![]() ![]() ![]() Berlin: Colloquium Verlag.īerlin, Jeffrey B., and Gert Kerschbaumer. Marie-Antoinette et ses enfants par Mme Vigée Le Brun. ![]() Paris: Éditions de la Réunion des musées nationaux.īaillio, Joseph. Frankfurt am Main: Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag.Īrizzoli-Clémentel, Pierre, and Xavier Salmon (eds.). Salzburg: Literaturarchiv.Īrens, Hanns (ed.). Zweig Biography and Archival Resource Profile, 5. ![]() Finally, it addresses the book’s enormous appeal to the public despite a mixed reception by critics.Īnonymous. The essay further considers the contradictions inherent in the author’s determination to avoid a direct statement against the rise of fascism in Germany and forward a message of “inward hope” constitutive of passive acceptance of fate. It then discusses the author’s dual scenario of a Dauphine’s unfulfilled sexual longings subsumed in extravagant amusements at court and a queen’s belated assumption of official obligations, culminating in self-actualization through suffering and then acceptance of fate during the most radical phase of the Revolution. It begins by situating Zweig’s biographical output of the late 1920s in relation to contemporaneous trends in psychological biography and French Revolutionary history. This chapter treats with the origins, research process, and argumentative development of Stefan Zweig’s Marie Antoinette: Bildnis eines mittleren Charakters ( Marie Antoinette: The Portrait of an Average Woman) of 1932. ![]()
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