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Wiliam Makepeace Thackeray

    Cet auteur a acquis une renommée pour ses romans satiriques, qui offrent un portrait pénétrant de la société britannique et de ses strates sociales. Ses œuvres sont célébrées pour leur profondeur psychologique et leurs caractérisations magistrales. L'auteur explore fréquemment des thèmes tels que l'hypocrisie, la vanité et la décadence morale. Par son style distinctif et ses observations perspicaces, il offre aux lecteurs un regard intemporel sur la nature humaine.

    Vanity fair
    • Vanity fair

      • 688pages
      • 25 heures de lecture
      3,9(545)Évaluer

      Vanity Fair, Thackeray's panoramic, satirical saga of corruption at all levels of English society, was published in 1847 but set during the Napoleonic Wars. It chronicles the lives of two women who could not be more different: Becky Sharp, an orphan whose only resources are her vast ambitions, her native wit, and her loose morals; and her schoolmate Amelia Sedley, a typically naive Victorian heroine, the pampered daughter of a wealthy family. Becky's fluctuating fortunes eventually bring her to an affair with Amelia's dissolute husband; when he is killed at Waterloo, Amelia and her child are left penniless, while Becky and her husband Rawdon Crawley rise in the world, managing to lead a high life in London solely on the basis of their shrewdness. (The chapter entitled "How to Live on Nothing" is a classic.) Thackeray's subtitle, "A Novel Without a Hero," is understating the case; his view of humanity in this novel is distinctly bleak and deliberately antiheroic. Critics of the time misunderstood the book, decrying it as (among other things) vicious, vile, and odious. But VANITY FAIR has endured as one of the great comic novels of all time, and a landmark in the history of realism in fiction.

      Vanity fair