Foreword by Christy Wampole
Preface
Part I In Nostalgia
1 The Pensive Citadel
2 Between Two Worlds
3 What Existentialism Meant to Us
4 Cleopatra at Yale
5 “Brombingo!”—Learning from Students
Part II The Ludic Mode
6 The Paradox of Laughter
7 In Praise of Jealousy?
8 On Rereading
Part III The French Connection
9 Lessons of Montaigne
10 The Audacities of Molière’s Don Juan
11 The Bitterness of Candide
12 Encounters with Monsieur Beyle
13 Baudelaire: Visions of Paris
14 The Year of the Eiffel Tower
15 Malraux and the World of Violence
Part IV The Exit
16 The Permanent Sabbatical
Acknowledgments
Index
Victor Brombert is the Henry Putnam University Professor Emeritus of Romance and Comparative Literature at Princeton University and the author of many books.
“The Pensive Citadel offers an elegiac account of a life as reader
and teacher—and lover of literature who knows how to share that
love.”
*Peter Brooks, Yale University*
“The Pensive Citadel is an engaging and persuasive plea for
the central importance of literature to a well-rounded existence
and a vigorous life of the mind. Brombert deftly weaves his own
experiences and his changing responses to works of literature into
his readings and rereadings. In this book, he successfully answers
a question he often discussed with his students: Do literary works
merely provide a higher form of entertainment, or is the printed
word the revelation of a dialogue we carry on with ourselves? It is
most emphatically both and more.”
*Tess Lewis, writer, essayist, and translator*
“There is an old-fashioned pleasure in reading these essays and
being so intimately in the company of its witty, reflective, and
deeply read author. I suggest beginning at the end with ‘The
Permanent Sabbatical’ and then moving on to ‘In Praise of
Jealousy?’ round the middle and then on to the rest. One cannot go
wrong.”
*Thomas W. Laqueur, University of California, Berkeley*
"Retired Princeton University comparative literature professor
Brombert reflects on his life in academia in this ruminative essay
collection. . . . Brombert’s enthusiastic takes on the French
classics show what made him a beloved professor, but the reverent
accounts of university life and detailed discussions of navigating
trends in literary criticism will hold the most appeal for fellow
academics. Literature scholars will want to check this out."
*Publishers Weekly*
"Brombert’s book mingles memoir and what might be called literary
contemplation rather than conventional academic criticism. His text
is an acknowledgment of intellectual and literary debts, and he
celebrates our much-abused and neglected inheritance."
*The New Criterion*
“The Berlin-born centenarian scholar Victor Brombert has published
a swan-song anthology of essays on his teaching career and literary
enthusiasms, among them Montaigne, Molière and Malraux. . . his
book brings to life a bygone age with self-effacing humor and
irreverence.”
*Times Literary Supplement*
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