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Hippolyte Taine

Hippolyte Adolphe Taine (French pronunciation: ​[ipɔlit adɔlf tɛn], 21 April 1828 – 5 March 1893) was a French historian, critic and philosopher. He was the chief theoretical influence on French naturalism, a major proponent of sociological positivism and one of the first practitioners of historicist criticism. Literary historicism as a critical movement has been said to originate with him.[3] Taine is also remembered for his attempts to provide a scientific account of literature.

Hippolyte Taine
Portrait of Hippolyte Taine by Léon Bonnat.
Born
Hippolyte Adolphe Taine

(1828-04-21)21 April 1828
Vouziers, France
Died5 March 1893(1893-03-05) (aged 64)
Paris, France
NationalityFrench
Academic background
Alma materÉcole Normale Supérieure
Influences
Academic work
School or traditionConservatism
Naturalism
Positivism
Main interestsPhilosophy of art · History of France · Political philosophy
Influenced
Signature

Taine had a profound effect on French literature; the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica asserted that "the tone which pervades the works of Zola, Bourget and Maupassant can be immediately attributed to the influence we call Taine's."[4] Out of the trauma of 1871, Taine has been said by one scholar to have "forged the architectural structure of modern French right-wing historiography."[5]

Early years

Taine was born in Vouziers[6] into a fairly prosperous Ardennes family. His father, a lawyer, his uncle, and his grandfather encouraged him to read eclectically and offered him art and music lessons.

In 1841, Taine, then aged 13, lost his father[4] and was sent to a boarding school in Paris, in the Institution Mathé, whose classes were conducted in the Collège Bourbon, located in the Batignolles district. He excelled in his studies and in 1847 obtained two Baccalauréat degrees (Science and Philosophy) and received the honorary prize of the concours. He was awarded a first in the entrance examination of the letters section of the École Normale Supérieure, to which he was admitted in November 1848.[4] Among the 24 students in the letters section, he is the classmate of Francisque Sarcey (who, in his Souvenirs de jeunesse ("Memories of Youth") painted a portrait of young Hippolyte at the Rue d'Ulm campus) and Edmond About. But his attitude—he had a reputation for stubbornness—and his intellectual independence from then fashionable ideas— embodied by Victor Cousin—caused him to fail the examination for the national Concours d’Agrégation in philosophy in 1851.[7] After his essay on sensation was rejected, he abandoned the social sciences and turned to literature.[8] Having relocated outside Paris, he took up teaching positions in Nevers and Poitiers, during which time he continued his intellectual development. In 1853, he obtained a doctorate at the Sorbonne. His thesis, Essai sur les fables de La Fontaine, would later be published in revised form in 1861. His subsequent "Essay on Livy" won a prize from the Académie française in 1854.[9]

Taine adopted the positivist and scientist ideas that emerged around this time.

After defending his doctorate, he was automatically transferred to Besançon, but he refused this assignment. He settled first in Paris, where he enrolled in the medical school. From there, he went on a medical cure in the Pyrénées in 1855, after which he wrote his famous Voyage aux Pyrénées, and began contributing numerous philosophical, literary, and historical articles to the Revue des deux Mondes and the Journal des débats, two major newspapers at the time.

He then took leave and travelled to England, where he spent six weeks. In 1863 he published his History of English Literature in five volumes. Bishop Félix Dupanloup, who had made it his career to oppose the election of agnostic intellectuals to the French Academy, opposed the latter's awarding Taine a prize for this work.[10] In 1868, he married Thérèse Denuelle, daughter of Alexandre Denuelle. They had two children: Geneviève, wife of Louis Paul-Dubois, and Émile.

