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041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aForment, Lise
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aReflections on the Racine/Corneille parallel: Rooted in jealousy, outflying the crow
260 _c2022.
500 _a31
520 _aThis article aims to demonstrate the theoretical effectiveness of jealousy in revisiting the parallel between Racine and Corneille. Jealousy in its various forms, specifically the interweaving of emulatory scenes, reveals the importance of linkage in Racine’s poetics, as opposed to Corneille’s dream of autonomy. Berenice, the epitome of their rivalry, and the particular case of Antiochus, Titus’s harmless adversary, outline an allegorical or phantasmatic relationship between Racine’s theatrical universe, populated by jealous figures, and his obsession with linking his posterity to the glory of his father—and “enemy brother”. Irreducible to an extra-literary device, and equally resistant to a purely self-referential mechanism, jealousy interrogates our critical reflexes and sheds new light on Racine’s writing.
690 _aCorneille/Racine parallel
690 _aBerenice
690 _aQuarrel of the Ancients and the Moderns
690 _aMetatextuality
690 _aEmulation
690 _aJealousy
690 _aCorneille/Racine parallel
690 _aBerenice
690 _aQuarrel of the Ancients and the Moderns
690 _aMetatextuality
690 _aEmulation
690 _aJealousy
786 0 _nDix-septième siècle | o 295 | 2 | 2022-03-25 | p. 281-292 | 0012-4273
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-dix-septieme-siecle-2022-2-page-281?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c702749
_d702749