The Crimes of Love
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
Revision as of 16:23, 26 March 2008 Jahsonic (Talk | contribs) ← Previous diff |
Revision as of 16:14, 24 May 2010 Jahsonic (Talk | contribs) Next diff → |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Template}} | {{Template}} | ||
- | '''''Les Crimes de l'amour, Nouvelles héroïques et tragiques''''' (Eng: The Crimes of Love: Heroic and tragic Tales) is a collection of short stories by [[Sade]] first an published in [[1799]]. In its original publication, each story was prefaced by a motto from [[Edward Young]]'s ''[[Night Thoughts]]''. The collection also features the notable essay, ''[[Reflections on the Novel]]'', which features Sade's theories on the '[[modern novel]]'. | + | '''''Les Crimes de l'amour, Nouvelles héroïques et tragiques''''' (Eng: The Crimes of Love: Heroic and tragic Tales) is a collection of short stories by [[Sade]] first published in [[1799]]. In its original publication, each story was prefaced by a motto from [[Edward Young]]'s ''[[Night Thoughts]]''. The collection also features the notable essay, ''[[Reflections on the Novel]]'', which features Sade's theories on the '[[modern novel]]'. |
''Les Crimes de l'amour'' is also the title of a French film edited from ''[[The Crimson Curtain]]'', a short story by [[Jules Amédée Barbey d'Aurevilly]]. | ''Les Crimes de l'amour'' is also the title of a French film edited from ''[[The Crimson Curtain]]'', a short story by [[Jules Amédée Barbey d'Aurevilly]]. |
Revision as of 16:14, 24 May 2010
Related e |
Featured: |
Les Crimes de l'amour, Nouvelles héroïques et tragiques (Eng: The Crimes of Love: Heroic and tragic Tales) is a collection of short stories by Sade first published in 1799. In its original publication, each story was prefaced by a motto from Edward Young's Night Thoughts. The collection also features the notable essay, Reflections on the Novel, which features Sade's theories on the 'modern novel'.
Les Crimes de l'amour is also the title of a French film edited from The Crimson Curtain, a short story by Jules Amédée Barbey d'Aurevilly.
Contents |
Table of contents
- Une Idée sur les romans
- Juliette et Raunai, ou la Conspiration d'Amboise
- La Double Épreuve
- Miss Henriette Stralson, ou les Effets du désespoir
- Faxelange, ou les Torts de l'ambition
- Florville et Courval, ou le Fatalisme
- Rodrigue, ou la Tour enchantée
- Laurence et Antonio
- Ernestine
- Dorgeville, ou le Criminel par vertu
- La Comtesse de Sancerre, ou la Rivalle de sa fille
- Eugénie de Franval
- Postface
Review by Villeterque
October 22, 1800 - In Le Journal des arts, des sciences et de littérature, an article by the critic Villeterque appears, violently attacking Sade's Les Crimes de l'amour, which has just been published. In the article Villeterque refers to Sade as the author of Justine.
See also
Do not confuse with
- Un crime d'amour (1885)
External links
- Richardson and de Sade Acquisitions (no. 37, Spring 2001) by Bruce Whiteman, Clark Head Librarian
- wikisource