Seeing Through the Mother Goose Tales

Visual Turns in the Writings of Charles Perrault

Philip Lewis author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Stanford University Press

Published:1st Jun '96

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Seeing Through the Mother Goose Tales cover

During the first half of the reign of Louis XIV, Charles Perrault enjoyed the status of a prominent public intellectual. A key player in the development of the arts, he has commonly been situated in French literary and cultural history as the spokesman for the Moderns in the Quarrel of the Ancients and Moderns, the seventeenth century's protracted aesthetic controversy. During the 1690s, after falling from political favour, Perrault took up the writing of fiction and achieved lasting fame as the author of the Mother Goose Tales. Seeing Through the Mother Goose Tales proposes a framework for relating these two distinct facets of his career. The author shows how the intellectual and conceptual compromises that the fairy tales rearticulate derive their force and coherence from the priority that Perrault's characters, faithful to the dominant values of the century, accord to visual representation.

“Lewis’s reading of Perrault is informed by a deep knowledge of seventeenth-century French culture, ideology, and aesthetic theories as well as a particularly astute grasp of contemporary theoretical discourses. . . . We are finally given the extraordinarily complex workings of stories that for almost 300 years have been relegated to the domain of ‘children’s’ literature.”—Mitchell Greenberg, Miami University
“A powerful new vision of 17th-century literary and intellectual history. . . . Lewis has very much changed the way we will teach these tales and French classicism in general.”—John D. Lyons, University of Virginia

ISBN: 9780804724104

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 562g

312 pages