Jonathan Keates
Salonnières & Encyclopédistes
The French Mind: 400 Years of Romance, Revolution and Renewal
By Peter Watson
Simon & Schuster 800pp £30
Visiting Paris in the summer of 1770, the English musicologist Charles Burney went to the opera. The experience was disheartening. Not only was the piece performed, Pancrace Royer’s Zaïde, decidedly unmemorable, but Burney remained mystified as to why lyric tragedies of this sort, written in a style essentially unchanged for a hundred years, should go on being performed. All in all there seemed little to detain him in Paris and he was happy enough to set off for Italy, where they knew a thing or two about what made opera tick. As for the French audience, he noted sadly, ‘it is all analysis, calculation and parallel; they are to be wise, not pleased.’
Burney’s shrewd observation encapsulates a significant aspect of the outlook Peter Watson examines in The French Mind. The Gallic penchant for reducing everything to rules and systems has proved a mixed blessing where culture is concerned. Exalting the intellect and the life of the mind in a nation where children are taught philosophy – la philo – at school is certainly magnificent. Yet this concern with ‘analysis, calculation and parallel’, where the aim is ‘to be wise, not pleased’, has sometimes had a seriously limiting effect on spontaneous creativity and imagination. Perhaps this explains why so much of French cultural history over the past four centuries has involved scuffles and skirmishes between partisans of different schools and systems, the various wars – la Querelle du Cid, la Guerre des Bouffons, la Bataille d’Hernani – leaving behind a trail of wounded and not a few corpses, metaphorical or actual.
The 17th-century salons where Watson’s majestic voyage begins nurtured their different kinds of pugnacity and contention. In 1981 the novelist Marguerite Yourcenar, the first female ever admitted to the Académie Française in its 350-year history, rightly taxed its members with having deliberately sidelined the salonnières, women whose vision, energy
Sign Up to our newsletter
Receive free articles, highlights from the archive, news, details of prizes, and much more.@Lit_Review
Follow Literary Review on Twitter
Twitter Feed
How to ruin a film - a short guide by @TWHodgkinson:
Thomas W Hodgkinson - There Was No Sorcerer
Thomas W Hodgkinson: There Was No Sorcerer - Box Office Poison: Hollywood’s Story in a Century of Flops by Tim Robey
literaryreview.co.uk
How to ruin a film - a short guide by @TWHodgkinson:
Thomas W Hodgkinson - There Was No Sorcerer
Thomas W Hodgkinson: There Was No Sorcerer - Box Office Poison: Hollywood’s Story in a Century of Flops by Tim Robey
literaryreview.co.uk
Give the gift that lasts all year with a subscription to Literary Review. Save up to 35% on the cover price when you visit us at https://literaryreview.co.uk/subscribe and enter the code 'XMAS24'