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Jules Michelet

Writing Art and History in Nineteenth-Century France

Michèle Hannoosh author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Pennsylvania State University Press

Published:2nd Nov '20

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Jules Michelet cover

Jules Michelet, one of France’s most influential historians and a founder of modern historical practice, was a passionate viewer and relentless interpreter of the visual arts. In this book, Michèle Hannoosh examines the crucial role that art writing played in Michelet’s work and shows how it decisively influenced his theory of history and his view of the practice of the historian.

The visual arts were at the very center of Michelet’s conception of historiography. He filled his private notes, public lectures, and printed books with discussions of artworks, which, for him, embodied the character of particular historical moments. Michelet believed that painting, sculpture, architecture, and engraving bore witness to histories that frequently went untold; that they expressed key ideas standing behind events; and that they articulated concepts that would come to fruition only later.

This groundbreaking reevaluation of Michelet’s approach to history elucidates how writing about art provided a model for the historian’s relation to, and interpretation of, the past, and thus for a new type of historiography—one that acknowledges and enacts the historian’s own implication in the history he or she tells.

“In this book Hannoosh reveals a brilliant mind using art to invent a way of writing history, inspiring the discipline of art history itself, inspiring us to continue to build the ‘cathedral of knowledge’ as both meticulous scholarship and profound love of art.”

—Beth S. Wright Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide


“Hannoosh’s Jules Michelet: Writing Art and History in Nineteenth-Century France . . . is satisfying not just for what it contributes to our knowledge of Michelet and the nineteenth-century cultural field as a whole but also for the important set of theoretical questions it engenders.”

—Bettina Lerner H-France


“Michelet emerges as an obsessive and at times intriguingly changeable rewriter, and it is in this respect that Hannoosh’s study is exemplary in its choice and treatment of primary materials, as well as eloquent in its analyses and conclusions.”

—Jennifer Rushworth Modern Language Review


“Through her analyses of Michelet’s ever evolving relationships with art, Michèle Hannoosh masterfully develops her study across three planes: a biography of Michelet, a history of art, and a history of France. It is the subtle imbrication of these various threads that makes this book such compelling reading.”

—Robert Morrissey Journal of Modern History


“‘History can be an aliment only when it is full as an egg,’ according to Roland Barthes’s assessment of the romantic histories of the great nineteenth-century writer Jules Michelet. Michèle Hannoosh, in her own intellectual biography of the historian, picks up a crucial ingredient of this egg that Barthes had introduced but almost put aside: Michelet’s deep indebtedness to different periods and types of visual art. Hannoosh’s book remedies this ‘lack’ by offering us a most insightful, intelligent, and imaginative account of how dependent, in many ways, his historical vision was to works of art.”

—Michael Ann Holly, author of The Melancholy Art

ISBN: 9780271083575

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm

Weight: 340g

248 pages