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Three Masters: Balzac, Dickens, Dostoevsky

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Management number 233431970 Release Date 2026/06/27 List Price US$3.48 Model Number 233431970
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In these early 20th century literary essays, Stefan Zweig offers a Central European view of the writers he believed to be the “three greatest novelists” of the 19th century: Balzac, Dickens, and Dostoevsky.In Zweig’s view, Balzac set out to emulate his childhood hero Napoleon. Writing 20 hours a day, Balzac’s literary ambition was “tantamount to monomania in its persistence, its intensity, and its concentration.” His characters, each similarly driven by one desperate urge, were more vital to Balzac than people in his daily life.In Zweig’s reading, Dickens embodied Victorian England and its “bourgeois smugness”. His characters aspire to “A few hundred pounds a year, an amiable wife, a dozen children, a well-appointed table and succulent meats to entertain their friends with, a cottage not too far from London, the windows giving a view over the green countryside, a pretty little garden, and a modicum of happiness.” The ideal of middle-class respectability suffuses Dickens’ fiction.Dostoevsky drew on the struggles of his own life to illuminate the contradictions of the human soul. In Zweig’s view, his heroes had no desire to be citizens or ordinary human beings. While Balzac’s heroes “would gladly have subjugated the world, Dostoevsky’s heroes wished to transcend it.” Read more

ASIN B0085Y6VLA
XRay Not Enabled
Language English
File size 816 KB
Page Flip Enabled
Publisher Plunkett Lake Press
Word Wise Enabled
Print length 263 pages
Accessibility Learn more
Screen Reader Supported
Publication date May 23, 2012
Enhanced typesetting Enabled

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