Even the form of Henri Chateau’s novel, published in 1901, emphasizes the relationship between a master and his disciple. It uses autobiographical narrative and is based on the advice given by the arrivé to his young follower. The subject places the book among, what we call, arriviste novels – a category of the realist novel developed in 19th century, whose beginnings can be traced back to Stendhal and Balzac. Nevertheless, the structure of the narrative is singular and questions the very principle of arrivisme, inseparable from individualism. This paradox requires a reconsideration of the idea of teaching in such conditions. Our paper analyses the arriviste’s education process and presents the benefits and risks of the relationship between...
What is the value of play for a reader when the literary text itself is radically conceived as a lud...
In Francis Bebey's L'Enfant-pluie, the learner Mwana is burning with the desire to grow up. Weaned a...
At its peak in the 17th century, Vanity, thanks to its codification, persists beyond that age favour...
Le Disciple (The Disciple) is Paul Bourget’s main work. The book, which was published in 1889, was p...
Les Neuf Consciences du Malfini by Patrick Chamoiseau is a Bildungsroman centred around pedagogical ...
Often perceived as the result of empirical speculation, the sanatorium, intended for the treatment o...
As a substitute father figure, a mentor, a tutor and a writer to be admired and imitated, Barbey d’A...
In the 1850es, the Second Empire settles in after five stormy decades that unveil the vanity of temp...
Florimont, by Aimon de Varennes, a 12th-century Lyonnais author, seems to have been written in 1188,...
While included in Garnier’s collection, Azor, a little known work of Aunillon from 1750, does not fo...
During his time in the army, Vigny noticed the slow and inevitable disappearance of the old grumbler...
The article analyses the figures of hermits and recluses presented in The Quest for the Holy Grail, ...
During the first half of the 19th century, contradances, made up of displacements and interactions b...
This study examines the mechanics of memory as depicted in the works of Michel Leiris. Already in hi...
This paper deals with the theme of memory in the novel Mémoires d ’un ange maladroit by Francis Dann...
What is the value of play for a reader when the literary text itself is radically conceived as a lud...
In Francis Bebey's L'Enfant-pluie, the learner Mwana is burning with the desire to grow up. Weaned a...
At its peak in the 17th century, Vanity, thanks to its codification, persists beyond that age favour...
Le Disciple (The Disciple) is Paul Bourget’s main work. The book, which was published in 1889, was p...
Les Neuf Consciences du Malfini by Patrick Chamoiseau is a Bildungsroman centred around pedagogical ...
Often perceived as the result of empirical speculation, the sanatorium, intended for the treatment o...
As a substitute father figure, a mentor, a tutor and a writer to be admired and imitated, Barbey d’A...
In the 1850es, the Second Empire settles in after five stormy decades that unveil the vanity of temp...
Florimont, by Aimon de Varennes, a 12th-century Lyonnais author, seems to have been written in 1188,...
While included in Garnier’s collection, Azor, a little known work of Aunillon from 1750, does not fo...
During his time in the army, Vigny noticed the slow and inevitable disappearance of the old grumbler...
The article analyses the figures of hermits and recluses presented in The Quest for the Holy Grail, ...
During the first half of the 19th century, contradances, made up of displacements and interactions b...
This study examines the mechanics of memory as depicted in the works of Michel Leiris. Already in hi...
This paper deals with the theme of memory in the novel Mémoires d ’un ange maladroit by Francis Dann...
What is the value of play for a reader when the literary text itself is radically conceived as a lud...
In Francis Bebey's L'Enfant-pluie, the learner Mwana is burning with the desire to grow up. Weaned a...
At its peak in the 17th century, Vanity, thanks to its codification, persists beyond that age favour...