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Wikipedia

Guy de Maupassant

Henri René Albert Guy de Maupassant (UK: /ˈmpæsɒ̃/,[1][2] US: /ˈmpəsɒnt, ˌmpəˈsɒ̃/;[2][3][4][5] French: [ɡi d(ə) mopasɑ̃]; 5 August 1850 – 6 July 1893) was a 19th-century French author, remembered as a master of the short story form, as well as a representative of the Naturalist school, who depicted human lives, destinies and social forces in disillusioned and often pessimistic terms.

Guy de Maupassant
Photograph by Nadar
BornHenri René Albert Guy de Maupassant
(1850-08-05)5 August 1850
Tourville-sur-Arques, Normandy, France
Died6 July 1893(1893-07-06) (aged 42)
Passy, Paris, France
Resting placeMontparnasse Cemetery, Paris
Pen nameGuy de Valmont, Joseph Prunier
OccupationNovelist, short story writer, poet
GenreNaturalism, Realism
Signature

Maupassant was a protégé of Gustave Flaubert and his stories are characterized by economy of style and efficient, seemingly effortless dénouements. Many are set during the Franco-Prussian War of the 1870s, describing the futility of war and the innocent civilians who, caught up in events beyond their control, are permanently changed by their experiences. He wrote 300 short stories, six novels, three travel books, and one volume of verse. His first published story, "Boule de Suif" ("The Dumpling", 1880), is often considered his most famous work.

Biography

 
Guy de Maupassant at 7 years of age
 
Guy de Maupassant and his mother
 
His father, Gustave de Maupassant, by Hippolyte Bellangé

Henri-René-Albert-Guy de Maupassant, born on 5 August 1850 at the late 16th-century Château de Miromesnil (near Dieppe in the Seine-Inférieure (now Seine-Maritime) department in France), was the first son of Laure Le Poittevin and Gustave de Maupassant, who both came from prosperous bourgeois families. His mother urged her husband when they married in 1846 to obtain the right to use the particule or form "de Maupassant" instead of "Maupassant" as his family name, in order to indicate noble birth.[6] Gustave discovered a certain Jean-Baptiste Maupassant, conseiller-secrétaire to the King, who had been ennobled in 1752.[6] He then obtained from the Tribunal Civil of Rouen by decree dated 9 July 1846 the right to style himself "de Maupassant" instead of "Maupassant", and this was his surname at the birth of his son Guy in 1850.[7]

When Maupassant was 11 and his brother Hervé was five, his mother, an independent-minded woman, risked social disgrace to obtain a legal separation from her husband, who was violent towards her.

After the separation, Laure Le Poittevin kept her two sons. In the absence of the father, Maupassant's mother became the most influential figure in the young boy's life.[8] She was an exceptionally well-read woman and was very fond of classical literature, particularly Shakespeare. Until the age of thirteen, Guy lived happily with his mother, at Étretat in Normandy. At the Villa des Verguies, between the sea and the luxuriant countryside, he grew very fond of fishing and of outdoor activities. When Guy reached the age of thirteen, his mother placed her two sons as day boarders in a private school, the Institution Leroy-Petit, in Rouen—the Institution Robineau of Maupassant's story La Question du Latin—for classical studies.[9] From his early education he retained a marked hostility to religion, and to judge from verses composed around this time he deplored the ecclesiastical atmosphere, its ritual and discipline.[10] Finding the place unbearable, he finally got himself expelled in his penultimate year.[11]

In 1867, as he entered junior high school, Maupassant met Gustave Flaubert at Croisset [fr] at the insistence of his mother.[12] Next year, in autumn, he was sent to the Lycée Pierre-Corneille in Rouen[13] where he proved a good scholar, indulging in poetry and taking a prominent part in theatricals. In October 1868, at the age of 18, he saved the famous poet Algernon Charles Swinburne from drowning off the coast of Étretat.[14]

The Franco-Prussian War broke out soon after his graduation from college in 1870; he enlisted as a volunteer. In 1871, he left Normandy and moved to Paris, where he spent ten years as a clerk in the Navy Department. During this time his only recreation and relaxation was boating on the Seine on Sundays and holidays.

Gustave Flaubert took him under his protection and acted as a kind of literary guardian to him, guiding his debut in journalism and literature. At Flaubert's home he met Émile Zola (1840-1902) and the Russian novelist Ivan Turgenev (1818-1883), as well as many of the proponents of the realist and naturalist schools. He wrote and himself played (1875) in a comedy - "À la feuille de rose, maison turque" - with Flaubert's blessing.

In 1878, he was transferred to the Ministry of Public Instruction and became a contributing editor to several leading newspapers such as Le Figaro, Gil Blas, Le Gaulois and l'Écho de Paris. He devoted his spare time to writing novels and short stories.

 
Maupassant's working office, illustrated by Gustave Fraipont

In 1880 he published what is considered his first masterpiece, "Boule de Suif", which met with instant and tremendous success. Flaubert characterized it as "a masterpiece that will endure". This, Maupassant's first piece of short fiction set during the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-1871, was followed by short stories such as "Deux Amis", "Mother Savage", and "Mademoiselle Fifi".

 
Maupassant at the beginning of his most productive decade

The decade from 1880 to 1891 was the most fertile period of Maupassant's life. Made famous by his first short story, he worked methodically and produced two or sometimes four volumes annually. His talent and practical business sense made him wealthy.

In 1881 he published his first volume of short stories under the title of La Maison Tellier; it reached its twelfth edition within two years. In 1883 he finished his first novel, Une Vie (translated into English as A Woman's Life), 25,000 copies of which were sold in less than a year. His second novel, Bel-Ami, which came out in 1885, had thirty-seven printings in four months.

