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Love Letters and the Romantic Novel during the Napoleonic Wars Unabridged edition


Love Letters and the Romantic Novel during the Napoleonic Wars Unabridged edition

Hardback by Worley, Sharon

Love Letters and the Romantic Novel during the Napoleonic Wars

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£39.09

ISBN:
9781443801270
Publication Date:
24 Nov 2016
Edition:
Unabridged edition
Publisher:
Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Pages:
165 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 29 - 31 May 2024
Love Letters and the Romantic Novel during the Napoleonic Wars

Description

Love letters during the Napoleonic wars were largely framed by concepts of love which were promoted through novels and philosophy. The standard texts, so to speak, which were written by major authors who inherited this Enlightenment bearing, responded to the emerging concepts of love found in novels and philosophical essays. Love among this Napoleonic coterie is unique because it demonstrates the reciprocal relationship between the love letter and the romantic novel. Germaine de Stael, Juiette Recamier, Chateaubriand, Benjamin Constant, Lady Emma Hamilton, Napoleon Bonaparte and his brother, Lucien Bonaparte, were the authors and recipients of some of the most passionate love letters of this period. They were also avid readers of the newly emerging genre of the romantic novel, and many of them were also authors of such works where they projected their personal romances onto the characterization of their fictional heroes and heroines. In addition, these authors had lived through the recent French Revolution and the Terror. Imprisoned during the Revolution, or branded as emigres upon their return to Paris, their mature adult lives were spent in the shadows of the Napoleonic wars in which they shifted political loyalties as the specter of Napoleon's powers grew from First Consul to Emperor of Europe. The looming threat of war ignited the depths of their passions and inspired their intellectual analysis of love, happiness and suicide. Their evolving concept of love was a romantic, all-consuming passion which gripped the lovers in fatal embraces. This book's analysis of their love letters and romantic novels reveals the emerging political landscape of the period through extended metaphors of love and patriotism.

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