Indiana

Amantine Aurore Dupin

Language: French

Publisher: Michel Levy Freres

Published: Aug 15, 1869

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Pages: 288

Description:

Indiana Indiana, George Sand (1870).jpg Cover to the 1870 translation of Indiana by George W. Richards AuthorGeorge Sand CountryFrance LanguageFrench GenreRomantic Publication date April 1832 Pages344 ISBN2-07-037604-4 Indiana is a novel about love and marriage written by Amantine Aurore Dupin; it was the first work she published under her pseudonym George Sand. Published in April 1832, the novel blends the conventions of romanticism, realism, and idealism. As the novel is set partly in France and partly in the French colony of Réunion, Sand had to base her descriptions of the colony, where she had never been, on the travel writing of her friend Jules Néraud. The novel deals with many typical nineteenth-century novelistic themes. These include adultery, social constraint, and unfulfilled longing for romantic love. The novel is an exploration of nineteenth-century female desire complicated by class constraints and by social codes about infidelity. In another sense, the novel critiques the laws around women's equality in France. Indiana can not leave her husband, Colonel Delmare, because she lacks the protection of the law: under the Napoleonic Code, women could not obtain property, claim ownership of their children, or divorce. Finally, the novel touches on the subordination of the colonies to the French Empire. **