Peter Brooks’s monograph captures some of the most attractive aspects of Honoré de Balzac’s gigantic Human Comedy, the series of novels and novellas that according to Oscar Wilde’s bold statement “invented” the nineteenth century. Brooks confesses that initially Stendhal’s novels interested him most, given their links with the transparent psychology of earlier seventeenth- and eighteenth-century French moralists (La Rochefoucauld) and immoralists (Choderlos de Laclos). Later, discovering Père Goriot, Brooks admired Balzac’s depiction of the “naked and unabashed” ambition of his young characters and their need for satisfying “unlimited” desires (7). Sex and wealth obsess them, love being quite often convertible into money. Each character, moreover, has a long, complicated past and future, whose details can be found in other novels or novellas that belong to Balzac’s vast oeuvre.
Peter Brooks ci racconta la propria esperienza di lettura della Comédie humaine e la personale scoperta del suo autore, mostrandoci come la forza narrativa di Balzac riesca a dar forma alla dinamicità di un mondo in fermento, sul punto di fare il suo ingresso nella modernità. Un invito a leggere lo scrittore francese non solo per immergersi nella sua vastissima opera ma anche per comprendere sia il mondo di allora sia, e forse soprattutto, quello di oggi.
Episcopo, G. (2025). La lezione di Balzac.
La lezione di Balzac
giuseppe episcopo
2025-01-01
Abstract
Peter Brooks’s monograph captures some of the most attractive aspects of Honoré de Balzac’s gigantic Human Comedy, the series of novels and novellas that according to Oscar Wilde’s bold statement “invented” the nineteenth century. Brooks confesses that initially Stendhal’s novels interested him most, given their links with the transparent psychology of earlier seventeenth- and eighteenth-century French moralists (La Rochefoucauld) and immoralists (Choderlos de Laclos). Later, discovering Père Goriot, Brooks admired Balzac’s depiction of the “naked and unabashed” ambition of his young characters and their need for satisfying “unlimited” desires (7). Sex and wealth obsess them, love being quite often convertible into money. Each character, moreover, has a long, complicated past and future, whose details can be found in other novels or novellas that belong to Balzac’s vast oeuvre.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


