Identity Trouble

Fragmentation and Disillusionment in the Works of Guy de Maupassant

Fiction & Literature, Literary Theory & Criticism, French, European
Cover of the book Identity Trouble by Eva Yampolsky, Peter Lang
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Eva Yampolsky ISBN: 9781433138577
Publisher: Peter Lang Publication: September 6, 2017
Imprint: Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers Language: English
Author: Eva Yampolsky
ISBN: 9781433138577
Publisher: Peter Lang
Publication: September 6, 2017
Imprint: Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers
Language: English

In this book, Eva Yampolsky explores the questions of identity, illusion and suicide in the works of Guy de Maupassant. Utilizing a historical context which stimulated numerous social, technological and scientific transformations and developments during the 19th century, Dr. Yampolsky identifies two defining aims.

Firstly, she examines the various figures of the double, such as visual representations of the subject through painting, mirror reflection, generational proximity and resemblance, and the relation between self-perception and social norms. She seeks to show the complex and often conflicting relation between the individual and society, and more specifically the attempts and frequent failures to manipulate, control and embody a unique definition of self. This divergence between the social norms, such as class, profession, gender and honor, and the characters’ notion of self is what drives the narrative.

Secondly, Eva Yampolsky analyzes the consequent psychological turmoil, madness and even suicide of many Maupassantian characters. This impossible task of embodying an identity that is sole and unique, as it is lived and perceived by the subject and others, in most short stories and novels leads to the characters’ disillusionment and, in a great number of texts, violence or suicide.

This book draws on the social, political and economic revolutions that redefined the individual. New forms of visual representation and communication, namely with the invention of photography and the developments of the press, bring forth questions of authenticity, doubling, and a new distinction between private and public spheres. Finally, the birth of psychiatry at the turn of the 19th century and the emergence of new disciplines, such as sociology and psychoanalysis, inscribe passions, illusions and suicide in new discursive and disciplinary frameworks. These transformations and developments are pervasive and, in many cases, explicit in Maupassant’s work, influences that have aided and nourished the literary analysis of his texts.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

In this book, Eva Yampolsky explores the questions of identity, illusion and suicide in the works of Guy de Maupassant. Utilizing a historical context which stimulated numerous social, technological and scientific transformations and developments during the 19th century, Dr. Yampolsky identifies two defining aims.

Firstly, she examines the various figures of the double, such as visual representations of the subject through painting, mirror reflection, generational proximity and resemblance, and the relation between self-perception and social norms. She seeks to show the complex and often conflicting relation between the individual and society, and more specifically the attempts and frequent failures to manipulate, control and embody a unique definition of self. This divergence between the social norms, such as class, profession, gender and honor, and the characters’ notion of self is what drives the narrative.

Secondly, Eva Yampolsky analyzes the consequent psychological turmoil, madness and even suicide of many Maupassantian characters. This impossible task of embodying an identity that is sole and unique, as it is lived and perceived by the subject and others, in most short stories and novels leads to the characters’ disillusionment and, in a great number of texts, violence or suicide.

This book draws on the social, political and economic revolutions that redefined the individual. New forms of visual representation and communication, namely with the invention of photography and the developments of the press, bring forth questions of authenticity, doubling, and a new distinction between private and public spheres. Finally, the birth of psychiatry at the turn of the 19th century and the emergence of new disciplines, such as sociology and psychoanalysis, inscribe passions, illusions and suicide in new discursive and disciplinary frameworks. These transformations and developments are pervasive and, in many cases, explicit in Maupassant’s work, influences that have aided and nourished the literary analysis of his texts.

More books from Peter Lang

Cover of the book Postgraduate Study in Australia by Eva Yampolsky
Cover of the book Dancer Researcher Performer: A Learning Process by Eva Yampolsky
Cover of the book The History of the European Monetary Union by Eva Yampolsky
Cover of the book Présences, résurgences et oublis du religieux dans les littératures française et québécoise by Eva Yampolsky
Cover of the book Buhol-Buhol / Entanglement by Eva Yampolsky
Cover of the book Die Konkretisierung des Verfolgungsbegriffs des Art. 9 Abs. 1 Buchst. a QRL anhand des Begriffs der Menschenwuerde by Eva Yampolsky
Cover of the book Gérontinnovations by Eva Yampolsky
Cover of the book Unterlassungsverfuegungen im Immaterialgueterrecht by Eva Yampolsky
Cover of the book Narrative Design by Eva Yampolsky
Cover of the book Critical Studies of Southern Place by Eva Yampolsky
Cover of the book The Reflective Translator by Eva Yampolsky
Cover of the book Intolerancia y Globalización by Eva Yampolsky
Cover of the book Verbandshaftung bei Spielmanipulation durch Fußball-Schiedsrichter by Eva Yampolsky
Cover of the book Freiheitsaufbruch und Friedensverlangen by Eva Yampolsky
Cover of the book Carminis Personae Character in Roman Poetry by Eva Yampolsky
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy