Quiet History Behind Les Misérables
Ordinary Lives in 19th-Century Paris
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Acheter pour 15,64 $
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Narrateur(s):
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Andrew Post
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Auteur(s):
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Dakikon Publishing
À propos de cet audio
Behind every great novel lies a city of unseen lives.
Quiet History Behind Les Misérables invites listeners into the everyday world of ordinary people living in 19th-century Paris—the workers, vendors, mothers, children, and laborers who formed the living backdrop of Victor Hugo’s masterpiece.
This book does not retell the story of Les Misérables.
Instead, it explores the real social fabric that made such a story possible.
Through quiet streets, crowded markets, narrow alleys, and modest homes, you will discover:
- How working-class Parisians lived, ate, and survived
- What daily poverty, dignity, and resilience looked like beyond revolution and drama
- How ordinary routines shaped extraordinary literature
- The silent struggles and small hopes hidden behind history’s grand narratives
Written in a reflective, accessible style, this book focuses on human scale history—life as it was lived, not as it was celebrated. There are no battles here, no heroic speeches. Only people waking up, going to work, waiting, enduring, and continuing.
Perfect for listeners who enjoy:
- Social history and everyday life studies
- Literary background and contextual history
- Calm, thoughtful nonfiction
- Listeners of historical classics seeking deeper understanding