Notice bibliographique
- Notice
000 cam 22 3 450
001 FRBNF472847750000009
010 .. $a 9780190921583
010 .. $a 0190921587
010 .. $a 9780190921576
010 .. $a 0190921579
010 .. $a 9780190921606
035 .. $a OCoLC1304831127
100 .. $a 20230927d2023 m y0engy50 ba
101 0. $a eng
102 .. $a US
105 .. $a y z 001y|
106 .. $a r
181 .0 $6 01 $a i $b xxxe
181 .. $6 02 $c txt $2 rdacontent
182 .0 $6 01 $a n
182 .. $6 02 $c n $2 rdamedia
200 1. $a Proust's In search of lost time $b Texte imprimé $e philosophical perspectives $f edited by Katherine Elkins
214 .0 $a New York, NY $c Oxford University Press
214 .4 $d C 2023
215 .. $a 1 vol. (XI-251 p.) $c couv. ill. en coul. $d 21 cm
225 |. $a Oxford studies in philosophy and literature
300 .. $a Includes bibliographical references and index
330 .. $a "Unlike most fiction writers, Proust was trained in philosophy. In fact, he even considered
writing a philosophical treatise instead of the novel we know so well. This hesitation
about what form his writing should take still haunts his final choice of a novel,
which is both philosophical, and yet, not philosophy. Take your pick of philosophers,
from Plato to Nietzsche, and you can easily find an essay or even a book arguing that
this particular philosopher most applies to Proust. But as one plunges into the narrative
that he finally wrote, one is struck by the fact that In Search of Lost Time feels
nothing like what we often call a philosophical novel, or even, a novel of ideas.
Instead, philosophical reflection lies in the shadows of his fictional world, a sort
of parallel life that can be found in the underweave"
410 .0 $0 45832449 $t Oxford studies in philosophy and literature $d 2023
604 .. $3 11940457 $a Proust $b Marcel $f 1871-1922 $t À la recherche du temps perdu $3 11975676 $x Thèmes, motifs $2 rameau
676 .. $a 843.912 (critique) $v 23
801 .3 $a US $b OCoLC $c 20230927 $h 1304831127 $2 marc21
801 .0 $b DLC $g rda
930 .. $5 FR-751131010:47284775001001 $a 2023-195540 $b 759999999 $c Tolbiac - Rez de Jardin - Littérature et art - Magasin $d O