Cover for BELL: Real Time: Accelerating Narrative from Balzac to Zola. Click for larger image
Ebook Information

Real Time

Accelerating Narrative from Balzac to Zola

Speed began transforming social perceptions even before the expansion of the railroad, and the realist novel portrays and is structured by the effects of the perceptions of speed in the exchange of information and in the moving of people.

In Real Time David F. Bell explores the decisive impact the accelerated movement of people and information had on the fictions of four giants of French realism--Balzac, Stendhal, Dumas, and Zola.

Nineteenth-century technological advances radically altered the infrastructure of France, changing the ways ordinary citizens–-and literary characters--viewed time, space, distance, and speed. The most influential of these advances included the improvement of the stagecoach, the growth of road and canal networks leading to the advent of the railway, and the increasing use of mail, and of the optical telegraph. Citing examples from a wide range of novels and stories, Bell demonstrates the numerous ways in which these trends of acceleration became not just literary devices and themes but also structuring principles of the novels themselves.

Beginning with both the provincial and the Parisian communications networks of Balzac, Bell proceeds to discuss the roles of horses and optical telegraphs in Stendhal and the importance of domination of communication channels to the characters of Dumas, whose Count of Monte-Cristo might be seen as the ultimate fictional master of this accelerated culture. Finally, Bell analyzes the cinematic vision created by the arrival of the railroad, as depicted by Zola in La Bète Humaine.

"Real Time is written with clarity and elegance. David Bell demonstrates convincingly and brilliantly how technologies of communication and transportation had a decisive impact on representations of time and space in the nineteenth-century French novel and more generally on all narratives of this period."--Marcel Hénaff, author of Sade: The Invention of the Libertine Body and Lévi-Strauss and the Making of Structural Anthropology

Related Titles

previous book next book
Too Much Free Speech?

Randall P. Bezanson

Saving the World

A Brief History of Communication for Development and Social Change

Emile G. McAnany

Equal Time

Television and the Civil Rights Movement

Aniko Bodroghkozy

Hollywood's Italian American Filmmakers

Capra, Scorsese, Savoca, Coppola, and Tarantino

Jonathan J. Cavallero

Challenging the Prison-Industrial Complex

Activism, Arts, and Educational Alternatives

Edited by Stephen John Hartnett

Loser Sons

Politics and Authority

Avital Ronell

On the Condition of Anonymity

Unnamed Sources and the Battle for Journalism

Matt Carlson

Justice Provocateur

Jane Tennison and Policing in Prime Suspect

Gray Cavender and Nancy C. Jurik

Pacific Citizens

Larry and Guyo Tajiri and Japanese American Journalism in the World War II Era

Edited, with an Introduction and Notes, by Greg Robinson