6533b7d2fe1ef96bd125ebf5

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Waterloo in Vanity Fair or the Art of not Representing War

Marianne Camus

subject

Cultural Studies[SHS.LITT] Humanities and Social Sciences/Literature"war" "silence" "civilians" "disorder" "Waterloo"Literature and Literary Theory[SHS.LITT]Humanities and Social Sciences/Literaturewar" "silence" "civilians" "disorder" "Waterloo[ SHS.LITT ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Literature

description

International audience; The narrator of Vanity Fair warns his reader just as he is about to start his description of Waterloo, 'We do not claim to rank among the military novelists'. it is true that none of those involved will ever speak of it. The impression remains, however, that everything has been said about the event. A close reading of the chapters concerned with the events will reveal how the victory heralding British supremacy in the nineteenth century is in fact persistently undermined in the novel. Thackeray's contempt for anything military is well known and the writing strategies used here to attack the institution are as efficient as they are varied. The narrator intervenes directly to point at human silliness and cowardice. But more often he prefers the indirect or refracted manner (to use the mirror image he liked so much). He shows, for example, the impossibility to write the history of war, by gicing us all the different versions of it: rumour, newspapers, official history books with their biases and contradictions. He concentrates on the life of civilians. Looking at it from different angles he shows the folly, the cruelty, and, above all, the disorder which war encourages among them (the movements of panic, the mad rise of prices or the breakdown of the social hierarchy for example). But most striking is probably what one could call the feminisation of war which in the double and subtle way he weaves it into the narration acts as a sort of secret weapon against the military and nationalistic ideology of the time.

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