In this Book

Adulterous Nations: Family Politics and National Anxiety in the European Novel

Book
Tatiana Kuzmic
2016
summary

In Adulterous Nations, Tatiana Kuzmic enlarges our perspective on the nineteenth-century novel of adultery, showing how it often served as a metaphor for relationships between the imperialistic and the colonized. In the context of the long-standing practice of gendering nations as female, the novels under discussion here—George Eliot’s Middlemarch, Theodor Fontane’s Effi Briest, and Leo Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina, along with August Šenoa’s The Goldsmith’s Gold and Henryk Sienkiewicz’s Quo Vadis—can be understood as depicting international crises on the scale of the nuclear family. In each example, an outsider figure is responsible for the disruption experienced by the family. Kuzmic deftly argues that the hopes, anxieties, and interests of European nations during this period can be discerned in the destabilizing force of adultery. Reading the work of Šenoa and Sienkiewicz, from Croatia and Poland, respectively, Kuzmic illuminates the relationship between the literature of dominant nations and that of the semicolonized territories that posed a threat to them. Ultimately, Kuzmic’s study enhances our understanding of not only these five novels but nineteenth-century European literature more generally.

Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page, Copyright, Dedication, Epigraph

pp. i-viii

Contents

pp. ix-x

Acknowledgments

pp. xi-xiv

Note on Translation, Transliteration, and Dates

pp. xv-2

Introduction

pp. 3-24

Part I: Empires

1. Middlemarch: The English Heroine and the Polish Rebel(lions)

pp. 27-56

Chapter 2. Effi Briest: German Realism and the Young Empire

pp. 57-91

Chapter 3. Anna Karenina: The Slavonic Question and the Dismembered Adulteress

pp. 92-128

Part II: Nations

Chapter 4. The Goldsmith’s Gold: The Origins of Yugoslavism and the Birth of the Croatian Novel

pp. 131-154

Chapter 5. Quo Vadis: Polish Messianism and the Proselytizing Heroine

pp. 155-180

Conclusion

pp. 181-188

Notes

pp. 189-212

Bibliography

pp. 213-222

Index

pp. 223-229
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