<p>"In this enviably concise and revealing new book, the great French historian Alain Corbin has made yet more new discoveries, not least a “great century of rest” that began at the end of the nineteenth century. Corbin’s insights will continue to provoke reflection and discussion among all those interested in the history of our innermost lives."<br /><b>Robert D. Priest, Royal Holloway, University of London</b><br /><br />"In some measure this book is a history of the secularization of rest, from the sweet repose of Adam and Eve in the Garden and the rest of the dead in God, through rest as cure to the ills of the soul, to rest as not working, to our contemporary sense of its being a time to lie on the beach or improve our golf game. But it is more than that: a philosophical meditation on the history of how wakeful rest is a state in which one can be quiet and alone with oneself. We may be thankful that Corbin did not rest but wrote this moving book instead."<br /><b>Thomas W. Laqueur, University of California, Berkeley<br /></b><br />"lively and highly suggestive"<br /><b><i>Church Times</i> <br /><br /></b>“Engaging … Rest, as Mr. Corbin demonstrates in his subtle and insightful meditation, is complicated.”<br /><i>The Wall Street Journal</i></p>
Not viewed simply as an antidote for fatigue, for a long time rest was seen as the prelude to eternal life, until everything changed in the nineteenth century and society entered the great ‘age of rest’. At this point, the renowned French historian Alain Corbin explains, rest took on new therapeutic and leisurely qualities, embodied by the new types of human that emerged. The modern epicurean frolicked on beaches and soaked up the rays, while melancholics were rejuvenated in pristine sanatoria, the new temples of rest. Paid holidays and a widespread acceptance of the need to build up the strength sapped during work followed, while the 1950s became the decade of ‘sea, sex and sun’.
This new book, as original as Corbin’s other histories of neglected aspects of human life, pans the long evolution of rest in a highly readable and engaging style.
Introduction
1. Sabbath and heavenly rest
2. Eternal rest, the foundation stone of this history
3. Rest and quietude
4. Retreat and retirement in the seventeenth and eighteenth century, or the art of being able ‘to forge’ a tranquil rest for yourself
Interlude: Charles V
5. Disgrace, an opportunity for rest
6. Rest in the midst of confinement
7. The quest for comfort; new approaches to rest in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
8. Prelude: rest in the midst of nature
9. A rest for the land
10. Sunday rest and ‘the demon rest’
11. Fatigue and rest
12. Therapeutic rest from the end of the nineteenth to the middle of the twentieth century
Conclusion