This major critical work by the great French novelist reveals
Stendhal’s decisive role in the literary renaissance
called Romanticism. Written sixteen years before
The
Charterhouse of Parma, it marked the beginning of his
illustrious career and established him at the forefront of
the French Romantic movement.
The first part of
Racine and Shakespeare appeared as a
pamphlet in 1823, when Waterloo was still bitterly alive in
the French mind. In it, Stendhal vigorously championed
the spontaneous vitality of Shakespeare while condemning
the rigid imitators of Corneille and Racine. The second
half of
Racine and Shakespeare appeared two years later in
answer to a speech against Romanticism by the secretary
of the Académie Française. It is a brilliant tour de force, an
exchange of letters between an old classicist and a young
Romanticist, in which Stendhal defined Romanticism not
only for his age but for all time.
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By the same author: