century in France: founder and destroyer of the Romantic movement, revolutionary playwright, seminal poet, epic novelist, author of the last universally accessible masterpieces in the European tradition, among them Les Miserables and The Hunchback of Notre Dame. He was also a radical political thinker (and eventual exile); a gifted painter and architect; a visionary and mystic who conversed with Virgil, Shakespeare, and Jesus Christ -- in short, a tantalizing, protean personality who dominated, distracted, and maddened his contemporaries.Attempts to explain Hugo's bewildering complexity have generated a literature of memorable paradoxes. If there were a being higher than God, wrote Ford Madox Ford, one would have to say that it was Victor Hugo. Andre Gide, asked who the greatest French poet was, replied, Victor Hugo, alas! And Jean Cocteau famously defined Victor Hugo as a madman who thought he was Victor Hugo.
 

Spis treści

A SABRE IN THE NIGHT 18021803
3
SECRETS 18041810
17
THE DISASTERS OF WAR 18111815
31
THE DEMON DWARF 18211824
87
TRAITORS 18241827
107
H 18281830
131
DARK DOORS STAND OPEN IN THE INVISIBLE
212
CRIMINAL CONVERSATION 18431848
241
STATIONS OF THE CROSS 18681870
421
BECAUSE 18711873
472
A MAN WHO THINKS OF SOMETHING ELSE
491
To LOVE IS TO ACT 18781885
507
GOD 1885
525
EPILOGUE HUGO AFTER HUGO
533
GASTIBELZA LE FOU DE TOLÈDE
553
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
621

POETIC INJUSTICE 18511852
296
STRANGE HORIZON 18521855
316
SALVAGE 18631868
395

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Informacje o autorze (1998)

Graham Robb's two previous books, "Victor Hugo" & "Balzac," were "New York Times" Notable Books. He lives in Oxford, England.

Informacje bibliograficzne