His editor, Havard, commissioned him to write more stories, and Maupassant continued to produce them efficiently and frequently. At this time he wrote what many consider his greatest novel, Pierre et Jean (1888).

With a natural aversion to society, he loved retirement, solitude, and meditation. He traveled extensively in Algeria, Italy, England, Brittany, Sicily, and the Auvergne, and from each voyage brought back a new volume. He cruised on his private yacht Bel-Ami, named after his novel. This life did not prevent him from making friends among the literary celebrities of his day: Alexandre Dumas, fils had a paternal affection for him; at Aix-les-Bains he met Hippolyte Taine (1828-1893) and became devoted to the philosopher-historian.

Flaubert continued to act as his literary godfather. His friendship with the Goncourts was of short duration; his frank and practical nature reacted against the ambiance of gossip, scandal, duplicity, and invidious criticism that the two brothers had created around them in the guise of an 18th-century style salon.

Maupassant was one of a fair number of 19th-century Parisians (including Charles Gounod, Alexandre Dumas, fils, and Charles Garnier) who did not care for the Eiffel Tower[15] (erected in 1887-1889). He often ate lunch in the restaurant at its base, not out of preference for the food but because only there could he avoid seeing its otherwise unavoidable profile.[16] He and forty-six other Parisian literary and artistic notables attached their names to an elaborately irate letter of protest against the tower's construction, written to the Minister of Public Works, and published on 14 February 1887.[17]

Maupassant also wrote under several pseudonyms, including "Joseph Prunier", "Guy de Valmont", and "Maufrigneuse" (which he used from 1881 to 1885).

In his later years he developed a constant desire for solitude, an obsession for self-preservation, and a fear of death and paranoia of persecution caused by the syphilis he had contracted in his youth. It has been suggested that his brother, Hervé, also suffered from syphilis and that the disease may have been congenital.[18] On 2 January 1892, Maupassant tried to commit suicide by cutting his throat; he was committed to the private asylum of Esprit Blanche at Passy, in Paris, where he died (6 July 1893) from syphilis.

 
Engraving of Maupassant, by Marcellin Desboutin.

Maupassant penned his own epitaph: "I have coveted everything and taken pleasure in nothing." He is buried in Section 26 of the Montparnasse Cemetery, Paris.

Significance

Maupassant is considered a father of the modern short story. Literary theorist Kornelije Kvas wrote that along "with Chekhov, Maupassant is the greatest master of the short story in world literature. He is not a naturalist like Zola; to him, physiological processes do not constitute the basis of human actions, although the influence of the environment is manifested in his prose. In many respects, Maupassant's naturalism is Schopenhauerian anthropological pessimism, as he is often harsh and merciless when it comes to depicting human nature. He owes most to Flaubert, from whom he learned to use a concise and measured style and to establish a distance towards the object of narration."[19] He delighted in clever plotting, and served as a model for Somerset Maugham and O. Henry in this respect. One of his famous short stories, "The Necklace", was imitated with a twist by Maugham ("Mr Know-All", "A String of Beads"). Henry James's "Paste" adapts another story of his with a similar title, "The Jewels".

Taking his cue from Balzac, Maupassant wrote comfortably in both the high-Realist and fantastic modes; stories and novels such as "L'Héritage" and Bel-Ami aim to recreate Third-Republic France in a realistic way, whereas many of the short stories (notably "Le Horla" and "Qui sait?") describe apparently supernatural phenomena.

The supernatural in Maupassant, however, is often implicitly a symptom of the protagonists' troubled minds; Maupassant was fascinated by the burgeoning discipline of psychiatry, and attended the public lectures of Jean-Martin Charcot between 1885 and 1886.[20]

Legacy

 
Guy de Maupassant early in his career; by Alphonse Liébert.

Leo Tolstoy used Maupassant as the subject for one of his essays on art: The Works of Guy de Maupassant. His stories are second only to Shakespeare in their inspiration of movie adaptations with films ranging from Stagecoach, Oyuki the Virgin and Masculine Feminine.[21]

Friedrich Nietzsche's autobiography mentions him in the following text:

"I cannot at all conceive in which century of history one could haul together such inquisitive and at the same time delicate psychologists as one can in contemporary Paris: I can name as a sample – for their number is by no means small, ... or to pick out one of the stronger race, a genuine Latin to whom I am particularly attached, Guy de Maupassant."

William Saroyan wrote a short story about Maupassant in his 1971 book, Letters from 74 rue Taitbout or Don't Go But If You Must Say Hello To Everybody.

Isaac Babel wrote a short story about him, “Guy de Maupassant.” It appears in The Collected Stories of Isaac Babel and in the story anthology You’ve Got To Read This: Contemporary American Writers Introduce Stories that Held Them in Awe.

Gene Roddenberry, in an early draft for The Questor Tapes, wrote a scene in which the android Questor employs Maupassant's theory that, "the human female will open her mind to a man to whom she has opened other channels of communications."[This quote needs a citation] In the script Questor copulates with a woman to obtain information that she is reluctant to impart. Due to complaints from NBC executives, this part of the script was never filmed.[22]

Michel Drach directed and co-wrote a 1982 French biographical film: Guy de Maupassant. Claude Brasseur stars as the titular character.

Several of Maupassant's short stories, including "La Peur" and "The Necklace", were adapted as episodes of the 1986 Indian anthology television series Katha Sagar.

Bibliography

Short stories

  • "A Country Excursion"
  • "A Coup d'État"
  • "A Coward"
  • "A Cremation"
  • "Abandoned"
  • "The Accent"
  • "An Adventure in Paris"
  • "Afloat"
  • "After"
  • "After wars"
  • "Alexandre"
  • "All Over"
  • "Allouma"
  • "An Artifice"
  • "At Sea"
  • "Babette"
  • "The Baroness"
  • "Bed 29"
  • "Belhomme's Beast"
  • "Bertha"
  • "Beside Schopenhauer's Corpse"
  • "Boitelle"
  • "Châli"
  • "Coco"
  • "Confessing"
  • "The Accursed Bread"
  • "The Adopted Son"
  • "The Apparition"
  • "The Artist"
  • "The Baroness"
  • "The Beggar"
  • "The Blind Man"
  • "Boule de Suif" (Ball of Fat)
  • "The Cake"
  • "The Capture of Walter Schnaffs"
  • "The Child"
  • "The Christening"
  • "Clair de Lune"
  • "Cleopatra in Paris"
  • "Clochette"
  • "A Cock Crowed"
  • "The Colonel's Ideas"
  • "The Confession"
  • "The Corsican Bandit"
  • "The Cripple"
  • "A Crisis"
  • "The Dead Girl (a.k.a. "Was it a Dream?")"
  • "Dead Woman's Secret"
  • "The Deaf Mute"
  • "Denis"
  • "The Devil"
  • "The Diamond Necklace"
  • "The Diary of a Madman"
  • "Discovery"
  • "The Dispenser of Holy Water"
  • "The Donkey"
  • "The Door"
  • "The Dowry"
  • "Dreams"
  • "The Drowned Man"
  • "The Drunkard"
  • "Duchoux"
  • "A Duel"
  • "The Effeminates"
  • "The Englishman of Etretat"
  • "Epiphany"
  • "The False Gems"
  • "A Family"
  • "A Family Affair"
  • "Farewell"
  • "The Farmer's Wife"
  • "Father Matthew"
  • "A Father's Confession"
  • "The Fishing Hole"
  • "Fascination"
  • "The Father"
  • "Father Milon"
  • "Fear"
  • "Femme Fatale"
  • "The First Snowfall"
  • "Florentine"
  • "Forbidden Fruit"
  • "Forgiveness"
  • "Found on a Drowned Man"
  • "Friend Joseph"
  • "Friend Patience"
  • "The Frontier"
  • "The Gamekeeper"
  • "A Ghost"
  • "Ghosts"
  • "The Grave"
  • "The Graveyard Sisterhood"
  • "The Hairpin"
  • "The Hand"
  • "Growing Old"
  • "Happiness"
  • "Hautot Senior and Hautot Junior"
  • "His Avenger"
  • "The Highway Man"
  • "The Horla, or Modern Ghosts"
  • "The Horrible"
  • "The Hostelry"
  • "A Humble Drama"
  • "The Impolite Sex"
  • "In the Country"
  • "In the Spring"
  • "In the Wood"
  • "Indiscretion"
  • "The Inn"
  • "The Jewelry"
  • "Julie Romaine"
  • "The Kiss"
  • "The Lancer's Wife"
  • "Lasting Love"
  • "Legend of Mont St. Michel"
  • "The Legion of Honour"
  • "Lieutenant Lare's Marriage"
  • "The Little Cask"
  • "Little Louise Roque"
  • "A Lively Friend"
  • "The Log"
  • "Looking Back"
  • "The Love of Long Ago"
  • "Madame Baptiste"
  • "Madame Hermet"
  • "Madame Husson's Rosier"
  • "Madame Parisse"
  • "Madame Tellier's Establishment"
  • "Mademoiselle Cocotte"
  • "Mademoiselle Fifi"
  • "Mademoiselle Pearl"
  • "The Maison Tellier"
  • "The Magic Couch"
  • "Magnetism"
  • "Mamma Stirling"
  • "The Man with the Pale Eyes"
  • "The Marquis de Fumerol"
  • "Marroca"
  • "Martine"
  • "The Mask"
  • "A Meeting"
  • "A Million" (Un Million)
  • "Minuet"
  • "Misti"
  • "Miss Harriet"
  • "The Model"
  • "Moiron"
  • "Monsieur Parent"
  • "Moonlight"
  • "The Moribund"
  • "Mother and Son"
  • "A Mother of Monsters"
  • "Mother Sauvage"
  • "The Mountain Pool"
  • "The Mustache"
  • "My Twenty-Five Days"
  • "My Uncle Jules"
  • "My Uncle Sosthenes"
  • "My Wife"
  • "The Necklace"
  • "A New Year's Gift"
  • "The Night: A Nightmare"
  • "No Quarter" (French Le père Milon)
  • "A Normandy Joke"
  • "Old Amable"
  • "Old Judas"
  • "An Old Man"
  • "The Old Man"
  • "Old Mongilet"
  • "On Horseback"
  • "On the River"
  • "On a Spring Evening"
  • "The Orphan"
  • "Our Friends The English"
  • "Our Letters"
  • "A Parricide"
  • "The Parrot"
  • "A Passion"
  • "The Patron"
  • "The Penguin's Rock"
  • "The Piece of String"
  • "Pierrot"
  • "Pierre et Jean"
  • "The Port"
  • "A Portrait"
  • "The Prisoners"
  • "The Protector"
  • "Queen Hortense"
  • "A Queer Night in Paris"
  • "The Question of Latin"
  • "The Rabbit"
  • "A Recollection"
  • "Regret"
  • "The Rendez-vous"
  • "Revenge"
  • "The Relic"
  • "The Reward"
  • "Roger's Method"
  • "Roly-Poly" (Boule de Suif)
  • "The Rondoli Sisters"
  • "Rosalie Prudent"
  • "Rose"
  • "Rust"
  • "A Sale"
  • "Saint Anthony"
  • "The Shepherd's Leap"
  • "The Signal"
  • "Simon's Papa"
  • "The Snipe"
  • "The Son"
  • "Solitude"
  • "The Story of a Farm Girl"
  • "A Stroll"
  • "The Spasm"
  • "Suicides"
  • "Sundays of a Bourgeois"
  • "The Terror"
  • "The Test"
  • "That Costly Ride"
  • "That Pig of a Morin"
  • "Theodule Sabot's Confession"
  • "The Thief"
  • "Timbuctoo"
  • "Toine"
  • "Tombstones"
  • "Travelling"
  • "A Tress of Hair"
  • "The Trip of the Horla"
  • "True Story"
  • "Two Friends"
  • "Two Little Soldiers"
  • "The Umbrella"
  • "An Uncomfortable Bed"
  • "The Unknown"
  • "Useless Beauty"
  • "A Vagabond"
  • "A Vendetta"
  • "The Venus of Branzia"
  • "En Voyage"
  • "Waiter, a "Bock"
  • "The Wardrobe"
  • "Was it a Dream?"
  • "A Wedding Gift"
  • "Who Knows?"
  • "A Widow"
  • "The Will"
  • "The Wolf"
  • "The Wooden Shoes"
  • "The Wreck"
  • "The Wrong House"
  • "Yvette Samoris"

Novels

  • Une Vie (1883)
  • Bel-Ami (1885)
  • Mont-Oriol (1887)
  • Pierre et Jean (1888)
  • Fort comme la mort (1889)
  • Notre Cœur (1890)
  • L'Angelus (1910) - unfinished
  • L'Âmé Éntrangère (1910) - unfinished

Short-story collections

  • Les Soirées de Médan (with Zola, Huysmans et al. Contains Boule de Suif by Maupassant) (1880)
  • La Maison Tellier (1881)
  • Mademoiselle Fifi (1883)
  • Contes de la Bécasse (1883)
  • Duchoux[23]
  • Miss Harriet (1884)
  • Les Sœurs Rondoli (1884)
  • Clair de lune (1884) (contains "Les Bijoux")
  • Yvette (1884)
  • Contes du jour et de la nuit (1885) (contains "La Parure" or "The Necklace")
  • Monsieur Parent (1886)
  • La Petite Roque (1886)
  • Toine (1886)
  • Le Horla (1887)
  • Le Rosier de Madame Husson (1888)
  • La Main gauche (1889)
  • L'Inutile Beauté (1890)

Travel writing

  • Au soleil (1884)
  • Sur l'eau (1888)
  • La Vie errante (1890)

Poetry

  • Des Vers (1880)[24] containing Nuit de Neige

References

  1. ^ . Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 16 July 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Maupassant, Guy de". Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English. Longman. Retrieved 21 August 2019.
  3. ^ "Maupassant". Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.
  4. ^ "Maupassant". Collins English Dictionary. HarperCollins. Retrieved 21 August 2019.
  5. ^ "Maupassant". Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Retrieved 21 August 2019.
  6. ^ a b Alain-Claude Gicquel, Maupassant, tel un météore, Le Castor Astral, 1993, p. 12
  7. ^ Gicquel, Alain-Claude (1993). Maupassant, tel un météore: biographie. Collection "Les inattendus", number 218 (in French). Le Castor Astral. p. 12, 32. ISBN 9782859202187. Retrieved 7 October 2022.
  8. ^ "Guy de Maupassant Biography". enotes. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  9. ^ Maupassant, Choix de Contes, Cambridge, p. viii, 1945
  10. ^ de Maupassant, Guy (1984). Le Horla et autres contes d'angoisse (in French) (2006 ed.). Paris: Flammarion. p. 233. ISBN 978-2-0807-1300-1.
  11. ^ "Biographie de Guy de Maupassant". @lalettre.com. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  12. ^ "Maupassant's Apprenticeship with Flaubert".
  13. ^ "Lycée Pierre Corneille de Rouen - History". Lgcorneille-lyc.spip.ac-rouen.fr. 19 April 1944. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
  14. ^ Clyde K. Hyder, Algernon Swinburne: The Critical Heritage, 1995, p. 185.
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on 13 October 2013.
  16. ^ Barthes, Roland. The Eiffel Tower and Other Mythologies. Tr. Howard, Richard. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-20982-4. Page 1.
  17. ^ Loyrette, Henri (1985). Gustave Eiffel. Rizzoli. p. 174. ISBN 9780847806317. Retrieved 7 October 2022. 'We, writers, painters, sculptors, architects and passionate devotees of the hitherto untouched beauty of Paris, protest with all our strength, with all our indignation in the name of slighted French taste, against the erection [...] of this useless and monstrous Eiffel Tower [...] To bring our arguments home, imagine for a moment a giddy, ridiculous tower dominating Paris like a gigantic black smokestack, crushing under its barbaric bulk Notre Dame, the Tour Saint-Jacques, the Louvre, the Dome of les Invalides, the Arc de Triomphe, all of our humiliated monuments will disappear in this ghastly dream. And for twenty years [...] we shall see stretching like a blot of ink the hateful shadow of the hateful column of bolted sheet metal.'
  18. ^ "Remembering Maupassant | Arts and Entertainment | BBC World Service". Bbc.co.uk. 9 August 2000. Retrieved 13 March 2018.
  19. ^ Kvas, Kornelije (2019). The Boundaries of Realism in World Literature. Lanham, Boulder, New York, London: Lexington Books. p. 131. ISBN 978-1-7936-0910-6.
  20. ^ Pierre Bayard, Maupassant, juste avant Freud (Paris: Minuit, 1998)
  21. ^ Richard Brody (26 October 2015). "The Writer Who Sparks the Finest Movie Adaptations". The New Yorker. Retrieved 31 October 2015.
  22. ^ [Quoted from the track "The Questor Affair" from the album Inside Star Trek.]
  23. ^ "'Duchoux' by Guy De Maupassant | Major English | Class 12 - Mero Notice". Retrieved 5 April 2021.
  24. ^ The Tales of Maupassant. New York: Heritage Press. 1964.