The immense success of his work allowed him, not only to live by his pen, but also to be named professor of the History of Art and Aesthetics at the Ecole des Beaux Arts and professor of history and German at the École spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr.[11] He also taught at Oxford (1871), where he was a Doctor in Law. In 1878, he was elected member of the French Academy by 20 out of the 26 voters.[10] Taine was interested in many subjects, including art, literature, but especially history. Deeply shaken by the defeat of 1870, as well as by the insurrection (and violent repression) of the Paris Commune, Taine became fully devoted to his major historical work, The Origins of Contemporary France (1875–1893), on which he worked until his death, and which had a significant impact. Conceived by Taine with the aim of understanding the France of his day, the six-volume work achieved originality in its use of a long perspective to analyse the causes of the French Revolution. In particular, Taine denounced the artificiality of the revolution's political constructions (the excessively abstract and rational ideas of Robespierre, for example), which, in his mind, violently contradicted the natural and slow growth of the institutions of a State.

In 1885, while visiting the Hospital de la Salpêtrière, Taine and Joseph Delboeuf attended a session of hypnotism in which Jean-Martin Charcot induced vesications (blistering) by suggestion.

Taine died on 5 March 1893. He was buried in the Roc de Chère National Natural Reserve, Talloires, on the shores of Lake Annecy.[12] Taine had bought the Boringes property in Menthon-Saint-Bernard (in Haute-Savoie), in order to work there every summer, and had served as councillor of the commune.

Assessment

Taine's writing on the Revolution has remained popular in France. While admired by liberals like Anatole France, it has served to inform the conservative view of the Revolution, since Taine rejected its principles[13][14] as well as the French Constitution of 1793, on account of their being dishonestly presented to the people.[15] He argued that the Jacobins had responded to the centralisation of the ancien régime with even greater centralisation and favoured the individualism of his concepts of regionalism and nation. Taine's alternative to rationalist liberalism influenced the social policies of the Third Republic.[16]

On the other hand, Taine has likewise received criticism from across the political spectrum, his politics being idiosyncratic, complex, and difficult to define. Among others, attacks came from the Marxist historian George Rudé, a specialist in the French Revolution and in ‘history from below’, on account of Taine's view of the crowd;[17] and from the Freudian Peter Gay who described Taine's reaction to the Jacobins as stigmatisation.[18] Yet, Alfred Cobban, who advocated a revisionist view of the French Revolution in opposition to the orthodox Marxist school, considered Taine's account of the French Revolution "a brilliant polemic".[19] Taine's vision of the Revolution stands in contrast to the Marxist interpretations that gained prominence in the 20th century, as in the works of Albert Mathiez, Georges Lefebvre, and Albert Soboul, before the revisionist accounts of Alfred Cobban and François Furet.

Notwithstanding academic politics, when Alphonse Aulard, a historian of the French Revolution, analysed Taine's text, he showed that the numerous facts and examples presented by Taine to support his account proved substantially correct; few errors were found by Aulard—fewer than in his own texts, as reported by Augustin Cochin.

In his other writings Taine is known for his attempt to provide a scientific account of literature, a project that has linked him to sociological positivists, although there were important differences. In his view, the work of literature was the product of the author's environment, and an analysis of that environment could yield a perfect understanding of that work; this stands in contrast with the view that the work of literature is the spontaneous creation of genius. Taine based his analysis on categories such as "nation", "environment" or "situation", and "time".[20][21] Armin Koller has written that in this Taine drew heavily from the philosopher Johann Gottfried Herder, although this has been insufficiently recognised,[22] while the Spanish writer Emilia Pardo Bazán has suggested that a crucial predecessor to Taine's idea was Germaine de Staël’s work on the relationship between art and society.[2] Nationalist literary movements and post-modern critics alike have made use of Taine’s concepts, the former to argue for their unique and distinct place in literature[23] and the latter to deconstruct the texts with regards to the relationship between literature and social history.

Taine was criticised, including by Émile Zola who owed a great deal to him, for not taking sufficiently into account the individuality of the artist. Zola argued that an artist’s temperament could lead him to make unique artistic choices distinct from the environment that shaped him, and gave Édouard Manet as a principal example. Gustave Lanson argued that Taine’s environmental determinism could not account for his genius.[24]

Influence

Taine's influence on French intellectual culture and literature was significant. He had a special relationship, in particular, with Émile Zola.[25] As critic Philip Walker says of Zola, "In page after page, including many of his most memorable writings, we are presented with what amounts to a mimesis of the interplay between sensation and imagination which Taine studied at great length and out of which, he believed, emerges the world of the mind." The Spanish philosopher, Miguel de Unamuno, was fascinated with both Zola and Taine early on (although he eventually concluded that Taine's influence on literature had been negative).[26] Paul Bourget and Guy de Maupassant were also heavily influenced by Taine.

