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Le Symboliste

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Le Symboliste was a short-lived weekly French newspaper created by Jean Moréas (editor-in-chief), Gustave Kahn (managing editor), and Paul Adam (editorial secretary).[1] Its creation closely followed the publication of Jean Moréas's "Symbolist Manifesto" in the literary supplement of Figaro (18 September 1886), which claimed the epithet "symbolist" and rejected "decadent". Only four issues were ever published, the first on 7 October and the last on 30 October 1886.[1] There were four pages per issue,[1] and it cost ten centimes.[2] Despite its brief run, it was important in the Symbolist movement.[1]

Further reading

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  • Pereira, Véronique Silva (2012-05-16). "« Les premières armes du symbolisme » : le rôle du « petit journal » dans la querelle symboliste de 1886". COnTEXTES (in French) (11). doi:10.4000/contextes.5318. ISSN 1783-094X.
  • Guillerm, Jean-Pierre. "Paul Adam lexicographe. Entre symbolisme et décadentisme: Littré ironisé." Lexique 12-13 (1995): 357–368.
  • Plowert, Jacques (1888). Petit glossaire pour servir à l'intelligence des auteurs décadents et symbolistes (in French). Vanier.

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Gatti, Veronica (2013-07-01). ""Le Symboliste", une revue littéraire de courte vie mais de grande importance". Studi Francesi (170 (LVII | II)): 369–381. doi:10.4000/studifrancesi.2958. ISSN 0039-2944.
  2. ^ Kahn, Gustave (1902). Symbolistes et decadents (in French). L. Vanier. p. 42.