A Zola Dictionary
A Zola Dictionary
The Characters of the Rougon-Macquart Novels of Emile Zola
With a Biographical and Critical Introduction, Synopses of the Plots, Bibliographical Note, Map, Genealogy, etc.
Book Excerpt
allacy of the argument has been
exposed by more than one critic. It is self-evident that the
"experiments" by the novelist cannot be made on subjects apart from
himself, but are made by him and in him; so that they prove more
regarding his own temperament than about what he professes to regard
as the inevitable actions of his characters. The conclusion drawn by a
writer from such actions must always be open to the retort that he
invented the whole himself and that fiction is only fiction. But to
Zola in the late sixties the theory seemed unassailable and it was
upon it that he founded the whole edifice of /Les Rougon-Macquart/.
The considerations then that influenced Zola in beginning a series of
novels connected by subject into one gigantic whole were somewhat
various. There was the example of Balzac's great /Comedie Humaine/;
there was the desire of working out the theories of heredity in which
he had become interested; there was the opportunity of putting into
operation the system which he had termed /natu
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