Taine shared a correspondence with the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, who later referred to him in Beyond Good and Evil as "the first of living historians".[27] He was also the subject of Stefan Zweig's doctoral thesis, "The Philosophy of Hippolyte Taine."[28] Taine was also read by Peter Kropotkin, who described him as truly understanding the French Revolution, because he "studied the movements preceding the revolution of July 14," or as he quoted Taine himself, "I know of three hundred outbreaks before July 14."[29]

Works

  • De Personis Platonicis (1853).
  • La Fontaine et ses Fables (1853–1861, Taine's doctoral thesis).
  • Voyage aux Pyrénées (1855–1860).
  • Essai sur Tite-Live (1856).[30]
  • Les Philosophes Classiques du XIXe Siècle en France (1857–1868).
  • Essais de Critique et d’Histoire (1858–1882).
  • Vie et Opinions Politiques d'un Chat (1858).
  • Histoire de la Littérature Anglaise (1864).[31]
  • Philosophie de l’Art (1865–1882).
  • Nouveaux Essais de Critique et d’Histoire (1865–1901).
  • Voyage en Italie (1866).
  • Notes sur Paris. Vie et Opinions de M. Frédéric-Thomas Graindorge (1867).
  • De l’Intelligence (1870).[32]
  • Du Suffrage Universel et de la Manière de Voter (1872).
  • Notes sur l’Angleterre (1872).
  • Les Origines de la France Contemporaine:
    • L’Ancien Régime (1875).
    • La Révolution: I – l’Anarchie (1878).
    • La Révolution: II – La Conquête Jacobine (1881).
    • La Révolution: III – Le Gouvernement Révolutionnaire (1883).
    • Le Régime Moderne (1890–1893).
  • Derniers Essais de Critique et d’Histoire (1894).
  • Carnets de Voyage: Notes sur la Province (1863–1897).
  • Étienne Mayran (1910).
  • H. Taine, sa Vie et sa Correspondance (1903–1907).

Works in English translation

  • The Philosophy of Art (1865).[33]
  • Italy, Rome and Naples (1868).
  • Art in Greece (1871).
  • Art in the Netherlands (1871).
  • English Positivism: A Study on John Stuart Mill (1870).
  • On Intelligence (1871, translated by T.D. Haye).
  • History of English Literature (1872, translated by Henry Van Laun, and revised 1906–07).[34][35][36]
  • Notes on England (1872, translated by William Fraser Rae; Edward Hyams, 1957).
  • The Ideal in Art (1874, translated by John Durand).
  • A Tour Through the Pyrenees (1874, translated by John Safford Fiske).
  • Lectures on Art (1875).
  • The Origins of Contemporary France (1876, translated by John Durand).[37][38]
  • Notes on Paris (1879, translated by John Austin Stevens).
  • Journeys Through France (1896).
  • Life and Letters of H. Taine (1902, translated by R.L. Devonshire).[39]

Selected articles

  • "Socialism as Government," The Contemporary Review, Vol. XLVI, October 1884.
  • "Napoleon's Views of Religion," The North American Review, Vol. 152, No. 414, 1891.
  • "On Style," Scribner’s Magazine, Vol. 334, No. 4329, 1928.

