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Carmen and Other Stories
Carmen and Other Stories | Prosper M?rim?e
2 posts | 2 read
Five of the stories selected here demonstrate Prosper Merimee's ability to explore the contrast between primitive and civilized values. In Mateo Falcone a Corsican's conception of honour forces him to exact a ruthless revenge; The Storming of the Redoubt describes an incident in Napoleon's 1812 Russian campaign; Tamango depicts a revolt of Negro slaves; The Etruscan Vase is a tale of passionate jealousy set in Paris; The Game of Backgammon is a study in fatal remorse.
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review
psalva
Carmen and Other Stories | Prosper Merimee
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Bailedbailed

I came to this book for Carmen, which was the first story here, and I wasn‘t too impressed by it. Beyond its use of unreliable narrators, I didn‘t take away much else. I read two more stories and they felt cold/boring to me. Merimée‘s writing is just not that interesting. I‘m glad I read the original Carmen but I just don‘t care enough to read further. For once, Finn agrees with my assessment.
#catsoflitsy

blurb
psalva
Carmen and Other Stories | Prosper Merimee
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I‘ve been interested in the Carmen story for a few months now since I had a class on musical theater history in which we briefly studied Carmen Jones, Hammerstein‘s adaptation of the opera. I just finished reading the original story. The main narrator is naive, and full of romantic notions. I found the contrast between his POV and don Jose‘s narrative, which is full of passion, jealousy, and loathing, to be a study in unreliable narration. ⬇️

psalva Carmen is the tragic hero of this story, and it says a lot that her life is filtered through the perspective of these two men who view her either as a piece of property, or a witch who does the bidding of Satan. (edited) 2y
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