You know my passion for hardcovers (or, since you don't think the leather-bound Pléiade books are "hardcover", hardcover and leather-bound). I did get the two-volume Molière, though, and with the euro dropping, it doesn't look so outrageous.
That again!
I know for you hardcover is an accurate way to describe them. Thinking of French books in American/English publishing terms is just no more natural for me than for you to rely on translated french publishing/binding terms to describe a book.
If Pléiade had something like an "Essential French Baroque drama" volume I'd definitely own it, but the only dramatist I truly enjoy reading and returning to from that period is Molière, so it's the only one I have in Pléiade. That reflects more my tastes/interests than any judgement on literary quality/importance. Like Shakespeare, it's also fairly useful to own Molière's Complete Works as a reference. How the Sun-King persona was created and sustained is one of the aspects of his reign I've read a lot about, and that made me go back to Molière (much the same way it made me return to Lully and his successors).
From Racine I only have Andromaque, Iphigénie and Phèdre. From Corneille, only Le Cid. "Reliés", but all bought for cheap at bouquinistes over the years.
I wouldn't recommend investing for Racine's Pléiade, not unless you have a particular interest in drama, or are one of those who really enjoy reading drama (I'm not keen on that myself.. to buy a Pléiade from a dramatist I need compelling reasons. Molière aside, I own only Eugène Ionesco and Alfred Jarry). As you won't want to buy a PB either and reading a play is quite fast, I'd say an online source might be the best for Racine.
If I could vouch for the quality of any of them, I'd in fact recommend you to try a CD captation (I own several, but none of a Racine play). But all of those will be from France and released by big and usually very conservative companies (even more if it's a full DVD captation), and I have very little idea how they approach Racine in France now. The first productions I've seen here as a teenager were still sedate, posing and pompous (and terribly boring and ridiculous. If you've seen Mouchkine's Molière, that bit where he tried to play tragedies and got thrown stuff by the audience depicts one of his atrocious attempts at producing a Racine play), as if the idea was to have time to ponder and admire each word and line. Now it's back to a focus on the hard-edged purity of the verses and the intensity of emotions. The common saying about Racine is that to play him all the costume, accessories and sets an actor needs beside his body is the text itself (even in his time Racine was the antithesis of Molière's/Lully's multi-media extravangazas, which is in part why he's a darling of modern theater). The trend of the last decades in Montréal is to take that quite literally, and to bring out the intense beauty of the text by having the actors declaim again Racine's verses really fast (lightning speed fast in very intense or violent scenes), almost harshly/violently - which requires a high-level of virtuosity. When the actors manage to do this while inhabiting the characters and without butchering the rythm of Alexandrins, it's one hell of an experience. But I don't quite know if the Europeans, especially the companies from the establishement, are back to that trend though. I'll try to ask a client of mine whose husband is one of our best stage actors, she'll probably know.
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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Re: That would require yet another Pléiade purchase
23/05/2012 06:27:13 PM
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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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