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Germinal Audiobook

by Émile Zola
language: english
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing, January of 2006 ‧
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With flawless construction and impeccable detail, Germinal chronicles the conflicts, lusts, and deprivation of life in the coal fields of nineteenth-century France.

A father and three of seven children work brutal hours, facing such hazards as landslides, fire, and poisoned air, to scrape together enough money for food. When their lodger, ëtienne, shares ideas of a workers'' revolt, the family gradually embraces his plans. Soon the settlement is aflame with resolve to strike for better wages and working conditions. Savage and horrifying events ensue as miners clash with management and with each other. Where people once merely struggled for food they are now dying of starvation. The hungry wage war against the sated, against the resignation of their peers, and ultimately against hunger itself.

Published in 1885, Germinal helped establish ëmile Zola as the leading figure in the French school of naturalistic fiction. This masterpiece has been called one of the ten best novels in the French language.

Germinal

by Émile Zola

Property Description
ISBN: 9781483074061
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
Release Date: January of 2006
Language: English
Format: Audiobook
File Size B
File Format and Compatibility:
Categories: eBooks in English > Others
EAN: 9781483074061

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Émile Zola

Émile Zola was born in 1840 in Paris. He grew up in Aix-en-Provence, where he studied at the Collège Bourbon, returning to Paris to continue his studies. Struggling with financial difficulties after his father's death, he worked in offices and collaborated on several newspapers. With the entry into Hachette, Zola began in the world of literature, meeting writers such as Taine, Stendhal, Balzac and Flaubert. He published his first poems, short stories and articles and, at the age of twenty-five, exchanged his initial vocation as a poet for that of a novelist, writing La Confession de Claude. From then on, he lived as a journalist and novelist, publishing Le voeu d'une morte (1866) and Thérèse Raquin (1867), a work that affirmed his naturalist aesthetics, integrating theories of his time such as Darwinism, evolutionism and scientific determinism. Inspired by Balzac's The Human Comedy , in 1871 he began the Rougon-Macquart series, which he subtitled Natural and social history of a family under the Second Empire. It includes Nana (1880) and Germinal (1885), two of his main works. However, in 1880, he had published O Romance Experimental, a literary manifesto of the naturalist movement. For Zola, the novelist was an observer of Nature, adopting an experimental attitude and working with social and emotional facts as a chemist works with his matter. His books covered topics as diverse as the miners' strikes in Germinal, the alcoholism of the working classes in L'Assommoir, the sexual decadence of the wealthy classes in La Curée and the connection of peasants to their land in La Terre. Some of his works were considered scandalous at the time, and he was never chosen for the French Academy, to which he was a candidate twenty-four times. In 1898, Zola participated in the public debate on the Dreyfus Affair, defending the innocence, which would be proven, of the accused. His article 'J'accuse', published in L'Aurore, eventually led to the review of the court case. But its publication caused him to be prosecuted and sentenced to a year in prison, which led him to go into exile in England. He died in 1902 in his apartment on the rue de Bruxelles, in conditions that did not exclude the possibility of murder.

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BY THE AUTHOR