Edmond François Valentin About: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Peter J. King
(some tidying)
imported>Petréa Mitchell
m (→‎Source: Alphabetization)
Line 14: Line 14:
* [http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Edmond_Francois_Valentin_About Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition], a work that is now in the public domain.
* [http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Edmond_Francois_Valentin_About Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition], a work that is now in the public domain.


[[Category: CZ Live]]
[[Category: CZ Live|About, Edmond François Valentin]]
[[Category:Literature Workgroup]]
[[Category:Literature Workgroup|About, Edmond François Valentin]]

Revision as of 10:03, 5 May 2007

Edmond François Valentin About (February 14 1828January 16 1885) was a French novelist, publicist, and journalist.

About was born at Dieuze in the [Lorraine]] region. In 1848 he entered the École Normale, taking the second place in the annual competition for admission, with Hippolyte Taine being first. Among his college contemporaries were Taine, Francisque, Sarcey, Challemel-Lacour and Prevost-Paradol. About was considered the most exuberant, brilliant and undisciplined of them all.

At the end of his college career he joined the French school in Athens, but according to his own account never intended to folow the career for which the École Normale prepared him. In 1853 he returned to France and dedicated himself to literature and journalism. In 1855 he published La Grece contemporaine, (Modern Greece), which enjoyed immediate success. A year later he was charged that his book Tolla was essentially copied from an earlier Italian novel, Vittoria Savelli (1841). This roused a strong prejudice against About and numerous attacks, to which he was more than ready to respond.

About created even more animosity with his Lettres d'un bon jeune homme, published in Le Figaro under the nom de plume "Valentin de Quevilly". In the following years he produced several novels, stories, a failed play, a pamphlet on the Roman question, numerous pamphlets, innumerable newspaper articles, art critique, answers to his critiques, and popular articles on economy.

With the fall of the French monarchy following the Franco-German War in 1870, About lost his home in Alsace. After the war he adopted a republican view and, combined with his inveterate anti-clerical stance, threw himself with passion into the battle against the conservative reaction. His paper, XIXe Siècle, became a force of considerable influence in those years. In 1884 About was elected a member of the Académie Française, but died a year later, before being able to take his seat there.

About's fame quickly faded. His novels and articles, though successful at the time, failed to sustain that success.

Source