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A Comédia Humana #7

Comedy of Human Life, Vol. 7

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The Comedy of Human Life (La Comédie Humaine) is the collective title given to a series of linked stories by Balzac, totalling about 100 in all, and loosely divided into groups, such as provincial, Parisian, political, military, and country. Conceived in 1834, his idea was to produce a work with philosophical underpinnings which would survey all aspects of French society from the Revolution to his own time. Originally intended to comprise some 150 novels and short stories featuring around 2,000 characters, this gargantuan project was about two-thirds completed by the time of Balzac’s death. Volume VII includes some of the best stories from the series, concerning marriage, spoiled children, beauty, money, the aristocracy, child abuse and "the art of living."

320 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1839

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About the author

Honoré de Balzac

9,570 books4,387 followers
French writer Honoré de Balzac (born Honoré Balzac), a founder of the realist school of fiction, portrayed the panorama of society in a body of works, known collectively as La comédie humaine .

Honoré de Balzac authored 19th-century novels and plays. After the fall of Napoléon in 1815, his magnum opus, a sequence of almost a hundred novels and plays, entitled, presents life in the years.

Due to keen observation of fine detail and unfiltered representation, European literature regards Balzac. He features renowned multifaceted, even complex, morally ambiguous, full lesser characters. Character well imbues inanimate objects; the city of Paris, a backdrop, takes on many qualities. He influenced many famous authors, including the novelists Marcel Proust, Émile Zola, Charles John Huffam Dickens, Gustave Flaubert, Henry James, and Jack Kerouac as well as important philosophers, such as Friedrich Engels. Many works of Balzac, made into films, continue to inspire.

An enthusiastic reader and independent thinker as a child, Balzac adapted with trouble to the teaching style of his grammar. His willful nature caused trouble throughout his life and frustrated his ambitions to succeed in the world of business. Balzac finished, and people then apprenticed him as a legal clerk, but after wearying of banal routine, he turned his back on law. He attempted a publisher, printer, businessman, critic, and politician before and during his career. He failed in these efforts From his own experience, he reflects life difficulties and includes scenes.

Possibly due to his intense schedule and from health problems, Balzac suffered throughout his life. Financial and personal drama often strained his relationship with his family, and he lost more than one friend over critical reviews. In 1850, he married Ewelina Hańska, his longtime paramour; five months later, he passed away.

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Haman.
270 reviews70 followers
October 17, 2014
کتاب کمدی انسانی داستان زنی به نام دوشس دولانجه را به ما نشان می دهد که با یک عشق اسمانی در حالیکه می خواهد روح او را بشناسد با یک جنرال سرسخت ارتش روبرو می شود بالزاک جامعه خود را محکوم نمی کند اما توجه خواننده را جلب می کند که ممکن است در قالب یک زن انحرافی عشق پاک وجود داشته باشد
Profile Image for Veleka Georgieva.
38 reviews21 followers
May 2, 2013
La Comedie Humaine, but this book is everything but a comedy. I admit it took me a long time to read tho whole piece because I did not simply read it - I suffered through it. Even though many people think it's rather boring and difficult to read, I don't think there is a single useless word in the whole novel. Because by reading it you are being sent to an entirely different society, to a whole different world which could not be understood by a citizen of the modern world if it weren't for all the thorough descriptions and "boring" conversations. I think I enjoyed it so much because I had decided not to struggle with it no matter what and when it was slow and hard to read to just put it aside and give myself time to just think it through. I reckon it was a rather good strategy. The other important thing that made it so enjoyable was the fact that I had The Cound of Monte Cristo behind my back, and I had already experienced that so specific in its manners and understandings society.
The last ten or twenty pages were a real torture. I literally felt like the old man - he had to die to be rid of his pain and sorrow, bu he could not, and so I wanted the book to end, so I wouldn't have to read about that poor man's pain and sorrow, but I could not put it down. I felt his pain and disappointment, and I lived through Eugene's anger. These two characters were so real and vivid that I could easily indentify with both of them even though I had never in my life experienced anything like this.
This book was both terrible and amazing. It left me breathless with tears in my eyes. My heart aches as I think of the last words of Old Goriot when I could see that he wasn't actually crazy; he wasn't dellusional either - he just loved his daughters and didn't mind deceiting himself just to be happy for a while with the thought that his daughters actually loved him back.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Kimisse.
30 reviews5 followers
June 14, 2008
Une fresque gigantesque dont je n'ai lu qu une petite quantité mais les descriptions sont étonnantes . Le seul élément désservant le style de Balzac est que ses fameuses descriptions ne sont pas toujours fidèles...Mais dans l art du détail il est l un des maîtres incontesté de ce style!

