In Our Time

Germinal (Archive Episode)

Aug 21, 2025
Join Susan Harrow, an authority on French literature, Kate Griffiths, an expert in translation, and Edmund Birch, a cambridge lecturer, as they dive into Emile Zola's masterpiece, 'Germinal.' They discuss the gripping struggles of miners and the harsh life of Etienne Lantier, highlighting the stark realities of capitalism and the awakening of socialist ideas. The guests also explore Zola's unique narrative style and the profound impact of his work, emphasizing its relevance to contemporary societal issues. A compelling reflection on literature's power to provoke change!
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INSIGHT

A Literary Science Of Heredity

  • Zola conceived the Rougon-Macquart as a scientific study of heredity, environment and era shaping people.
  • He aimed to document his time, show deterministic human behaviour, and find beauty in everyday life.
ANECDOTE

Zola's Extreme Fieldwork

  • Zola did immersive fieldwork: he visited coalfields during a major strike and went down into a mine cage.
  • He crawled through tight tunnels despite being corpulent and claustrophobic to record miners' experiences firsthand.
INSIGHT

Empathy Through Domestic Detail

  • The Maheu family humanises extreme poverty so readers empathise with desperate violence.
  • Zola prevents easy moral judgement by immersing us in their daily struggles and transformations.
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