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Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
August 2025
Print publication year:
2025
Online ISBN:
9781009576659

Book description

Émile Zola was the nineteenth century's pre-eminent naturalist writer and theoretician, spearheading a cultural movement that was rooted in positivist thought and an ethic of sober observation. As a journalist, Zola drove home his vision of a type of literature that described rather than prescribed, that anatomised rather than embellished—one that worked, in short, against idealism. Yet in the pages of his fiction, a complex picture emerges in which Zola appears drawn to the ideal—to the speculative, the implausible, the visionary—more than he liked to admit. Spanning the period from Zola's epic Germinal to his fateful intervention in the Dreyfus Affair, Zola's Dream is the first book to explore how the 'quarrel' between idealists and naturalists shaped the ambitions of the novel at the end of the nineteenth century, when differences over literary aesthetics invariably spoke of far-reaching cultural and political struggles.

Reviews

It is rare that an author as well studied as Zola-not to mention as central to European modernity-benefits from a new critical reading that totally shifts our perceptions of the work, of its meanings, and of its place in literary history. Claire White has achieved this extraordinary feat in Zola's Dream.

Andrew Counter - Professor of Modern French Literature, University of Oxford

‘By reading Zola's late novels against the grain to expose their suppressed idealism, Claire White brilliantly demonstrates the centrality of literary debates in the history of the Third Republic.  A must-read for scholars of literature and history alike.'

Maurice Samuels - Betty Jane Anlyan Professor of French, Yale University

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