It has been looking down at me from the bookshelf for ten years now. Read it and tell me if it's worth the time.
But honestly, I doubt we read the same kind of french literature, me being an uncultured philistine who likes dumas and verne and camus and all that, so I am not really any help at all.
But honestly, I doubt we read the same kind of french literature, me being an uncultured philistine who likes dumas and verne and camus and all that, so I am not really any help at all.
Well, Montaigne' Essais are a hodgepodge of philosophy (as Renaissance men understood the term, so including natural philosophy a lot), maxims, daily life observations, political or ethical short pieces, opinions on everything and nothing etc. The language is fun, but Les Essais are not especially noted (or read) for their literary quality (nothing like Montesquieu, Rabelais, Descartes or Saint-Simon for e.g.)
It's an interesting read for those interested in Renaissance thinking/non-fiction writing. Montaigne scattered himself a lot though, there's nothing systemic in Les Essais. It has some interest to those wishing to explore renaissance French (he's still more readable than someone like Rabelais, who was messing up a lot with the language on purpose) - but in the original it's not an easy read even for the average native francophone. Archaic spelling is fairly easy to get around, but the semantic shifts and the pre-Baroque grammar/syntax make a lot of sentences obscure at best without referring a lot to a renaissance dictionary. In modern French (most editions are translated to modern French) or another language it's far less interesting and I'd say a collection of the best essays by Montaigne is then far more recommended than the whole thing.
I liked Les Essais in small doses at a time, but in the end I prefer Montaigne's travel diary (narrating his trip to Italy going through the german states for the first time). But it's more akin to say, Samuel Pepy's Diaries, i.e. it's big collection of fascinated observations about daily life.
What should I read next in French and German?
22/05/2012 08:05:38 PM
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My list of French literature I've read is extremely short, so, um, Racine? Yourcenar?
22/05/2012 08:17:49 PM
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Re: My list of French literature I've read is extremely short, so, um, Racine? Yourcenar?
23/05/2012 03:23:37 AM
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That would require yet another Pléiade purchase
23/05/2012 04:10:48 AM
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Essais de Montaigne
22/05/2012 10:08:18 PM
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Re: Essais de Montaigne
23/05/2012 03:15:06 AM
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How about one of the Greek Novels?
23/05/2012 03:47:58 AM
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*browses shelves*
23/05/2012 06:43:38 AM
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I bought 16 books of Jung and 4 of Freud.
23/05/2012 01:44:16 PM
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Don Carlos
23/05/2012 06:21:48 PM
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Yeah, I have that. *NM*
23/05/2012 09:30:48 PM
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And if you were to read the Spanish versions, there are two well-known plays
23/05/2012 11:57:45 PM
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Okay, I looked at Don Carlos. I see no resemblance to Don Juan.
25/05/2012 08:40:05 PM
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I mentioned it because Don Juan appears in it, but is not the star of it
25/05/2012 10:24:20 PM
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It's hard for me to get excited about Spanish literature.
26/05/2012 02:18:40 AM
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Carlos Fuentes said as much in his 2011 non-fiction book, La gran novela latinoamericana
26/05/2012 03:24:22 AM
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Re: *browses shelves*
23/05/2012 06:57:22 PM
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I have the two-volume anthology of French poetry from Pléiade (book series, not the poet group).
23/05/2012 09:32:51 PM
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Re: I have the two-volume anthology of French poetry from Pléiade (book series, not the poet group).
24/05/2012 01:38:45 AM
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You could read the world's first Sci-Fi novel, Lucian of Samosata's Ἀληθῆ διηγήματα.
27/05/2012 03:08:30 PM
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Having read more about that, I'm tempted to say genre fiction has always been bad.
28/05/2012 03:40:45 AM
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