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The Poetry of Pierre Jean Jouve

The Poetry of Pierre Jean Jouve
Author: Margaret Callander
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Total Pages: 326
Release: 1965
Genre: French poetry
ISBN:

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Despair Has Wings

Despair Has Wings
Author: Pierre Jean Jouve
Publisher:
Total Pages: 228
Release: 2007
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN:

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In 1938 David Gascoyne was introduced to Pierre Jean Jouve whose influence would be crucial to the development of his own poetry and philosophy. Gascoyne had begun translating Jouve's poems at the end of the 1930s when Blanche Reverchon-Jouve, a Freudian psychiatrist, became his analyst.


An Idiom of Night

An Idiom of Night
Author: Pierre Jean Jouve
Publisher:
Total Pages: 80
Release: 1968
Genre:
ISBN:

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Search for Hidden Suns

Search for Hidden Suns
Author: Daniel Eusebio Rivas
Publisher:
Total Pages: 518
Release: 1977
Genre:
ISBN:

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An Idiom of Night

An Idiom of Night
Author: Pierre Jean Jouve
Publisher: Swallow Press
Total Pages: 86
Release: 1968
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

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Genius in France

Genius in France
Author: Ann Jefferson
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2014-12-21
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0691160651

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This engaging book spans three centuries to provide the first full account of the long and diverse history of genius in France. Exploring a wide range of examples from literature, philosophy, and history, as well as medicine, psychology, and journalism, Ann Jefferson examines the ways in which the idea of genius has been ceaselessly reflected on and redefined through its uses in these different contexts. She traces its varying fortunes through the madness and imposture with which genius is often associated, and through the observations of those who determine its presence in others. Jefferson considers the modern beginnings of genius in eighteenth-century aesthetics and the works of philosophes such as Diderot. She then investigates the nineteenth-century notion of national and collective genius, the self-appointed role of Romantic poets as misunderstood geniuses, the recurrent obsession with failed genius in the realist novels of writers like Balzac and Zola, the contested category of female genius, and the medical literature that viewed genius as a form of pathology. She shows how twentieth-century views of genius narrowed through its association with IQ and child prodigies, and she discusses the different ways major theorists—including Sartre, Barthes, Derrida, and Kristeva—have repudiated and subsequently revived the concept. Rich in narrative detail, Genius in France brings a fresh approach to French intellectual and cultural history, and to the burgeoning field of genius studies.