Further reading

  • Abamine, E. P. "German-French Sexual Encounters of the Franco-Prussian War Period in the Fiction of Guy de Maupassant." CLA Journal 32.3 (1989): 323–334. online
  • Dugan, John Raymond. Illusion and reality: a study of descriptive techniques in the works of Guy de Maupassant (Walter de Gruyter, 2014).
  • Fagley, Robert. Bachelors, Bastards, and Nomadic Masculinity: Illegitimacy in Guy de Maupassant and André Gide (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2014) online (PDF).
  • Harris, Trevor A. Le V. Maupassant in the Hall of Mirrors: Ironies of Repetition in the Work of Guy de Maupassant (Springer, 1990).
  • Rougle, Charles. "Art and the Artist in Babel's" Guy de Maupassant"." The Russian Review 48.2 (1989): 171–180. online
  • Sattar, Atia. "Certain Madness: Guy de Maupassant and Hypnotism". Configurations 19.2 (2011): 213–241. regarding both versions of his horror story "The Horla" (1886/87). online
  • Stivale, Charles J. The art of rupture: narrative desire and duplicity in the tales of Guy de Maupassant (University of Michigan Press, 1994).

External links

  • Works by Guy de Maupassant in eBook form at Standard Ebooks
  • Works by Guy de Maupassant at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Guy de Maupassant at Internet Archive
  • Guy de Maupassant timeline and stories at AsNotedIn.com
  • Complete list of stories by Guy de Maupassant at Prospero's Isle.com
  • Works by Guy de Maupassant at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Université McGill: le roman selon les romanciers 4 August 2021 at the Wayback Machine Recensement et analyse des écrits non romanesques de Guy de Maupassant
  • Works by Guy de Maupassant at Online Literature (HTML)
  • (in French)
  • Works by Guy de Maupassant (text, concordances and frequency list)
  • Maupassantiana, a French scholar's website on Maupassant and his works
  • Petri Liukkonen. "Guy de Maupassant". Books and Writers
  • Oeuvres de Maupassant, à Athena (in French)
  • Guy de Maupassant's The Jewels audiobook with video at YouTube
  • Guy de Maupassant's The Jewels audiobook at Libsyn

