The Paris of Monet, Zola, Bernhardt, Eiffel, Debussy, Clemenceau, and Their Friends
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Köp båda 2 för 581 kr[In her] splendid . . . work, Dawn of the Belle Epoque, Mary McAuliffe strikingly evoked the three flourishing decades of culture that followed Frances humiliation by Germany and the never-to-be-forgotten crowning, in 1871, of a German emperor at Versailles. * The New York Times * Rising from the ashes of the Franco-Prussian War and the Commune, the tumultuous Third Republic's early years from 1870 to 1900, known as the Belle Epoque, was an era in which groundbreaking artists flourished: Monet, Eiffel, Rodin, Debussy, and other one-name legends. McAuliffe chronicles the story of Paris's rebirth, capturing the artistic freedom of impressionism in painting and music, and new ideas in sculpture and on the stage even as Republican secularists, lingering Communards, and the royalist Catholic hierarchy fought for political and popular control, a struggle wonderfully illustrated through the construction in this era of the Statue of Liberty, the Eiffel Tower, and the Basilique du Sacr Coeur. [McAuliffe offers] fascinating glimpses into the lives of each significant figure . . . including Sarah Bernhardt's, whose self-marketing could well have served as a blueprint for Lady Gaga. The author doesn't overlook the Dreyfus affair and economic hard times, but the relationships and creative output of the era's innovators create a marvelous vision of Paris at its heady, uncertain best. * Publishers Weekly * In Dawn of the Belle Epoque, Mary McAuliffewho earned a Ph.D. from the University of Maryland and wrote for Paris Notestells the intriguing story of how Paris came alive again after that black period of French history. . . . To tell this incredibly complicated story, Ms. McAuliffe uses an interesting technique, one that might be identified more with fiction than nonfiction. Arranged chronologically into 28 chapters year by year from 1871 to 1900, the book consists of short scene-like vignettes featuring key historical figures and their actions during the year in question. Thus Dawn of the Belle Epoque reads more like a novel than an academic history. . . . Rich with the flavor of words taken from primary sources, the book provides an intimate look at the very human side of history. An extensive bibliography including French sources and 24 pages of endnotes allow for much further reading investigation. . . . Today's Paris rose from war and ashes, as Mary McAuliffe's Dawn of the Belle Epoque so eloquently proves. * New York Journal of Books * Today, Paris retains its allure as a mecca for lovers of art, fashion, and high culture. To an extent, that allure is a legacy of the Belle Epoque, an age from roughly the end of the Franco-Prussian War in 1871 to the onset of WWI in 1914. McAuliffe examines the earliest phase of the period, up to the turn of the century. As the term indicates, this was an era of wonderful cultural flowering. In literature, giants like Zola and Hugo were active. The list of painters and sculptors who emerged seems endless, including Toulouse-Lautrec, Manet, Monet, and Rodin. McAuliffe tracks, on a year-by-year basis, this explosion of artistic expression. She does not ignore the seamy underside of this glittering picture. She pays ample attention to the political turmoil, beginning with the horrors of the Paris Commune and ending with the disgrace of the Dreyfus Affair, which virtually dominated French political discourse for years. This is an excellent and honest portrayal of an exciting and vital era in European history. * Booklist * It is within this psychologically damaged milieu that McAuliffe deftly explores the inner lives of the artists and those who surrounded them, and in the process humanizes these larger-than-life characters. . . . McAuliffe has added a truly remarkable degree of insight into both the lives of the participants and the turbulent world they inhabited. McAuliffe paints with broad, majestic strokes a world that has been lost to us or perhaps never wa
Mary McAuliffe received a Ph.D. in history from the University of Maryland and has taught at several universities and lectured at the Smithsonian Institution. For many years she was a regular contributor to Paris Notes. She has traveled extensively in France and is the author of Paris Discovered: Explorations in the City of Light. She lives in New York City with her husband. Click here to visit her photo blog on Facebook for insights on French history and culture.
Introduction: The Terrible Year (18701871) Chapter 1: Ashes (1871) Chapter 2: Recovery (1871) Chapter 3: Scaling the Heights (18711872) Chapter 4: The Moral Order (18731874) Chapter 5: "This will kill that." (1875) Chapter 6: Pressure Builds (18761877) Chapter 7: A Splendid Diversion (1878) Chapter 8: Victory (18791880) Chapter 9: Saints and Sinners (1880) Chapter 10: Shadows (18811882) Chapter 11: A Golden Tortoise (1882) Chapter 12: Digging Deep (1883) Chapter 13: Hard Times (1884) Chapter 14: That Genius, That Monster (1885) Chapter 15: Onward and Upward (1886) Chapter 16: Fat and Thin (18871888) Chapter 17: Centennial (1889) Chapter 18: Sacred and Profane (18901891) Chapter 19: Family Affairs (1892) Chapter 20: "The bell has tolled. . . ." (1893) Chapter 21: Between Storms (1894) Chapter 22: Dreyfus (1895) Chapter 23: Passages (1896) Chapter 24: A Shot in the Dark (1897) Chapter 25: "J'accuse!" (1898) Chapter 26: "Despite all these anxieties . . ." (1898) Chapter 27: Rennes (18981899) Chapter 28: A New Century (1900) Bibliography