S U B S T A N C E 102
Volume 32, number 3, 2003 [Full Text*]
The Politics of French Literary History
Guest Editors:
Richard J. Golsan & Ruth Larson
Introduction
Richard J. Golsan & Ruth Larson
Revisiting A New History of
French Literature
D. Hollier interviewed by Golsan & Larson
The Politics of French Literary History
In the US and France Today
Richard J. Golsan
Céline: The Success of the
Monstre Sacré in Postwar France
Nicholas Hewitt
Paul Morand: The Paradoxes of “Revision”
Marc Dambre
Of Books, Bombs, and Backward
Thinking: Jean Dutourd’s Reactionary
Literary History
Ralph Schoolcraft
What the Nazis Saw:
Les Mouches in Occupied Paris
Allan Stoekl
“Une voiture peut en cacher une autre”:
Twentieth-Century Women Writers Read George Sand
Melanie Hawthorne
Passages Beyond the Resistance: Char’s Seules demeurent
And its Harmonics in Semprun and Foucault
Van Kelly
Michel Leiris: Race, Poetry, Politics:
Rereading the Mission Lucas
Ruth Larson
The Anti-Colonial Archive:
France and Africa’s Unfinished Business
Phyllis Taoua
REVIEWS
Burton, Richard D.E. Blood in the City: Violence and
Revelation in Paris, 1789-1945.
Reviewed by Allan Stoekl
Cone, Michèle. French Modernisms: Perspectives on Art
Before, During, and After Vichy.
Reviewed by Peter Schulman
Eng, David L. and David Kazajian, eds. Loss: The Politics
of Mourning.
Reviewed by Naomi Mandel
Lecarme, Jacques. Drieu la Rochelle ou le bal des maudits.
Reviewed by Richard J. Golsan
Moscovici, Claudia. Double Dialectics: Between Universalism
and Relativism in Enlightenment and Postmodern Thought.
Reviewed by Downing Thomas
*The full text is available through your library’s subscription to Project MUSE