maupassant, this, article, surname, maupassant, maupassant, henri, rené, albert, french, mopasɑ, august, 1850, july, 1893, 19th, century, french, author, remembered, master, short, story, form, well, representative, naturalist, school, depicted, human, lives, . In this article the surname is Maupassant not de Maupassant Henri Rene Albert Guy de Maupassant UK ˈ m oʊ p ae s ɒ 1 2 US ˈ m oʊ p e s ɒ n t ˌ m oʊ p e ˈ s ɒ 2 3 4 5 French ɡi d e mopasɑ 5 August 1850 6 July 1893 was a 19th century French author remembered as a master of the short story form as well as a representative of the Naturalist school who depicted human lives destinies and social forces in disillusioned and often pessimistic terms Guy de MaupassantPhotograph by NadarBornHenri Rene Albert Guy de Maupassant 1850 08 05 5 August 1850Tourville sur Arques Normandy FranceDied6 July 1893 1893 07 06 aged 42 Passy Paris FranceResting placeMontparnasse Cemetery ParisPen nameGuy de Valmont Joseph PrunierOccupationNovelist short story writer poetGenreNaturalism RealismSignatureMaupassant was a protege of Gustave Flaubert and his stories are characterized by economy of style and efficient seemingly effortless denouements Many are set during the Franco Prussian War of the 1870s describing the futility of war and the innocent civilians who caught up in events beyond their control are permanently changed by their experiences He wrote 300 short stories six novels three travel books and one volume of verse His first published story Boule de Suif The Dumpling 1880 is often considered his most famous work Contents 1 Biography 2 Significance 3 Legacy 4 Bibliography 4 1 Short stories 4 2 Novels 4 3 Short story collections 4 4 Travel writing 4 5 Poetry 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksBiography Edit Guy de Maupassant at 7 years of age Guy de Maupassant and his mother His father Gustave de Maupassant by Hippolyte Bellange Henri Rene Albert Guy de Maupassant born on 5 August 1850 at the late 16th century Chateau de Miromesnil near Dieppe in the Seine Inferieure now Seine Maritime department in France was the first son of Laure Le Poittevin and Gustave de Maupassant who both came from prosperous bourgeois families His mother urged her husband when they married in 1846 to obtain the right to use the particule or form de Maupassant instead of Maupassant as his family name in order to indicate noble birth 6 Gustave discovered a certain Jean Baptiste Maupassant conseiller secretaire to the King who had been ennobled in 1752 6 He then obtained from the Tribunal Civil of Rouen by decree dated 9 July 1846 the right to style himself de Maupassant instead of Maupassant and this was his surname at the birth of his son Guy in 1850 7 When Maupassant was 11 and his brother Herve was five his mother an independent minded woman risked social disgrace to obtain a legal separation from her husband who was violent towards her After the separation Laure Le Poittevin kept her two sons In the absence of the father Maupassant s mother became the most influential figure in the young boy s life 8 She was an exceptionally well read woman and was very fond of classical literature particularly Shakespeare Until the age of thirteen Guy lived happily with his mother at Etretat in Normandy At the Villa des Verguies between the sea and the luxuriant countryside he grew very fond of fishing and of outdoor activities When Guy reached the age of thirteen his mother placed her two sons as day boarders in a private school the Institution Leroy Petit in Rouen the Institution Robineau of Maupassant s story La Question du Latin for classical studies 9 From his early education he retained a marked hostility to religion and to judge from verses composed around this time he deplored the ecclesiastical atmosphere its ritual and discipline 10 Finding the place unbearable he finally got himself expelled in his penultimate year 11 In 1867 as he entered junior high school Maupassant met Gustave Flaubert at Croisset fr at the insistence of his mother 12 Next year in autumn he was sent to the Lycee Pierre Corneille in Rouen 13 where he proved a good scholar indulging in poetry and taking a prominent part in theatricals In October 1868 at the age of 18 he saved the famous poet Algernon Charles Swinburne from drowning off the coast of Etretat 14 The Franco Prussian War broke out soon after his graduation from college in 1870 he enlisted as a volunteer In 1871 he left Normandy and moved to Paris where he spent ten years as a clerk in the Navy Department During this time his only recreation and relaxation was boating on the Seine on Sundays and holidays Gustave Flaubert took him under his protection and acted as a kind of literary guardian to him guiding his debut in journalism and literature At Flaubert s home he met Emile Zola 1840 1902 and the Russian novelist Ivan Turgenev 1818 1883 as well as many of the proponents of the realist and naturalist schools He wrote and himself played 1875 in a comedy A la feuille de rose maison turque with Flaubert s blessing In 1878 he was transferred to the Ministry of Public Instruction and became a contributing editor to several leading newspapers such as Le Figaro Gil Blas Le Gaulois and l Echo de Paris He devoted his spare time to writing novels and short stories Maupassant s working office illustrated by Gustave Fraipont In 1880 he published what is considered his first masterpiece Boule de Suif which met with instant and tremendous success Flaubert characterized it as a masterpiece that will endure This Maupassant s first piece of short fiction set during the Franco Prussian War of 1870 1871 was followed by short stories such as Deux Amis Mother Savage and Mademoiselle Fifi Maupassant at the beginning of his most productive decade The decade from 1880 to 1891 was the most fertile period of Maupassant s life Made famous by his first short story he worked methodically and produced two or sometimes four volumes annually His talent and practical business sense made him wealthy In 1881 he published his first volume of short stories under the title of La Maison Tellier it reached its twelfth edition within two years In 1883 he finished his first novel Une Vie translated into English as A Woman s Life 25 000 copies of which were sold in less than a year His second novel Bel Ami which came out in 1885 had thirty seven printings in four months His editor Havard commissioned him to write more stories and Maupassant continued to produce them efficiently and frequently At this time he wrote what many consider his greatest novel Pierre et Jean 1888 With a natural aversion to society he loved retirement solitude and meditation He traveled extensively in Algeria Italy England Brittany Sicily and the Auvergne and from each voyage brought back a new volume He cruised on his private yacht Bel Ami named after his novel This life did not prevent him from making friends among the literary celebrities of his day Alexandre Dumas fils had a paternal affection for him at Aix les Bains he met Hippolyte Taine 1828 1893 and became devoted to the philosopher historian Flaubert continued to act as his literary godfather His friendship with the Goncourts was of short duration his frank and practical nature reacted against the ambiance of gossip scandal duplicity and invidious criticism that the two brothers had created around