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Cover image for book Dreyfus and the Literature of the Third Republic

Dreyfus and the Literature of the Third Republic

Secularism and Tolerance in Zola, Barres, Lazare and Proust
By:Evlyn Gould
Publisher:McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers
Print ISBN:9780786472147
eText ISBN:9781476600529
Edition:0
Copyright:2012
Format:Page Fidelity

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Captain Alfred Dreyfus, a French Jewish army officer, spent twelve years from 1894 to 1906 in solitary confinement for a crime he did not commit. Amidst the dramatic and shifting revelations of what would come to be known throughout the world as the Dreyfus Affair, four influential authors reassessed their moral convictions on the civic questions posed by this abuse. Emile Zola, Maurice Barres, Bernard Lazare, and Marcel Proust offered fictive articulations of response to these questions. Among them, national citizenship and the roles of secularism and public education, as well as tolerance of Jews and other immigrants to France, loom largest. The four authors considered dilemmas still unresolved in the modern democratic cultures of Europe today. Moreover, as this critical study illuminates, the writers in effect were teaching readers to negotiate individual desires and collective purpose and to assess their own values as the effects of Dreyfus continued to ripple through society.