For the People, by the People?
Eugene Sue's "Les Mysteres De Paris" - A Hypothesis in the Sociology of Literature
Christopher Prendergast author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Published:1st Dec '03
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Eugene Sue (1804-57), like his contemporary Alexandre Dumas pere, was one of the most successful writers of his time. Les Mysteres de Paris, the novel for which he is most remembered, became a publishing sensation. In its serial form, it took the public by storm - readers fought for copies of the next instalment - and in book form its print-run reached an unprecedented 60,000. Christopher Prendergast's study engages with the problematic of emerging forms of popular literature on the basis of a specific hypothesis: that Les Mysteres de Paris, written and published in serial form, was, through the pressure of Sue's reader-correspondents (many of them barely literate), a collective production, 'written by the people for the people'. Prendergast examines the phenomenon of popular literature and reader response in the nineteenth century to illuminate larger issues in the sociology of literature.
ISBN: 9781900755894
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 249g
144 pages