Depicting a cast of multi-generational characters, 'Je, l'Autre' describes the lives and struggles of its cast with the conditions of their time and with their very identity, who ultimately find comfort in each other across decades and centuries of separation.
Attributes | Values |
---|
rdf:type
| |
rdfs:label
| |
rdfs:comment
| - Depicting a cast of multi-generational characters, 'Je, l'Autre' describes the lives and struggles of its cast with the conditions of their time and with their very identity, who ultimately find comfort in each other across decades and centuries of separation.
|
dcterms:subject
| |
dbkwik:conworld/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
pub date
| |
Last
| |
Country
| |
Name
| |
media type
| |
Caption
| - ''Cover of a recent edition of 'Je, l'Autre'
|
First
| |
Language
| |
Author
| |
title orig
| |
Pages
| |
english pub date
| |
translators
| - First English translation by Gregory Flint, 1914.
|
Publisher
| |
orig lang code
| |
Location
| |
abstract
| - Depicting a cast of multi-generational characters, 'Je, l'Autre' describes the lives and struggles of its cast with the conditions of their time and with their very identity, who ultimately find comfort in each other across decades and centuries of separation. The novel gained instant popularity upon its publication in 1909, with many declaring it Ravel's best work. Henri de Mettanis described it as "the most truthful account into the Human condition ever to be written - a masterwork in sheer emotion alone". 'I, the Outsider' won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1909, and remains popular even today, where it is often studied in schools as part of a literary analysis of the Helvoran language.
|