About This Book
An essay traces an author's artistic development as a struggle between youthful romantic impulses and a disciplined modern realism, arguing that the suppression of lyrical desire produced an unpersonal narrative style and sharp irony. It interprets key works as exercises in self-education of the heart, linking tragic romantic longing and satirical depictions of bourgeois life to a later appetite for grand, exotic spectacle. The analysis highlights tensions among aesthetic ambition, craving for recognition, and moral distancing, showing how temperament, technique, and cultural pressures combined to shape the emergence of the modern novel.
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