When Charles Sorel published
Description de l’île de Portraiture et de la ville des Portraits[Description of the Isle of Portraiture and of the City of Portraits] in 1659, he was known above all for his work as an innovative novelist. With his successful
Histoire comique de Francion[
The Comical History of Francion] (1623-33), Sorel had experimented with a narrative style that sought to break away from the “absurdités” [absurdities] and “aventures chimériques” [chimerical adventures] of traditional fiction
—pastoral and heroic romances in particular. “La vraisemblance” [verisimilitude] and “le naturel” [naturalness] remain leading precepts in Sorel’s other two “histoires comiques” [comical histories]. Significantly retitled
L’Anti-roman[
TheAnti-Romance…
3159 words
Citation: Debaisieux, Martine. "Description de l'île de portraiture et de la ville des portraits". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 13 May 2017 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=35718, accessed 24 November 2024.]