them in the guise of an 18th century style salon Maupassant was one of a fair number of 19th century Parisians including Charles Gounod Alexandre Dumas fils and Charles Garnier who did not care for the Eiffel Tower 15 erected in 1887 1889 He often ate lunch in the restaurant at its base not out of preference for the food but because only there could he avoid seeing its otherwise unavoidable profile 16 He and forty six other Parisian literary and artistic notables attached their names to an elaborately irate letter of protest against the tower s construction written to the Minister of Public Works and published on 14 February 1887 17 Maupassant also wrote under several pseudonyms including Joseph Prunier Guy de Valmont and Maufrigneuse which he used from 1881 to 1885 In his later years he developed a constant desire for solitude an obsession for self preservation and a fear of death and paranoia of persecution caused by the syphilis he had contracted in his youth It has been suggested that his brother Herve also suffered from syphilis and that the disease may have been congenital 18 On 2 January 1892 Maupassant tried to commit suicide by cutting his throat he was committed to the private asylum of Esprit Blanche at Passy in Paris where he died 6 July 1893 from syphilis Engraving of Maupassant by Marcellin Desboutin Maupassant penned his own epitaph I have coveted everything and taken pleasure in nothing He is buried in Section 26 of the Montparnasse Cemetery Paris Significance EditMaupassant is considered a father of the modern short story Literary theorist Kornelije Kvas wrote that along with Chekhov Maupassant is the greatest master of the short story in world literature He is not a naturalist like Zola to him physiological processes do not constitute the basis of human actions although the influence of the environment is manifested in his prose In many respects Maupassant s naturalism is Schopenhauerian anthropological pessimism as he is often harsh and merciless when it comes to depicting human nature He owes most to Flaubert from whom he learned to use a concise and measured style and to establish a distance towards the object of narration 19 He delighted in clever plotting and served as a model for Somerset Maugham and O Henry in this respect One of his famous short stories The Necklace was imitated with a twist by Maugham Mr Know All A String of Beads Henry James s Paste adapts another story of his with a similar title The Jewels Taking his cue from Balzac Maupassant wrote comfortably in both the high Realist and fantastic modes stories and novels such as L Heritage and Bel Ami aim to recreate Third Republic France in a realistic way whereas many of the short stories notably Le Horla and Qui sait describe apparently supernatural phenomena The supernatural in Maupassant however is often implicitly a symptom of the protagonists troubled minds Maupassant was fascinated by the burgeoning discipline of psychiatry and attended the public lectures of Jean Martin Charcot between 1885 and 1886 20 Legacy Edit Guy de Maupassant early in his career by Alphonse Liebert Leo Tolstoy used Maupassant as the subject for one of his essays on art The Works of Guy de Maupassant His stories are second only to Shakespeare in their inspiration of movie adaptations with films ranging from Stagecoach Oyuki the Virgin and Masculine Feminine 21 Friedrich Nietzsche s autobiography mentions him in the following text I cannot at all conceive in which century of history one could haul together such inquisitive and at the same time delicate psychologists as one can in contemporary Paris I can name as a sample for their number is by no means small or to pick out one of the stronger race a genuine Latin to whom I am particularly attached Guy de Maupassant William Saroyan wrote a short story about Maupassant in his 1971 book Letters from 74 rue Taitbout or Don t Go But If You Must Say Hello To Everybody Isaac Babel wrote a short story about him Guy de Maupassant It appears in The Collected Stories of Isaac Babel and in the story anthology You ve Got To Read This Contemporary American Writers Introduce Stories that Held Them in Awe Gene Roddenberry in an early draft for The Questor Tapes wrote a scene in which the android Questor employs Maupassant s theory that the human female will open her mind to a man to whom she has opened other channels of communications This quote needs a citation In the script Questor copulates with a woman to obtain information that she is reluctant to impart Due to complaints from NBC executives this part of the script was never filmed 22 Michel Drach directed and co wrote a 1982 French biographical film Guy de Maupassant Claude Brasseur stars as the titular character Several of Maupassant s short stories including La Peur and The Necklace were adapted as episodes of the 1986 Indian anthology television series Katha Sagar Bibliography EditSee also Guy de Maupassant bibliography and List of Short Stories by Guy de Maupassant Short stories Edit This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items January 2012 A Country Excursion A Coup d Etat A Coward A Cremation Abandoned The Accent An Adventure in Paris Afloat After After wars Alexandre All Over Allouma An Artifice At Sea Babette The Baroness Bed 29 Belhomme s Beast Bertha Beside Schopenhauer s Corpse Boitelle Chali Coco Confessing The Accursed Bread The Adopted Son The Apparition The Artist The Baroness The Beggar The Blind Man Boule de Suif Ball of Fat The Cake The Capture of Walter Schnaffs The Child The Christening Clair de Lune Cleopatra in Paris Clochette A Cock Crowed The Colonel s Ideas The Confession The Corsican Bandit The Cripple A Crisis The Dead Girl a k a Was it a Dream Dead Woman s Secret The Deaf Mute Denis The Devil The Diamond Necklace The Diary of a Madman Discovery The Dispenser of Holy Water The Donkey The Door The Dowry Dreams The Drowned Man The Drunkard Duchoux A Duel The Effeminates The Englishman of Etretat Epiphany The False Gems A Family A Family Affair Farewell The Farmer s Wife Father Matthew A Father s Confession The Fishing Hole Fascination The Father Father Milon Fear Femme Fatale The First Snowfall Florentine Forbidden Fruit Forgiveness Found on a Drowned Man Friend Joseph Friend Patience The Frontier The Gamekeeper A Ghost Ghosts The Grave The Graveyard Sisterhood The Hairpin The Hand Growing Old Happiness Hautot Senior and Hautot Junior His Avenger The Highway Man The Horla or Modern Ghosts The Horrible The Hostelry A Humble Drama The Impolite Sex In the Country In the Spring In the Wood Indiscretion The Inn The Jewelry Julie Romaine The Kiss The Lancer s Wife Lasting Love Legend of Mont St Michel The Legion of Honour Lieutenant Lare s Marriage The Little Cask Little Louise Roque A Lively Friend The Log Looking Back The Love of Long Ago Madame Baptiste Madame Hermet Madame Husson s Rosier Madame Parisse Madame Tellier s Establishment Mademoiselle Cocotte Mademoiselle Fifi Mademoiselle Pearl The Maison Tellier The Magic Couch Magnetism Mamma Stirling The Man with the Pale Eyes The Marquis de Fumerol Marroca Martine The Mask A Meeting A Million Un Million Minuet Misti Miss Harriet The Model Moiron Monsieur Parent Moonlight The Moribund Mother and Son A Mother of Monsters Mother Sauvage The Mountain Pool The Mustache My Twenty Five Days My Uncle Jules My