RESTIF, NICOLAS-EDME


Meaning of RESTIF, NICOLAS-EDME in English

born Oct. 23, 1734, Sacy, near Auxerre, France died Feb. 3, 1806, Paris byname Restif De La Bretonne French novelist whose works provide lively, detailed accounts of the sordid aspects of French life and society in the 18th century. After serving his apprenticeship as a printer in Auxerre, Restif went to Paris, where he eventually set the type for some of his own worksbooks long prized by collectors for their rarity, quaint typography, and beautiful and curious illustrations. His novels are rambling and carelessly written. While he parades his moralistic intentions and frequently airs his views on the reform of society, his preoccupation with eroticism, tinged with mysticism, has led to his being called the Rousseau of the gutter. The author's life formed the basis of much of his writing, as in La Vie de mon pre (1779; My Father's Life), a vivid picture of peasant life. But in this work, as in his autobiography, Monsieur Nicolas (179497), much of which is set in the Parisian underworld, Restif's vivid imagination has rendered it difficult to separate fact from fiction. Restif left another record of his observation of Parisian life in his own day in Les Contemporaines (178085; The Modern Women), while Le Paysan perverti (1776; The Corrupted Peasant) and La Paysanne pervertie (1784; The Corrupted Peasant) develop the theme of the demoralization of virtuous country folk in the metropolis. Additional reading Restif's multivolume autobiography is available in English as Monsieur Nicolas: Or, The Human Heart Laid Bare, trans., ed., and abridged by Robert Baldick (1966). Analytical examinations of Restif's literary writings include Charles A. Porter, Restif's Novels: Or, An Autobiography in Search of an Author (1967); and Mark Poster, The Utopian Thought of Restif de la Bretonne (1971).

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