Description
Developing a method entitled 'microhistories of ideas,' Cooke shows that a longitudinal approach to each writer's career yields a set of central unit-ideas that reappear in the new, emotive context of the Affair. Through close readings of material such as pamphlets, newspaper columns and aesthetic essays, the significance of often ephemeral writing to the larger questions of intellectual history - and to the outcome of the Dreyfus Affair itself - becomes clear.
About the Author
Roderick Cooke is Assistant Professor of French at Villanova University.
Reviews
"The significance of this approach is to highlight the importance of esthetic considerations in this-and potentially other-political debates rather than making art the handmaiden of political discourse. I think this is not only original, but could become a model for scholars studying literary politics in other times and places."
Robert A. Nye, Oregon State University
Book Information
ISBN 9781802077988
Author Roderick Cooke
Format Hardback
Page Count 312
Imprint Liverpool University Press
Publisher Liverpool University Press