Les Fables Canadiennes de Jules Verne: Discorde Et Concorde Dans Une Autre Amerique
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Specificatii
Over the course of three decades--from the early 1870s to the turn
of the 20th century--Jules Verne wrote three novels covering more
than half a century of Canadian history. While this triptych is
undoubtedly located within the Vernian corpus, it nevertheless
constitutes a body of work in its own right, a powerful testimony
to the place that Canada and Quebec occupied in France. This place
was relative, however, dependent on interactions with England and
the United States. Several of Verne's works beginning with the
publication of The Adventures of Captain Hatteras in the mid-1860s
compare English and American characters. Ultimately, the rivalry
that emerges between the two countries is further developed in the
Canadian novels The Fur Country (1872-1873) and Family Without a
Name (1889). The Anglo-American conflict explains the affinities
between French Canadians and Americans present in both novels.
Toward the end of his life, however, Verne revisits this alliance.
In The Golden Volcano, written in 1899-1900, those relations change
diametrically: French and English Canadians, all honest people in
search of Klondike gold, unite against the Texans, notorious and
feared delinquents. How is this reversal to be understood? What
clues does it offer for understanding of the depictions of Canada
and Quebec that prevail henceforth in France on a broader scale?
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