Short Voyages to the Land of the People

Summary
This book analyzes a range of texts that seek, in different ways, to represent "the people." Rancière approaches these texts as travel narratives or ethnographies whose authors have traveled not to distant or exotic lands but across class lines. In this truly comparative study, he examines Wordsworth's poetry, the utopian discourse of the Saint-Simoniens, the correspondence and theater of Büchner, Claude Genoux's Mémoires d'un enfant de la Savoie , Michelet's theories of history, the prose and poetry of Rilke, and the performance of Ingrid Bergman in Rossellini's postwar film Europe 51 . Rancière examines the various forms of displacement that affect his subjects, enabling each to become foreign to the sites and trajectories commonly known as reality. He argues convincingly that "the people" have no proper signification in the texts under consideration, instead, they function as points of reality upon which the voyager can drape a conceptual framework shaped by the circumstances not of the other, but of the self.
Similar Books
-
Writing the Past, Inscribing the Future: History as Prophecy in Colonial Java
by Nancy K. Florida
-
Gothic Writing 1750-1820: A Genealogy
by Robert Miles
-
Romantic Writing and Pedestrian Travel
by Robin Jarvis
-
Transamerican Literary Relations and the Nineteenth-Century Public Sphere
by Anna Brickhouse
-
The Historic Imaginary: Politics of History in Fascist Italy
by Claudio Fogu
-
-
Poetics Of The Pretext: Reading Lautréamont
by Roland-François Lack
-
-
English Literature and the Russian Aesthetic Renaissance
by Rachel Polonsky
-
The Elsewhere: On Belonging at a Near Distance
by Adam Zachary Newton
-
-
First Encounters in French and German Prose Fiction, 1830-1883
by Sima Kappeler