See also

References

  1. ^ Evans, Brad (2005). Before Cultures. University of Chicago Press, p. 90.
  2. ^ a b DuPont, Denise (2003). "Masculinity, Femininity, Solidarity: Emilia Pardo Bazan's Construction of Madame de Stael and George Sand". In: Comparative Literature Studies, Vol. 40, No. 4, 372–393.
  3. ^ Kelly, R. Gordon (1974). "Literature and the Historian". American Quarterly. 26 (2): 141–159. doi:10.2307/2712232. JSTOR 2712232.
  4. ^ a b c Baring, Maurice (1911). "Taine, Hippolyte Adolphe" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 26 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 360–363.
  5. ^ Susanna Barrows. Distorting Mirrors: Visions of the Crowd in Late Nineteenth-century France. New Haven: Yale U, 1981, p.83
  6. ^ Duclaux, Mary (1903). "The Youth of Taine," The Living Age, Vol. 236, pp. 545–560.
  7. ^ Lombardo, Patrizia (1990). "Hippolyte Taine Between Art and Science", Yale French Studies, Vol. 77, p. 119.
  8. ^ Wolfenstein, Martha (1944). "The Social Background of Taine's Philosophy of Art", Journal of the History of Ideas, Vol. 5, No. 3, p. 335.
  9. ^ Bosky.
  10. ^ a b Hippolyte TAINE | Académie française » [archive], sur academie-francaise.fr
  11. ^ "Hippolyte Adolphe Taine". Encyclopedia Britannica. ITA. Retrieved 15 February 2021.
  12. ^ Maison d'Hippolyte Taine » [archive], Fédération des Maisons d'écrivains et des patrimoines littéraires.
  13. ^ McElrone, Hugh P. (1887). "Taine’s Estimate of Napoleon Bonaparte," The Catholic World, Vol. 45, pp. 384–397.
  14. ^ Soltau, Roger Henry (1959). "Hippolyte Taine." In: French Political Thought in the 19th Century. New York: Russell & Russell, pp. 230–250.
  15. ^ Gay, 665.
  16. ^ Pitt, Alan (1998). "The Irrationalist Liberalism of Hippolyte Taine", The Historical Journal, Vol. 41, No. 4, p. 1051.
  17. ^ George Rudé, "Interpretations of the French Revolution", Historical Association Pamphlet, General Series, no. 47 (London, 1961)
  18. ^ Gay, Peter (1961). "Rhetoric and Politics in the French Revolution", The American Historical Review, Vol. 66, No. 3, p. 665.
  19. ^ Aulard, F.A. (1907). Taine – Historien de la Révolution Française. Paris: Librairie Armand Colant.
  20. ^ Terrier, Jean (2011). Visions of the Social: Society as a Political Project in France, 1750–1950. BRILL, pp. 25–26.
  21. ^ Hauser, Arnold (2012). "Art as a Product of Society." In: The Sociology of Art. Routledge, pp. 96–97.
  22. ^ "Taine's indebtedness to Herder has not yet fully been recognized. Every element of Taine's theory is containd in Herder's writings." – Koller, Armin H. (1912). "Johann Gottfried Herder and Hippolyte Taine: Their Theories of Milieu," PMLA, Vol. 27, p. xxxix.
  23. ^ Jones, R.A. (1933). "Taine and the Nationalists." In: The Social and Political Ideas of Some Representative Thinkers of the Victorian Age. New York: Barnes & Noble, Inc., pp. 222–249.
  24. ^ Wolff, Mark (2001). "Individuality and l'Esprit Français: On Gustave Lanson's Pedagogy", MLQ: Modern Language Quarterly, Vol. 62, No. 3, pp. 239–257.
  25. ^ Butler, Ronnie (1974). "Zola between Taine and Sainte-Beuve, 1863–1869," The Modern Language Review, Vol. 69, No. 2, pp. 279–289.
  26. ^ Basdekis, Demetrios (1973). "Unamuno and Zola: Notes on the Novel", Modern Language Notes, Vol. 88, No. 2, p. 369.
  27. ^ Nietzsche, Friedrich (1907). Beyond Good and Evil. New York: The Macmillan Company, p. 214.
  28. ^ Vanwesenbeeck, Birger & Mark H. Gelber (2014). Stefan Zweig and World Literature: Twenty-First-Century Perspectives. New York: Camden House, p. 102.
  29. ^ Peter Kropotkin (5 March 1902). "Kropotkin to Nettlau, March 5, 1902 : On Individualism and the Anarchist Movement in France". revoltlib.com.
  30. ^ Lombardo, Patrizia (1990). "Hippolyte Taine between Art and Science," Yale French Studies, No. 77, pp. 117–133.
  31. ^ Rae, W. Fraser (1864). "Taine's History of English Literature," The Westminster Review, Vol. 81, pp. 473–511.
  32. ^ Mill, John Stuart (1870). "On Taine's De l'Intelligence," The Fortnightly Review, Vol. XIV, pp. 121–124.
  33. ^ Rae, W. Fraser (1866). "H. Taine on Art and Italy," The Westminster Review, Vol. LXXXV, pp. 224–237.
  34. ^ Stephen, Leslie (1873). "Taine's History of English Literature," The Fortnightly Review, Vol. XX, pp. 693–714.
  35. ^ Sainte-Beuve, Charles Augustin (1890). "Taine’s 'History of English Literature'." In: Essays. London: Walter Scott. Ltd., pp. 228–265.
  36. ^ Schérer, Edmond (1891). "Taine's History of English Literature." In: Essays on English Literature. London: Sampson Low, Marston & Company, pp. 62–84.
  37. ^ Morley, John (1876). "M. Taine's New Work," The Fortnightly Review, Vol. XXV, pp. 370–384.
  38. ^ Gasquet, J.R. (1904). "Taine’s French Revolution." In: Studies Contributed to the "Dublin Review". Westminster: Art and Book Company, pp. 1–33.
  39. ^ Payne, William Morton (1904). "Letters of H.H. Taine", The International Quarterly, Vol. X, pp. 196–200.

