Skip to content
You are not logged in |Login  
     
Limit search to available items
Book Cover
Bestseller
BestsellerE-Book
Author Kuzmic, Tatiana, author.

Title Adulterous nations : family politics and national anxiety in the European novel / Tatiana Kuzmic.

Publication Info. Evanston, Illinois : Northwestern University Press, 2016.
©2016

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 All Libraries - Shared Downloadable Materials  JSTOR Open Access Ebook    Downloadable
All patrons click here to access this title from JSTOR
 University of Saint Joseph: Pope Pius XII Library - Internet  WORLD WIDE WEB E-BOOK JSTOR    Downloadable
Please click here to access this JSTOR resource
Description 1 online resource (xv, 229 pages .)
Series UPCC book collections on Project MUSE.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Empires -- Middlemarch : the English heroine and the Polish rebel(lions) -- Effi Briest : German realism and the young empire -- Anna Karenina : the Slavonic question and the dismembered adulteress -- Nations -- The goldsmith's gold : the origins of Yugoslavism and the birth of the Croatian novel -- Quo vadis : Polish messianism and the proselytizing heroine.
Summary In Adulterous Nations, Tatiana Kuzmic enlarges our perspective on the nineteenth-century novel of adultery and how it often served as a metaphor for relationships between the imperial and the colonized. In the context of the long-standing practice of gendering nations as female, the novels discussed--Eliot's Middlemarch, Fontane's Effi Briest, and Tolstoy's Anna Karenina, along with Šenoa's The Goldsmith's Gold and Sienkiewicz's Quo Vadis--can be understood as depicting international crises on the scale of the nuclear family. Kuzmic argues that the hopes, anxieties, and interests of European nations in this period can be discerned in the destabilizing force of adultery. Reading the work of Šenoa and Sienkiewicz, Kuzmic illuminates the relationship between the literature of dominant nations and that of the semicolonized territories that posed a threat to them. Kuzmic's study enhances our understanding of not only these novels but nineteenth-century European literature more generally.
Note Print version record.
Language In English.
Subject European fiction -- History and criticism.
Adultery in literature.
Nationalism in literature.
Adultery in literature. (OCoLC)fst00797399
European fiction. (OCoLC)fst00916731
Nationalism in literature. (OCoLC)fst01033899
LITERARY CRITICISM / Modern / General.
Genre/Form Criticism, interpretation, etc. (OCoLC)fst01411635
Added Author Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
Other Form: Print version: Kuzmic, Tatiana. Adulterous nations. 9780810133976 0810133970 (DLC) 2016007596 (OCoLC)939911353
ISBN 9780810133990 (electronic bk.)
0810133997 (electronic bk.)
9780810133976
0810133970
9780810133983
0810133989
-->
Add a Review