Celebration and Power: Zola's Representation of the Ball
Author: Barjonet, Aurélie
Source: Romance Studies, Volume 23, Number 2, July 2005 , pp. 91-103(13)
Publisher: Maney Publishing
Abstract:
Whether an upper- or lower-class celebration, the ball is a common chronotope in the nineteenth-century novel. This paper analyses Zola's best-known ball scenes: the costume ball given by the wealthy Saccard in La Curée, the lower-class ball in Germinal, and a less conventional one: the children's ball in Une page d'amour. The argument is based on Bakhtin's definition of the chronotope and responds to Alain Montandon's call for a new cultural and literary anthropology by analysing the dynamic role of the ball scenes within these novels. I explore how these scenes actually fulfil a dual strategy involving both author and characters, for the ball serves as an ideal spatial and temporal representation that exposes two sometimes concomitant forms of power: social power (material ostentation, political and economic tactics and confrontations) and corporeal power (sensuality, instinct, physical release, bestiality, sexuality). Ultimately, these instances reveal Zola's authorial power, for each ball is a highly concentrated dynamic spatio-temporal construction around which the plot turns; each exposes the constitution of the characters, and each offers an exemplary scene where time, space, and objects fuse in a compelling literary representation.Document Type: Research Article
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/026399005x58797
Publication date: 2005-07-01
- Published by Maney Publishing on behalf of the University of Wales Swansea
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