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Zola's fin-de-siècle reproductive politics

Abstract:
This article offers a synoptic reading of Émile Zola's fictional and journalistic writings from the mid-1890s to his death in 1902, considering these in light of the novelist's engagement with the Third Republic's politics of pronatalism, and with questions of reproduction more broadly. It explores Zola's particular conception of the problem of depopulation (the declining French birth rate at the end of the nineteenth century) as an aesthetic question demanding an aesthetic solution, before examining how he attempted to provide such a solution in his later fiction. The final novels are shown to be incessantly preoccupied, and at several levels, with an idealized figure of the child. The article finally considers the intolerance that Zola displayed in his last few novels towards all individuals — homosexuals, ‘new women’, priests, Catholics, decadent novelists, childless heterosexuals — whom he imagined as failing to conform to his own reproductive ideal.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1093/fs/knt302

Authors

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
HUMS
Department:
Medieval & Modern Languages Faculty
Sub department:
French
Role:
Author


Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Journal:
French Studies More from this journal
Volume:
68
Issue:
2
Pages:
193-208
Publication date:
2014-04-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1468-2931
ISSN:
0016-1128


Language:
English
Pubs id:
pubs:612676
UUID:
uuid:1973069f-9843-4c75-bf08-1b035ff6e241
Local pid:
pubs:612676
Source identifiers:
612676
Deposit date:
2016-04-01
ARK identifier:

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