ABSTRACT

Emile Zola's reputation as a landmark European novelist is undisputed. His monumental achievement, the novel cycle Les Rougon-Macquart: Histoire sociale et naturelle d'une famille sous le Second Empire (1871-1893), fixed his status as a major writer in the naturalist tradition. Is there any more to be said? Susan Harrow answers boldly in the affirmative, challenging the commonplace view that Zola's writing is predictable, prolix and transparent (what Barthes called 'readerly', for which read 'tedious'). Harrow exposes the modernist and postmodernist strategies which surface in the Rougon-Macquart novels, and reveals Zola's innovatory representation of the body captured here at work, at war, at play, at rest, and in arresting abstraction. Informed by critical thought from Barthes and Deleuze to Michel de Certeau and Anthony Giddens, Zola, the Body Modern offers a model for how we can revitalize our understanding of the canonical nineteenth-century European novel, and learn to travel more flexibly between parameters of century, style and aesthetics.

chapter |21 pages

Introduction Why Zola? Why Now?

part I|47 pages

Unfolding Modernity

chapter 1|18 pages

Old Consensus and New Currency

part II|74 pages

The Embodiment of Style

chapter 3|21 pages

Real Bodies and Textual Transpositions

chapter 4|52 pages

Folds and Fractures: The Body of the Text

part III|72 pages

The Social Body

chapter 5|26 pages

Thinking and Visualizing the Social Body

chapter 6|15 pages

Individuation

chapter 7|19 pages

Reading and Speaking the Social Body

chapter |10 pages

Summations And Speculations