"Considering the crises of literary authority in nineteenth-century French literature against the backdrop of the Second Empire (1852-1870) and the aftermath of the bloody Paris Commune of 1871, Seth Whidden focuses on the phenomena - literary collaboration, parody, destabilized poetic form, the substitution of one poetic or narrative voice with that of the many - that enabled challenges to the traditional status of the writer and, by extension, the political authority that it reflected"--
A word on the text -- Introduction. Second Empire, empire of "zut" -- Authority dispersed in collaboration -- Authority under siege when parody meets poetry -- Rimbaud drowning verse in a sea of multiplicity -- At 7,000 meters without a net: the vertigo of Jules Verne's narrative authority