"Milieux" in Life and Literature
Readings:
See Description
Course Description:
“The notion of milieu is becoming a universal and obligatory mode of apprehending the experience and existence of living beings; one could almost say it is now constituted as a category of contemporary thought” writes Foucault’s teacher, the historian of science Georges Canguilhem.
It was during the nineteenth century that “milieu” emerged as a concept in the field of biology and then became a philosophical, social, and literary critical term. “Milieu” is a central notion in the ambitious literary projects of Balzac and Zola. It was also important in the development of experimental literary forms such as the prose poem, which Baudelaire ties to the milieu of the modern city. In this seminar, we will investigate the emergence of the concept “milieu” and examine its impacts on literary practices. This will lead us to examine literary works from the perspective of boundaries between personal and social identity (questions of type and class, of language – who can say what and how? — of character development and its limitations), as well as of relations between character and ambiance (physical, social and historical) all of which will require consideration of formal practices of literary description and narration.
Readings will include works by Balzac (short works such as “La Femme Abandonnée” as well as one novel from the Comédie humaine), Baudelaire (Le Spleen de Paris), Zola (short works such as Le Colonel Chabert, L’Assommoir, critical writings about Naturalism), Georges Sand (Le Meunier d’Angibault ), Sainte Beuve (Volupté) , Maupassant (Le Horla) as well as short selections from the writings Claude Bernard, Auguste Comte and Hippolyte Taine.