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Correspondance

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French
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Published 1994 Conard
ISBN
2070106691, 2070114368
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About Author

Émile Zola

Emile Zola was a French journalist and novelist known for his series of 20 novels known collectively as Les Rougon-Macquart (1871-93). Zola's style was called literary naturalism; his novels were attacked and even banned for their frankness and sordid detail, and caused quite a bit of controversy in their day. The same traits made him a best-selling author and a star of French literature in his day. In 1898 he then further incurred the wrath of French officials when he published the open letter "J'Accuse," in defense of Alfred Dreyfus, an Army officer who had been convicted of treason. Zola was sentenced to prison for libel, fled to England, and was granted amnesty a few months later. He died in Paris from carbon monoxide poisoning -- the victim of a stopped-up chimney -- a few months before Dreyfus was officially exonerated.

Description

How to reconcile the necessary loneliness of the creator and the need to build a community of spirits that are close to the neighboring requirements? For Yves Bonnefoy, sharing is the meaning of the poetic experience, in his eyes different from mere literature. One of the moments is that of writing a letter. The edition of his Correspondence associates the letters he has written with those he has received. It brings out the fabric of a life of man and poet, with its network of friendships, constant or mobile, according to alliances, chances and crumples. This first volume, begun with the collaboration of Yves Bonnefoy, brings together more than nine hundred letters exchanged in the second half of the twentieth century, to which are added some e-mails.^ The dialogues, with forty-nine correspondents, are organized around two axes: on the one hand, links from surrealism - André Breton, Pierre Alechinsky, Gilbert Lely, Christian Dotremont, George Henein, Raoul Ubac, Jacqueline Lamba, André Pieyre of Mandiargues, Hans Bellmer, Jean Brun; on the other hand, the friendships which after fifteen years led to the creation of L'Éphémère (1967-1972), the magnificent magazine published by the Maeght editions: André du Bouchet, Jacques Dupin and Gaëtan Picon , Louis-René des Forêts and Paul Celan.^ The other authors of the letters are in no way secondary characters, neither in themselves, nor by the place they occupied in the world of Bonnefoy: Gaston Bachelard, Jean Wahl and Andre Chastel, his masters; then Gilbert Lely, Salah Stétié, Pierre Jean Jouve, Gabriel Bounoure, Christiane Martin du Gard, Philippe Jaccottet, Boris Schloezer, André Frenaud, Michel Butor, Emil Cioran, Monique Wittig, Paul Benichou, Jean-Pierre Richard or Henry Corbin, for to name only them. Here you will find a wealth of information about the poet's work and the sensibility of an era, with notes enriched with excerpts from the writer's Chronology by himself, also unpublished.--Translation of page 4 of cover by Fabula.

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