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Nana (|Reprint)

Zola, EmileNelson, Brian(Edited by)Constantine, Helen(Translated by)
Part of the Oxford World's Classics series
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'She was the golden beast, an unconscious force, the very scent of her could bring the world to ruin.'Nana, daughter of a drunk and a laundress, is the Helen of Troy of Paris.

A sexually magnetic high-class prostitute and actress, she becomes a celebrity, rapidly conquering society, ruining all men who fall under her spell-especially Count Muffat, Chamberlain to the Empress.

Nana herself meets a terrible fate, consumed by her own dissipation and extravagance, just as the disastrous war with Prussia is declared. Nana is the ninth instalment in the twenty volume Rougon-Macquart series.

The novel opens in 1867, the year of the World Fair, when Paris, thronged by a cosmopolitan lite, was la Ville Lumire, the glittering setting-and object-of Zola's scathing denunciation of society's hypocrisy and moral corruption.

Nana comes to symbolize the Second Empire regime itself in all its excesses; but in the final chapters, the narrator seems to suggest that the coming disaster is not so mucha result of the corruption of the Empire, as of rampant female sexuality.

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Product Details
Oxford University Press
0192545353 / 9780192545350
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
843.8
26/03/2020
English
464 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%