Had Émile Zola been able to see into the future, he might have thought better of insisting as strenuously as he did upon his status as a “naturalist.” By doing so, he attached his name to the most fashionable group of contemporary artists and writers (the term had been coined by Gustave Courbet and taken up by the influential Goncourt brothers, among other trend-setters), ensuring that his novels would be perceived as stylistically and intellectually up-to-the-minute, but the tag has proved something of a drag on his posthumous reputation. Pedagogues dearly love such handy rubrics, which allow them to spoonfeed a writer to their pupils, and Zola’s “naturalism” has been repeated as an article of dreary faith to generation after generation of high school and college students. I myself shied away from him for years, for the textbooks made him sound a grim fellow, obsessed with the gutter and with a peculiarly nineteenth ...
Brooke Allens latest book is Moral Minority: Our Skeptical Founding Fathers (Ivan R Dee)
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 28 November 2009, on page 59
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