Jeune-France
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- | '''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]]. | + | '''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]]. |
''Les Jeunes-France: romans goguenards'' (“The Jeunes-France: Tales Told with Tongue in Cheek), published in 1833, was a satire of Romanticism. 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: romans goguenards'' (“The Jeunes-France: Tales Told with Tongue in Cheek), published in 1833, was a satire of Romanticism. 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 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.
Les Jeunes-France: romans goguenards (“The Jeunes-France: Tales Told with Tongue in Cheek), published in 1833, was a satire of Romanticism. 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
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