French Fiction into the Twenty-First Century: The Return to the Story (French and Francophone Studies)

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The French novel’s “return to the story” in the last decades of the twentieth century and the beginning of the twenty-first is has been widely acknowledged in literary scholarship. But is this assessment accurate? With French Fiction in the Twenty-First Century, Simon Kemp looks at the work of five contemporary writers—Annie Ernaux, Pascal Quignard, Marie Darrieussecq, Jean Echenoz, and Patrick Modiano—in the context of the current French literary scene, and examines how far they pursue the innovations of their predecessors and just how far they have turned their backs on the era of experiment. (20110511)

Author(s): Simon Kemp
Series: French and Francophone Studies
Publisher: University of Wales Press
Year: 2010

Language: English
Pages: 224

Contents......Page 9
Series Editors’ Preface......Page 10
Introduction......Page 11
Annie Ernaux and the Narrating of Time......Page 29
Pascal Quignard and the Fringes of Narrative......Page 59
Marie Darrieussecq and the Voice of the Mind......Page 86
Jean Echenoz and the uses of digression......Page 106
Patrick Modiano and the Problem of Endings......Page 141
The Return to the Story......Page 165
Notes......Page 169
Select Bibliography......Page 210
Index......Page 221