Uncle Sosthenes My Wife The Necklace A New Year s Gift The Night A Nightmare No Quarter French Le pere Milon A Normandy Joke Old Amable Old Judas An Old Man The Old Man Old Mongilet On Horseback On the River On a Spring Evening The Orphan Our Friends The English Our Letters A Parricide The Parrot A Passion The Patron The Penguin s Rock The Piece of String Pierrot Pierre et Jean The Port A Portrait The Prisoners The Protector Queen Hortense A Queer Night in Paris The Question of Latin The Rabbit A Recollection Regret The Rendez vous Revenge The Relic The Reward Roger s Method Roly Poly Boule de Suif The Rondoli Sisters Rosalie Prudent Rose Rust A Sale Saint Anthony The Shepherd s Leap The Signal Simon s Papa The Snipe The Son Solitude The Story of a Farm Girl A Stroll The Spasm Suicides Sundays of a Bourgeois The Terror The Test That Costly Ride That Pig of a Morin Theodule Sabot s Confession The Thief Timbuctoo Toine Tombstones Travelling A Tress of Hair The Trip of the Horla True Story Two Friends Two Little Soldiers The Umbrella An Uncomfortable Bed The Unknown Useless Beauty A Vagabond A Vendetta The Venus of Branzia En Voyage Waiter a Bock The Wardrobe Was it a Dream A Wedding Gift Who Knows A Widow The Will The Wolf The Wooden Shoes The Wreck The Wrong House Yvette Samoris Novels Edit Une Vie 1883 Bel Ami 1885 Mont Oriol 1887 Pierre et Jean 1888 Fort comme la mort 1889 Notre Cœur 1890 L Angelus 1910 unfinished L Ame Entrangere 1910 unfinishedShort story collections Edit Les Soirees de Medan with Zola Huysmans et al Contains Boule de Suif by Maupassant 1880 La Maison Tellier 1881 Mademoiselle Fifi 1883 Contes de la Becasse 1883 Duchoux 23 Miss Harriet 1884 Les Sœurs Rondoli 1884 Clair de lune 1884 contains Les Bijoux Yvette 1884 Contes du jour et de la nuit 1885 contains La Parure or The Necklace Monsieur Parent 1886 La Petite Roque 1886 Toine 1886 Le Horla 1887 Le Rosier de Madame Husson 1888 La Main gauche 1889 L Inutile Beaute 1890 Travel writing Edit Au soleil 1884 Sur l eau 1888 La Vie errante 1890 Poetry Edit Des Vers 1880 24 containing Nuit de NeigeReferences Edit Maupassant Guy de Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 16 July 2021 a b Maupassant Guy de Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Longman Retrieved 21 August 2019 Maupassant Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary Maupassant Collins English Dictionary HarperCollins Retrieved 21 August 2019 Maupassant Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved 21 August 2019 a b Alain Claude Gicquel Maupassant tel un meteore Le Castor Astral 1993 p 12 Gicquel Alain Claude 1993 Maupassant tel un meteore biographie Collection Les inattendus number 218 in French Le Castor Astral p 12 32 ISBN 9782859202187 Retrieved 7 October 2022 Guy de Maupassant Biography enotes Retrieved 9 December 2014 Maupassant Choix de Contes Cambridge p viii 1945 de Maupassant Guy 1984 Le Horla et autres contes d angoisse in French 2006 ed Paris Flammarion p 233 ISBN 978 2 0807 1300 1 Biographie de Guy de Maupassant lalettre com Retrieved 9 December 2014 Maupassant s Apprenticeship with Flaubert Lycee Pierre Corneille de Rouen History Lgcorneille lyc spip ac rouen fr 19 April 1944 Retrieved 13 March 2018 Clyde K Hyder Algernon Swinburne The Critical Heritage 1995 p 185 The Tower of Babel Criticism of Eiffel Tower Archived from the original on 13 October 2013 Barthes Roland The Eiffel Tower and Other Mythologies Tr Howard Richard Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 20982 4 Page 1 Loyrette Henri 1985 Gustave Eiffel Rizzoli p 174 ISBN 9780847806317 Retrieved 7 October 2022 We writers painters sculptors architects and passionate devotees of the hitherto untouched beauty of Paris protest with all our strength with all our indignation in the name of slighted French taste against the erection of this useless and monstrous Eiffel Tower To bring our arguments home imagine for a moment a giddy ridiculous tower dominating Paris like a gigantic black smokestack crushing under its barbaric bulk Notre Dame the Tour Saint Jacques the Louvre the Dome of les Invalides the Arc de Triomphe all of our humiliated monuments will disappear in this ghastly dream And for twenty years we shall see stretching like a blot of ink the hateful shadow of the hateful column of bolted sheet metal Remembering Maupassant Arts and Entertainment BBC World Service Bbc co uk 9 August 2000 Retrieved 13 March 2018 Kvas Kornelije 2019 The Boundaries of Realism in World Literature Lanham Boulder New York London Lexington Books p 131 ISBN 978 1 7936 0910 6 Pierre Bayard Maupassant juste avant Freud Paris Minuit 1998 Richard Brody 26 October 2015 The Writer Who Sparks the Finest Movie Adaptations The New Yorker Retrieved 31 October 2015 Quoted from the track The Questor Affair from the album Inside Star Trek Duchoux by Guy De Maupassant Major English Class 12 Mero Notice Retrieved 5 April 2021 The Tales of Maupassant New York Heritage Press 1964 Further reading EditAbamine E P German French Sexual Encounters of the Franco Prussian War Period in the Fiction of Guy de Maupassant CLA Journal 32 3 1989 323 334 online Dugan John Raymond Illusion and reality a study of descriptive techniques in the works of Guy de Maupassant Walter de Gruyter 2014 Fagley Robert Bachelors Bastards and Nomadic Masculinity Illegitimacy in Guy de Maupassant and Andre Gide Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2014 online PDF Harris Trevor A Le V Maupassant in the Hall of Mirrors Ironies of Repetition in the Work of Guy de Maupassant Springer 1990 Rougle Charles Art and the Artist in Babel s Guy de Maupassant The Russian Review 48 2 1989 171 180 online Sattar Atia Certain Madness Guy de Maupassant and Hypnotism Configurations 19 2 2011 213 241 regarding both versions of his horror story The Horla 1886 87 online Stivale Charles J The art of rupture narrative desire and duplicity in the tales of Guy de Maupassant University of Michigan Press 1994 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Guy de Maupassant Wikimedia Commons has media related to Guy de Maupassant Wikisource has original works by or about Maupassant Works by Guy de Maupassant in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by Guy de Maupassant at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Guy de Maupassant at Internet Archive Guy de Maupassant timeline and stories at AsNotedIn com Complete list of stories by Guy de Maupassant at Prospero s Isle com Works by Guy de Maupassant at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Universite McGill le roman selon les romanciers Archived 4 August 2021 at the Wayback Machine Recensement et analyse des ecrits non romanesques de Guy de Maupassant Works by Guy de Maupassant at Online Literature HTML Works by Guy de Maupassant in Ebooks in French Works by Guy de Maupassant text concordances and frequency list Maupassantiana a French scholar s website on Maupassant and his works Petri Liukkonen Guy de Maupassant Books and Writers Oeuvres de Maupassant a Athena in French Guy de Maupassant s The Jewels audiobook with video at YouTube Guy de Maupassant s The Jewels audiobook at Libsyn Portal Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Guy de Maupassant amp oldid 1131190079, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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