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            Middlebrow Matters

            Women's reading and the literary canon in France since the Belle Époque

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            Author(s)
            Holmes, Diana
            Collection
            Knowledge Unlatched (KU)
            Language
            English
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            Abstract
            Middlebrow is a derogatory word that connotes blandness, mediocrity and a failed aspiration to ‘high’ culture. However, when appropriated as a positive term to denote that wide swathe of literature between the challenging experimentalism of the high and the formulaic drive of the popular, it enables a rethinking of the literary canon from the point of view of what most readers actually read, a criterion curiously absent from dominant definitions of literary value. Since women have long formed a majority of the nation’s reading public, this perspective immediately feminises what has always been a very male canon. Opening with a theorisation of the concept of middlebrow that mounts a defence of some literary qualities disdained by modernism, the book then focuses on a series of case studies of periods (the Belle Époque, inter-war, early twenty-first century), authors (including Colette, Irène Nemirovsky, Françoise Sagan, Anna Gavalda) and the middlebrow nature of literary prizes.
            URI
            https://doab-dev.siscern.org/handle/20.500.12854/183396
            Keywords
            Languages; Literary studies; fiction; novelists & prose writers; France; English; French; thema EDItEUR::D Biography, Literature and Literary studies::DS Literature: history and criticism::DSK Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers
            DOI
            10.2307/j.ctvt1sk8w
            ISBN
            9781786949523
            Publisher
            Liverpool University Press
            Publisher website
            https://liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/
            Publication date and place
            Liverpool, 2018-10-31
            Grantor
            • Knowledge Unlatched
            Series
            Contemporary French and Francophone Cultures,
            • OAPEN harvesting collection

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              This project received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 871069.

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