The Nun (Oxford World's Classics)
Editorial Reviews
Book Description
Diderot's The Nun (La Religieuse) is the seemingly true story of a young girl forced by her parents to enter a convent and take holy orders. A novel mingling mysticism, madness, sadistic cruelty and nascent sexuality, it gives a scathing insight into the effects of forced vocations and the
unnatural life of the convent. A succ`es de scandale at the end of the eighteenth century, it has attracted and unsettled readers ever since. For Diderot's novel is not simply a story of a young girl with a bad habit; it is also a powerfully emblematic fable about oppression and intolerance.
This new translation includes Diderot's all-important prefatory material, which he placed, disconcertingly, at the end of the novel, and which turns what otherwise seems like an exercise in realism into what is now regarded as a masterpiece of proto-modernist fiction.
Language Notes
Text: English, French (translation)
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.
The Nun (Oxford World's Classics),Denis Diderot,Russell Goulbourne,Oxford University Press, USA,0192804308,Classics,European - French,Fiction,Literature - Classics / Criticism,Literature: Classics,16th to 18th century fiction,Fiction / Classics,French,Literature/English | World Literature | France
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