Paris Spleen

Author:   Charles Baudelaire ,  Rainer J. Hanshe
Publisher:   ERIS
Edition:   New Edition
Volume:   1
ISBN:  

9781967751686


Pages:   216
Publication Date:   10 March 2026
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Our Price $264.00 Quantity:  
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Paris Spleen


Overview

Paris Spleen is one of the first modern books-formally experimental, morally ambivalent, and relentlessly urban. Written in the 1850s, these fifty prose poems roam through the streets of Paris with unsparing detail and a deeply ambivalent gaze. Baudelaire captures daily life as something both intoxicating and absurd, filled with strange encounters, sudden violence, fleeting beauty, and constant noise. This is not poetry in the usual sense, but something sharper and more elastic: compact narratives, snapshots, observations, and provocations.Baudelaire moves quickly between tones-satirical, melancholic, brutal, philosophical-without ever losing control. Paris Spleen speaks in the voice of a man both of the city and estranged from it, and it remains one of the most influential works of the 19th century: vivid, darkly comic, and permanently contemporary.

Full Product Details

Author:   Charles Baudelaire ,  Rainer J. Hanshe
Publisher:   ERIS
Imprint:   ERIS
Edition:   New Edition
Volume:   1
ISBN:  

9781967751686


ISBN 10:   1967751684
Pages:   216
Publication Date:   10 March 2026
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Reviews

What is great and strange about Baudelaire’s poetry [is] its unmatched capacity to transmute public existence into private torments and then return them to the public sphere. -- Joshua Clover * <i>The Nation</i> *


Author Information

Charles Baudelaire (1821–1867) was a French poet, essayist, and cultural critic whose work reshaped modern literature. His landmark collection, The Flowers of Evil, brought a new intensity to poetic language—introspective, decadent, and defiant. Restless and often at odds with his time, Baudelaire was among the first writers to take the modern city as his true subject, and remains one of its most enduring interpreters.

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Latest Reading Guide

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