The Readers Review: Literature from 1714 to 1910 discussion

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The Red and the Black
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The Red and the Black - Background and Resoruces
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Here is various background information about Stendhal and the book:
http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/e...
http://us.penguingroup.com/static/rgu...
Stendhal was a man of the Napoleonic era who admired Napoleon greatly and served on his army staff all over Europe. Here is a resume of his army life and adventures:-
http://www.napoleon-series.org/ins/sc...
Here is some information and pics about the region of the French Comte, where the fictional village of Verrieres is supposed to have been located. The Franche Comte was one of the last places in France to have serfdom. Half the population were serfs in 1784. It borders Switzerland and shares its culture. It is well known for its Burgundy wine and the ceremony surrounding Beaujolais. There is a Comte Cheese which has been produced there for centuries - shades of Don Quixote!
Here are some beautiful images of the area the Jura Mountains where Beaujolais is produced and where we can perhaps imagine our characters living:-
http://www.europaphotogenica.com/Beau...
The Jura Mountains are where we get the name Jurassic from as fossils of this period were first studied there.
http://www.lost-in-france.com/french-...
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/mesozoic...
There are some slideshows here of the area on the Swiss side of the mountains, showing the architecture and topography of the villages there:-
http://www.fusions.ch/towns-fxtown08....
So with a glass of 1830 Burgundy in hand we can commence! Bonne Sante!

http://www.amazon.com/The-Red-Black-e...


These slideshows that Madge brings to our attention are lovely. Lots of virtual sightseeing is possible here!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilya_Ehr...
I have read the first chapter of RB now in a couple of translations and will say that there are definite differences in pleasure, although it bounced a bit from one to the other. Have one more to try; then may offer an opinion among those three.

http://www.thuto.org/ubh/ub/h202/fr19...

'Early liberals also laid the groundwork for the separation of church and state, which became part of both the American and French Constitutions. As heirs of the Enlightenment, liberals believed that any given social and political order emanated from human interactions, not from divine will. Many liberals were openly hostile to religious belief itself, but most concentrated their opposition to the union of religious and political authority, arguing that faith could prosper on its own, without official sponsorship or administration by the state.' We see some of these ideas being aired in R&B.'
Here is another neat little summary:-
http://www.ehow.com/info_8691929_succ...

Thank you, Silver! That fits so well with the history CDs on European history that I am listening to right now!

The more I read in this book by Ehrenburg, the more I recommend it as background reading for our RB! I just ordered a used copy (21 cents plus postage) because I want to share the section on France and French culture with my son and his wife, as a compliment to their recent visit to France. I figured it wasn't going to be any more expensive than the time and cost required to copy the pages from the library book that I wanted to share. It positions a number of French writers in relation to each other and other authors, especially Russian ones.
Madge, I think you would find particularly interesting the comments on the considerable impact he claims George Sands has had on other authors, even as he descries the literary quality of her work.


But, I am still not sorry to be acquiring the book. I especially have enjoyed so far the survey on French culture. I am reminded of a story about a young Chinese woman applying for US citizenship and being told that she will have to learn US history. When she asked how many years and was told about 250, she responded "That sounds like about a weekend of study." She was accustomed to the eons of Chinese history!
One direction Ehrenburg took me was to these translations of a famous piece of 16th century poetry (Ronsard):
http://www.bewilderingstories.com/iss...

'Behind him lay many storms, passions, disillusionments: an adolescence lit by the fires of the Revolution, the triumph of barbarians [the Bourbons], long years in Italy, theatre footlights, meetings with Byron, Rossini, Pellico, carbonari and the many women he had loved.'
We learn something of his brushes with the carbonari of several countries in the chapters about Julien and The Secret Note, which have an element of the James Bond about them!
Sadly, his last years were unhappy ones, which he served as a Consul in a remote Papal town. He was watched by the police and began to write in code, using many aliases (he had 40 of them!). A beloved mistress refused to marry him so he lived alone and one day, whilst walking in the street, he collapsed and died. A lonely end for such a sociable man:(.
(BTW he also introduced the word 'egotism' into the French language, meaning a love of talking about oneself.)

I thought the distinction between "egotism" and "egoism" was interesting, although I can't reconstruct it without recourse to the book, which is somewhere out of reach at the moment.


Yes, I understand your comment. I'm still in his twenties. His sister was very pretty, according to the pictures included. He was more passionate than Julien -- and, of course, became far more powerful. But, I do see parallels and wonder if they are all accidental.
Please post spoiler warnings where appropriate.