Bureaucrats

Published
Jan 1994
Main Genre
General Fiction General Fiction
Rating
Pages
247

About This Book

The Bureaucrats (Les Employes) stands out in Balzac's immense Human Comedy by concentrating precisely and penetratingly on a distinctive "modern" institution: France's state bureaucracy. Rabourdin, aided by his unscrupulous wife, attempts to reorganize and streamline the entire system. Rabourdin's plan will halve the government's size while doubling its revenue. When the plan is leaked, Rabourdin's rival--an utter incompetent--gains the overwhelming support of the frightened and desperate body of low-ranking functionaries.
The novel contains the recognizable themes of Balzac's work: obsessive ambition, conspiracy and human pettiness, and a melodramatic struggle between the social good and the evils of folly and stupidity. It is also an unusual, dramatized analysis of a developing political institution and its role in shaping social class and mentality.

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Paperback

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Trade Paperback
Jan 1994 Northwestern University Press ISBN 0810109875
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Hardcover

Hardcover edition cover
Hardcover
Dec 1993 Northwestern University Press ISBN 0810109735
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