¶ … plot background Zola's Germinal encompasses thinking major figures discussed
Revolutionary Sentiment
By most estimates, the historical epoch of the mid to late 19th century was fairly turbulent, particularly within the throes of Western Civilization. Earlier in that century the communist urgings of Karl Marx and Freidrich Engels challenged the conventional politics and economics of the time period in which the capitalist divide between those that have and those that have not was especially noticeable -- even blatantly so (Marx, Engles 1848). Additionally, psychological notions of hysteria, the likes of which would be innovated and championed by Sigmund Freud, were also being explored (Scurr 2010), while conventional notions of labor and exploitation were also being challenged. Much of the zeitgeist that was existent during this epoch is demonstrated within Emile Zola's Germinal, which was the 13th novel within the author's 20 volume series entitled Les Rougon-Macquart. A close analysis of the majority of characters within this novel, as well as the background and the plot involved, reveals that the author was actively attempting to accurately reflect the intellectual hegemony existent during this time period.
Germinal is set within the French coal mining town of Montsou in the 1860's. Many of the conditions that led political thinkers such as Marx and Engels to unveil their communist ideology are highly palpable in this poor town, which is rooted in the type of penury in which denizens routinely have difficulty...
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