Proust: A Family Affair

byLaure Murat, Charlotte Mandell (Translator)
Proust's In Search of Lost Time is many things. It is a staggering achievement, an evocation of an elite milieu, a literary reckoning with memory; it is also a massive reading challenge, a book more abandoned than read. For Laure Murat - who first read The Search when she was twenty years old - it was a map to the world of the French aristocracy, the very world into which she had been born. The chateaux and balls of The Search were, for her, the backdrop of her family story, understood anew through Proust's eyes.

In this beautiful book, Murat explores the fixity of the aristocratic life, which codifies everything from speech to dress to movement; and Proust's astonishing seven-volume novel, which, with fluidity and linguistic virtuosity, shifts focus from the codes for behaving to the experience of living. In Proust: A Family Affair, Murat celebrates the emancipating power of literature, and the honour of paying close attention to a text that may, in turn, provoke a close and loving attendance to the self.

About Laure Murat

Laure Murat, historian and professor at UCLA, is the author of a dozen of books on history of literature, psychiatry and gender studies. A public and critical success in France, Proust: A Family Affair won the Medicis Prize for non-fiction.
Details
  • Imprint: Allen Lane
  • ISBN: 9780241729854
  • Length: 176 pages
  • Price: £25.00
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