Description
Book SynopsisExplosive Narratives: Terrorism and Anarchy in the Works of Emile Zola explores the genealogy of modern day terrorism through a close study of the anarchist figure in three of Emile Zola’s novels: Germinal, Paris, and Travail. The study links the crisis of representation registered at the end of the 19th century with the rise of terrorism embodied in the bomb-throwing anarchist. It thereby traces Zola’s evolving thoughts on anarchy from the terrorist to the humanitarian reformer, from class warfare to a peaceful artisan commune, from a naturalist depiction of an elusive reality to a utopian writing fleeing the contingencies of the historical. The volume brings together aesthetic, political, urban, and scientific debates of Belle Epoque France and it will thus be of great interest not only to Zola scholars, but also to students of late 19th-century politics and art.
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction: Anarchy, Entropy, Naturalism Anarchy Entropy Naturalism Chapter 1: Souvarine’s Vanishing Act: The Effacement of Anarchy in Germinal The Ambiguous Politics of Germinal The Resurgence of Anarchy from the Underground Mine Undermining Narratives: The Sub-text of Anarchy Chapter 2: Anarchy as Narrative Capital: The Emplotment of Terrorism in Paris The Political Discourse in Paris Anarchy as Narrative Capital Towards Utopia: Taking the Bite Out of Anarchy Chapter 3: The Anarchic Commune as World’s Fair in Travail Ideological Welding: Fourier and Anarchism Revolutionary Rape as Entropic Heat Death Beyond Narrative Entropy: Utopia The Anarchic Commune as World’s Fair Epilogue: Zola’s Dream Bibliography Index