un-Rousseauesque
Apparence
Étymologie
[modifier le wikicode]- (Siècle à préciser) De Rousseauesque avec le préfixe marquant l’opposition un-.
Adjectif
[modifier le wikicode]un-Rousseauesque \Prononciation ?\
- Antonyme de Rousseauesque.
But he sides with them, making them credible and powerful figures, particularly because he needs them to make a rather un-Rousseauesque point.
— (Patrick W. Byrne, Les Liaisons dangereuses : A Study of Motive and Moral, University of Glasgow French and German Publications, 1989, p. 35)And of course, in his early novel Typee (1846), Melville has his narrator Tom, a shipwrecked young sailor, take us right into the heart of a Polynesian society and, in a most un-Rousseauesque moment, uncover grizzly evidence of cannibalism.
— (Gerald E. P. Gillespie, “Traveling into the Abyss” in Manfred Schmeling & Monika Schmitz-Emans (Éditeurs), Das Paradigma Der Landschaft in Moderne und Postmoderne, Königshausen & Neumann, 2007, p. 112)