Dialogues
Jean-Jacques Rousseau; Judith R. Bush, trs.; Christopher Kelly, trs.; Roger D. Masters, trs.

Collected Writings of Rousseau
Dartmouth College Press
1990 • 309 pp. 3 illus. 6 1/8 x 9 1/4"
Philosophy & Ethics / Biography & Letters / Literature & Language-French


$65.00 Cloth, 978-0-87451-495-7


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Rousseau’s complete work, unified in English for the first time, premiers with an original translation of his Dialogues.

One of Rousseau's later and most puzzling works and never before available in English, this neglected autobiographical piece was the product of the philosopher's old age and sense of persecution. Long viewed simply as evidence of his growing paranoia, it consists of three dialogues between a character named "Rousseau" and one identified only as "Frenchman" who discuss the bad reputation and works of an author named "Jean-Jacques." Dialogues offers a fascinating retrospective of his literary career.

Endorsements:

"[The Rousseau series is] indispensable to Rousseau scholars and students of political theory. Now that we have it, we realize we cannot do without it. Its scholarship is a model, a monument, and a treasury." —Harvey Mansfield, Jr., Harvard University






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Tue, 23 Feb 2010 14:52:56 -0500