Profile Image for Paulo Sousa.
294 reviews12 followers
August 12, 2017
Livro lido 1°/Ago//38°/2017
Título: Ilusões Perdidas
Título original: Illusions Perdues
Publicação original: entre 1836 e 1843
Autor: Honoré de Balzac (França)
Editora: @globolivros (Biblioteca Azul)
Publicado: 2013
Tradução: Paulo Rónai
Páginas: 792
Minha classificação: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

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Todas as vezes que contemplo o pequeno grande quadro de Edward Hopper, "Boulevard of Broken Dreams", numa livre tradução "Rua dos sonhos perdidos", é impossível não pensar em minha própria coleção de sonhos perdidos, aqueles que se eternizaram justamente por não terem se tornado realidade. Sonhos, ilusões perdidas, quem nunca?
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Esse insight eu tive com tamanha nitidez na conclusão dessa leitura extraordinária que foi Ilusões Perdidas. O romance é uma pequena partícula no grande projeto literário do escritor francês Honoré de Balzac, a portentosa A Comédia Humana, uma série de romances que, nas intenções do seu idealizador, abarcariam todas as facetas da vida humana.
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Composto por mais de 143 obras, entre romances, contos e novelas, muitas inconclusas, a A Comédia Humana não teve seu fim porque Balzac não suportou as pesadíssimas cargas de trabalho a que se impunha nos 21 anos que gastou em concebê-la. Diz-se que acordava antes do nascer do sol e, movido a doses cavalares de café, escrevia até as primeiras horas da madrugada. Tamanho esforço ceifou a vida do gênio Balzac aos 51 anos de idade, que se morreu pobre e sem a glória literária que lhe é devida.
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Mas, ainda que sem sua merecida conclusão, é inegável a qualidade da obra. Balzac não poupou em suas linhas a crueza, a hipocrisia, as intenções fesceninas com que seus personagens se moviam. E o que dirá a absurda atualidade de sua Comédia, mesmo tendo sido escrita em meados do século XIX.
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É o caso de Ilusões Perdidas. Nesse romance nos é apresentado o jovem Luciano Chardon de Rubempré, um poeta desconhecido que, nascido numa pequena cidade provinciana, Angoulême, anseia ver seus livros publicados e com eles atingir o sucesso. Incentivado por sua amante, a Srª de Bargeton, parte para a capital francesa, onde logo sente o primeiro baque nos seus sonhos pueris de reconhecimento literário: se vê abandonado pela amante e, mal vestido, mal alimentado, o pouco dinheiro trazido quase escasso, conhece uma sociedade de amigos literatos onde recebe o reconhecimento e o incentivo para voltar a nutrir suas expectativas.
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Mas Luciano, já menos ingênuo e lentamente corrompido pela boêmia parisiense, busca as facilidades da vida, os prazeres e a consegue, ainda que curta, se lançar jornalista onde pode utilizar da pena para servir ao interesse escuso dos jornais de Paris. Lentamente vai se afundando no meio sórdido da imprensa, se regalando numa vida de dândi com a amante Corália, e no vício da jogatina, onde rapidamente torra suas já parcas economias, levando-o à completa ruína. Sua perfidez chega a tanto que falsifica a assinatura do cunhado, o tipógrafo David Sechard, cujo dinheiro tenta saldar as enormes dívidas que fez no jogo e na vida burguesa que vem tentando manter.
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Humilhado, é obrigado a voltar a sua terra natal, onde descobre que David se tornou foragido da justiça devido às letras de empréstimo que tomou em nome deste. Luciano percebe, afinal, quantas Ilusões nutria, e como elas foram destruídas pela ambição dos homens que, embora tenham jurado amizade ao pobre poeta de Angoulême, na verdade conspiraram para sua derrocada. Luciano se vê no dilema de dar cabo a sua imprestável vida...
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A atualidade deste romance, para muitos o mais importante de toda a Comédia, é extraordinária em tempos de uma mídia detestavelmente hipócrita e parcial. O fiel retrato do que acontece dentro dos jornais, de como os interesses pessoais de alguns poderosos se sobrepõem à imparcialidade da notícia, a forma vil como são destruídos os pequeninos em prol do reles desejo do editor, tudo isso você vê nas páginas balzaquiana (sim, o termo "balzaquiana" é advindo de outro romance seu, A mulher de trinta anos, que li é achei muito ruim..). Alguma coincidência? De qualquer forma, se vivo hoje, Balzac chegaria à conclusão que na verdade a genuína Comédia é esta de hoje a que estamos fadados a suportar.
Profile Image for Daniela.
17 reviews
December 7, 2012
Una obra que vale la pena leer si se desea conocerse un poco más y a todos nuestros congéneres, su realismo brutal podría llegar a deprimir si no fuera porque su oscuro sentido del humor sobre la naturaleza humana rescata totalmente ésta obra, no por algo es un clásico.
Profile Image for Rose O'Keefe.
18 reviews
July 27, 2015
The edition of this book was from 1899 and had such a feeling of antiquity to it, it was almost spooky. I came to understand what Edith Wharton learned from Balzac about the way he weaves his stories. That each and everyone was utterly bleak was disappointing.
542 reviews
September 3, 2013
I read "Cat and Racket." It started out strong and then it seemed like the author just got tired of the story - and quit!
Profile Image for Anni.
21 reviews2 followers
February 28, 2014
Instead of watching soap operas you should read this - gives you an excellent insight to the human psychology...
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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