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La colline inspirée

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About This Book

The work focuses on a modest hill venerated as a center of spiritual force, showing how landscape, memory and ritual awaken intense religious feeling within a local community. It blends rich description of sacred sites with episodes of pilgrimage and mystical experience, and follows the social repercussions as devotion spreads: consolations, poetic inspiration, rising fanaticism and contested authority. Key themes include the formative power of place, the porous boundary between faith and superstition, the shaping of collective identity by sacred geography, and the moral and political tensions that surface when private revelation becomes public.

About the Author

Barrès, Maurice portrait

Maurice Barrès

Maurice Barrès was a French novelist and political figure known for his influential works that explore themes of nationalism, identity, and the individual's relationship with society. His literary career spanned the late 19th and early 20th centuries, during which he contributed significantly to the Symbolist movement. Barrès is perhaps best known for his trilogy "Le culte du moi," which delves into the complexities of selfhood and personal freedom against the backdrop of societal expectations. His writings often reflect his deep connection to the French landscape and culture, as seen in works like "La colline inspirée" and "Un jardin sur l'Oronte." Barrès's legacy continues to resonate in discussions of French literature and nationalism.

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