The Flood
Uitgelicht
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Naar shop
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Naar shop
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9,20 |
Naar shop
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Beschrijving
Bol
Émile Zola's The Flood is a concentrated naturalist tale in which rural security is overwhelmed by an elemental catastrophe. Centered on a peasant household whose labor, property, and affections are swept away by rising waters, the narrative transforms a local disaster into a stark meditation on human vulnerability. Zola's prose is exact, visual, and unsentimental, placing the story within the nineteenth-century naturalist tradition that sought to show life governed by material conditions, instinct, and environment. Zola, the great architect of French Naturalism and author of the Rougon-Macquart cycle, was deeply preoccupied with the forces-social, biological, economic, and physical-that shape human destiny. His experience as a journalist and his commitment to documentary precision inform this work's vivid realism. The Flood reflects his broader artistic purpose: to strip away consoling illusion and confront the reader with the indifferent power of nature over human plans. This book is recommended to readers interested in Zola beyond his major novels, especially those who admire concise fiction of moral gravity and descriptive force. It offers a powerful entry into his naturalist method, combining dramatic intensity with sober observation, and will appeal to anyone drawn to literature that finds tragedy not in melodrama, but in reality itself.
Émile Zola's The Flood is a concentrated naturalist tale in which rural security is overwhelmed by an elemental catastrophe. Centered on a peasant household whose labor, property, and affections are swept away by rising waters, the narrative transforms a local disaster into a stark meditation on human vulnerability. Zola's prose is exact, visual, and unsentimental, placing the story within the nineteenth-century naturalist tradition that sought to show life governed by material conditions, instinct, and environment. Zola, the great architect of French Naturalism and author of the Rougon-Macquart cycle, was deeply preoccupied with the forces-social, biological, economic, and physical-that shape human destiny. His experience as a journalist and his commitment to documentary precision inform this work's vivid realism. The Flood reflects his broader artistic purpose: to strip away consoling illusion and confront the reader with the indifferent power of nature over human plans. This book is recommended to readers interested in Zola beyond his major novels, especially those who admire concise fiction of moral gravity and descriptive force. It offers a powerful entry into his naturalist method, combining dramatic intensity with sober observation, and will appeal to anyone drawn to literature that finds tragedy not in melodrama, but in reality itself.
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