توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب The National Habitus: Ways of Feeling French, 1789–1870
نام کتاب : The National Habitus: Ways of Feeling French, 1789–1870
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : عادت ملی: راه های احساس فرانسوی، 1789-1870
سری : Culture & Conflict; 4
نویسندگان : Marie-Pierre Le Hir
ناشر : De Gruyter
سال نشر : 2014
تعداد صفحات : 350
ISBN (شابک) : 9783110363067 , 9783110559231
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 1 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Introduction\nPart I: The Revolutionary Field\n Chapter I Olympe de Gouges’s Revolutionary Patriotism\n 1.1 Vive le roi! (1788–1791)\n 1.1.1 Bourgeois values vs. aristocratic ethos\n 1.1.2 Royal patriotism\n 1.1.3 Manifestations of the aristocratic code of conduct\n 1.1.4 Attitudes towards foreigners\n 1.1.5 The French Revolution as a breakdown of civility\n 1.1.6 Constructing the nation: the cult of great men\n 1.2 Vive la France! (1792–93)\n 1.2.1 From loving the king to loving the nation\n 1.2.2 “L’esprit français”\n 1.2.3 War: the catalyst of national sentiment\n Conclusion\n Chapter II Identity Lost and Found: Chateaubriand’s Culturalist Nationalism\n 2.1 The Historical, Political, and Moral Essay on Revolutions\n 2.1.1 The aristocratic sense of self and national identity\n 2.1.2 Christianity: the foundation of French identity\n 2.1.3 Against the Enlightenment and the French Revolution\n 2.2 The Genius of Christianity, or The Beauties of the Christian Religion\n 2.2.1 Chateaubriand’s case for Christianity’s modernity\n 2.2.2 Chateaubriand’s politics\n 2.2.3 Grounding identity in faith and soil\n Conclusion\n Chapter III Cosmopolitanism and Nationalism in Germaine de Staël’s Works\n 3.1 Delphine, an ambiguous critique of the aristocratic ethos\n 3.1.1 The aristocratic ethos of the Parisian salon\n 3.1.2 Bourgeois life in the countryside\n 3.1.3 Exile and war\n 3.1.4 Delphine’s reception\n 3.2 Divided allegiance: cosmopolitanism and nationalism in Corinne, or Italy\n 3.2.1 Cosmopolitanism and the national character\n 3.2.2 The national habitus in Corinne\n 3.2.3 Corinne’s reception\n Conclusion\nPart II: The Post-Revolutionary Field\n Chapter IV Through Stendhal’s Eyes: The National Habitus in the Making\n 4.1 The French character in Chronicles for England\n 4.1.1 Of Frenchmen, old and new\n 4.1.2 Assessing change in Restoration France\n 4.2 Identity nationalization as inescapable universal process\n 4.2.1 On becoming ‘British’\n 4.2.2 Obstacles to real democracy\n Conclusion\n Chapter V Looking Back: National Past and Culture in Mérimée\n 5.1 Mérimée and the invention of the national patrimony\n 5.2 A history of violence and superstition\n 5.2.1 Violence and religion in A Chronicle of the Reign of Charles IX\n 5.2.2 Taming the superstitious mind: the fantastic tales\n 5.3 Colomba: savage past and modernity\n 5.4 State and religion in The Mormons\n Conclusion\n Chapter VI National Belonging in George Sand’s Novels\n 6.1 George Sand and the Republic\n 6.1.1 Republican patriotism\n 6.1.2 George Sand’s project of national unity\n 6.2 Patriotism and nationalism at times of war\n 6.2.1 National identity in Nanon\n 6.2.2 Nationalism in Francia\n Conclusion\n Conclusion\n Works cited\n Primary texts\n Secondary sources\n Index of names\n Index of subjects