
Napoleon III and His Regime
Taking a highly innovative approach to this intriguing historical figure, David Baguley entertains sources in a mélange of media and forms, pictures, performances, spectacles, rituals, music, fiction, poems, plays, architecture, fashion, as well as Louis Napoléon's own writings, to explore how the ruler was represented, invented, and interpreted by detractors and defenders alike. The dynamic process by which the legend of Napoleon III was elaborately fabricated and then vigorously dismantled unfolds under Baguley's hand not chronologically but by generic categories, reflecting the author's underlying conviction that history and literary depictments are not as incompatible as is often assumed.
Baguley examines works by, among many others, Victor Hugo, Karl Marx, Émile Zola, Honoré Daumier, Jacques Offenbach, Gustave Flaubert, and Elizabeth Barrett Browning that range from history and biography to romanticized versions of the Emperor's feats to parody, caricature, and satire. With its conspiratorial origins, its rising and dramatically falling action, its schemes, scandals, and tragic denouement, the Second Empire appears designed to inspire writers and artists. Napoleon III, Baguley observes, could well have been the central character, or temperament, in a naturalist novel.
While most historians consider Louis Napoléon's coup d'état of December 1851 to be his boldest endeavor, Baguley shows in this expansive and eloquent work that his most extravagant venture was to found a second Napoleonic empire, and he illustrates not only the power of the name and the image but also the precariousness of the Emperor's reliance upon them. For Napoleon III, dissimulation was his natural state; opportunist or utopian reformer, or something in between, he must remain one of history's most elusive and controversial figures, ever resisting final assessment.
- Undertittel
- An Extravaganza
- Forfatter
- David Baguley
- ISBN
- 9780807126240
- Språk
- Engelsk
- Vekt
- 853 gram
- Serie
- Modernist Studies
- Utgivelsesdato
- 1.11.2000
- Antall sider
- 425
