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Casanova: Un voyage libertin

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" Ce livre est à la fois voyage dans l'inconnu du XVIIIe siècle et approche d'une figure singulière, irréductible à nos concepts modernes d'intelligence ou de désir. Giacomo Casanova, vénitien, habile charlatan, grand joueur et franc libertin. De n'être pas prise dans un mouvement d'identification, ni de rejet, je m'accorde la liberté de me perdre et d'être séduite, de m'arrêter et d'analyser, et surtout de m'étonner. Car la beauté baroque, infime, grossière, âpre, souvent violente, parfois même monstrueuse dont sont marqués les Mémoires de Casanova n'a rien à voir avec un tableau lisse et rassurant. Elle ouvre sur des interrogations, des situations qui ont la force du romanesque et l'étrangeté des énigmes. "

384 pages, Pocket Book

First published October 1, 1998

9 people want to read

About the author

Chantal Thomas

69 books36 followers
Chantal Thomas (born 1945 in Lyon) is a French writer and historian. Her 2002 book, Farewell, My Queen, won the Prix Femina and was adapted into a 2012 film starring Diane Kruger and Léa Seydoux.

Thomas was born in Lyon in 1945, and was raised in Arcachon, Bordeaux, and Paris. Her life has included teaching jobs at American and French universities (such as Yale and Princeton) as well as a publishing career. She has published nineteen works, including essays on the Marquis de Sade, Casanova, and Marie Antoinette.

In 2002, Thomas published Les adieux à la reine (Farewell, My Queen). The novel gave a fictional account of the final days of Marie Antoinette in power through the perspective of one of her servants. It won the Prix Femina in 2002, and was later adapted into the 2012 film Farewell, My Queen. The film stars Diane Kruger as the titular queen and Léa Seydoux as her servant Sidonie Laborde. Thomas co-wrote the screenplay,and it opened the 62nd Berlin International Film Festival. Helen Falconer of The Guardian called the work "a well written slice of history" with "evocative, observant prose," but criticized it for creating a narrator who "merely provides us with a pair of eyes to see through rather than capturing our interest in her own right." While disagreeing in its classification as a novel, Falconer did however add that Farewell, My Queen "generates in the reader a real sense of being a fly on the wall, eavesdropping on the affairs of the great and the not so good."

Thomas is currently the director of research at the French National Centre for Scientific Research.

(from Wikipedia)

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