The Year of Reading Proust discussion

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Within a Budding Grove
Within a Budding Grove, vol. 2
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I imagine that it is too soft, too clingy for the rather stiff formal dresses that ladies ..."
Karen, with this display I am at a loss.. What should I wear for the office tomorrow?

It´s transparent but dresses can be made by lining it with more crepe.Cool but expensive.
http://www.redcarpet-fashionawards.co...

No idea. For that we would need a historian on costume.
Found this book.
Fashion and Wo..."
Maybe this can be of help
http://www.fashion-era.com/la_belle_e...

What's the weather doing with you? Temperature dictates my choice, so it'll be nothing but wool for me tomorrow. Layers and layers of it.

It´s transparent but dresses can be made by lining it with more crepe.Cool but expensive.
..."
Is it? I thought it was the chiffon on that red number that was the transparent stuff.

http://vimeo.com/49690511
http://vimeo.com/46660778
they take time but I really found them excellent
THOUGH NOT ON CLOTHES :)

It´s transparent but dresses can be made by lining it with more crepe.Cool..."
they are almost the same thing :
http://www.mytextilenotes.com/differe...

It´s transparent but dresses can be made by lining it with m..."
The crêpe is not transparent and has a certain weight.

It´s transparent but dresses can be made by..."
You are right Kall so I´ve just checked with my Auntee Renee and she says you are right and "Pato, as usual you just think you know everything and jump to conclusions without checking things first,"She forgets she was the one that gave me the material and called it that and it was transparent,Now we have a family feud.

M. Compangnon in his lecture at Le College de France: Proust in 1913 (delivered 1/13) makes the point that the text of Swann's Way is "mobile, precarious, unstable..." as he is continually rewriting events, changing characters, situations (sometimes 3 or 4 times or more & even on galley proofs that near publication) and melding, mixing, blending realities as he remembers them or imagines them: the family relations in Combray, the lady in pink, etc; furthermore as Proust writes in a letter (to I've forgotten whom) he compares his text to a winding train ride where what appears on your left now appears on your right, much like the steeples seen from Dr. Percipied's carriage, so says M. Compagnon.
I don't know what to believe, I assume nothing, I read on...



Thanks for giving us these gems from Compagnon's lecture, Eugene.
I like that he confirms how 'mobile, precarious, unstable' the text is so we don't feel it is any lack of comprehension on our part that makes it seem so. I like also that Proust was aware of this, that it was his intent and that the passage about the steeples has even more significance than we realized when we originally read it.

Yes...I too love the winding train analogy.
Remember the traveler at a train station analogy at the beginning of Swann's Way? It was the first and second page. The Narrator wondering what time it was spoke of the whistling of trains "now nearer and now further off" and the marking of memory for a traveler who is on an unfamiliar journey...that fact of unfamiliarity making the path and those met along the way more poignant and memorable.

Yes, the imagery of the traveller comes up relatively often. The first time is at the very beginning of the work when he describes the sensations when waking up in Combray, and in other rooms.


The wiki is good.
English version:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathilde...
French version is longer:
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mat..."
Here is a Paris Review article, by Lorin Stein, describing Proust writing about Princesse Mathilde:
"The epigraph comes from “An Historical Salon,” an essay—really, a celebrity profile—that Proust wrote for Le Figaro in late 1902. His subject is the Princesse Mathilde Bonaparte..."
"The best part of the essay is Proust’s description of how the princess reconciled with her old friend the Duc d’Aumale. When they were young, he was exiled by her cousin (and former suitor) Louis-Napoléon. The duke wrote Louis-Napoléon a famously insulting open letter—then actually challenged him to a duel:"
It is interesting to read about the "historical salon" and then compare it to the passage on page 157:
http://www.theparisreview.org/blog/20...


Thank you. I had forgotten about Cottard and the duc d'Aumole.

The duc sounds a lot like the model for a minor character in Anatole France's Le Lys Rouge, Le Marquis de Ré.


It's an interesting theory; and: BTW, Proust takes pains, in the "tea party" section, to mention how much Gilberte resembles her father.

With regard to Odette's pregnancy, I understood that her being away with the Verdurins was the strategy Proust used to allow Swann to be ignorant of her state for as long as possible so that his finally marrying her becomes such a drama since we know he's had enough time away from her to recover from his infatuation and might have taken a different path in life were it not for his 'offstage' discovery of Gilberte's existence. Proust also has the Cottards leave the cruise well before the birth, and so Mme Cottard doesn't tell Swann about it. I presumed it was intended that Odette had the baby somewhere on route and that the baby would have been sent back to France with a nurse.

Anyway, I wanted to point out how Proust emphasizes Gilberte's resemblance to Swann to all those who had Dark Suspicions of Odette.

And I did wonder about who Gilberte's father might be until that scene where Proust underlines her physical resemblance to Swann. Has Swann a first name - I forget...


I imagine that it is too soft, too clingy for the rather stiff formal dresses that ladies would be wearing in public. The style they wore around the late 1880s-1890s was that smooth fronted skirt with a slight bustle at the back. That would need a taffeta or a silk damask or brocade.
Check this out, some gorgeous stuff here. My personal interest means that I particularly appreciate the tennis dress.
http://pinterest.com/happineff/histor...