Jeune-France
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- | '''''Les Jeunes-France: romans goguenards''''' (“The Jeunes-France: Tales Told with Tongue in Cheek), was a collection of stories by [[Gautier]] published in 1833. It was a satire of Romanticism. | + | '''''Les Jeunes-France: romans goguenards''''' (“The Jeunes-France: Tales Told with Tongue in Cheek), is a collection of stories by [[Gautier]] published in 1833. It was a satire of Romanticism. |
'''Les Jeunes-France''' was a name given c.1830 to a group of Romantic writers and artists, including [[Nerval]], [[Borel]], and [[Gautier]], whose [[extreme]] views or [[unusual]] behaviour [[shocked]] public opinion, e.g. in the [[Hernani (drama)|battle of Hernani]]. In 1831, the newspaper ''Le Figaro'' featured a number of works by the young generation of Romantic artists and published them in the ''Jeunes-France''. | '''Les Jeunes-France''' was a name given c.1830 to a group of Romantic writers and artists, including [[Nerval]], [[Borel]], and [[Gautier]], whose [[extreme]] views or [[unusual]] behaviour [[shocked]] public opinion, e.g. in the [[Hernani (drama)|battle of Hernani]]. In 1831, the newspaper ''Le Figaro'' featured a number of works by the young generation of Romantic artists and published them in the ''Jeunes-France''. |
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Les Jeunes-France: romans goguenards (“The Jeunes-France: Tales Told with Tongue in Cheek), is a collection of stories by Gautier published in 1833. It was a satire of Romanticism.
Les Jeunes-France was a name given c.1830 to a group of Romantic writers and artists, including Nerval, Borel, and Gautier, whose extreme views or unusual behaviour shocked public opinion, e.g. in the battle of Hernani. In 1831, the newspaper Le Figaro featured a number of works by the young generation of Romantic artists and published them in the Jeunes-France.
See also
- La Jeune France (1878 -88)
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