Further reading

History

  • Belloc, Hilaire (1906). “Ten Pages of Taine,” The International Quarterly, Vol. 12, pp, 255–272.
  • Cobban, Alfred (1968). "Hippolyte Taine, Historian of the French Revolution," History, Vol. 53, No. 179, pp. 331–341.
  • DiVanna, Isabel (2010). Writing History in the Third Republic. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. excerpt and text search
  • Evans, Colin (1978). "Taine and his Fate," Nineteenth-century French Studies, Vol. 6, pp. 118–128.
  • Furet, François, and Mona Ozouf, eds. (1989). A Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution. Harvard University Press, pp. 1011–20.
  • Guérard, Albert Léon (1913). "Critics and Historians: Sainte-Beuve, Taine." In: French Prophets of Yesterday. New York: D. Appleton and Company, pp. 201–223.
  • Weinstein, Leo (1972). Hippolyte Taine. New York: Twayne Publishers.
  • Wilson, H. Schütz (1894). "Carlyle and Taine on the French Revolution," The Gentleman's Magazine, Vol. CCLXXVII, pp. 341–359.

Language and literature

  • Babbitt, Irving (1912). "Taine." In: The Masters of Modern French Criticism. New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, pp. 218–256.
  • Eustis, Alvin A. (1951). Hippolyte Taine and the Classical Genius. Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press.
  • Fouillée, Alfred (1902). “The Philosophy of Taine and Renan,” The International Quarterly, Vol. 6, pp. 260–280.
  • Kamuf, Peggy (1997). "The Analogy of Science: Taine." In: The Division of Literature: Or the University in Deconstruction. University of Chicago Press, pp. 85–92.
  • Lemaître, Jules (1921). "Hippolyte Taine." In: Literary Impressions. London: Daniel O’Connor, pp. 219–225.
  • Brown, Marshall (1997). "Why Style Matters: The Lessons of Taine's 'History of English Literature'." In: Turning Points. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 33–87.
  • Gates, Lewis E. (1900). "Taine's Influence as a Critic." In: Studies and Appreciations. New York: The Macmillan Company, pp. 192–204.
  • Morawski, Stefan (1963). "The Problem of Value and Criteria in Taine's Aesthetics," The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, Vol. 21, No. 4, pp. 407–421.
  • Nias, Hilary (1999). The Artificial Self: The Psychology of Hippolyte Taine. Oxford: Legenda.
  • Nitze, William & Dargan, E. Preston (1922). "The Philosophers: Comte, Taine, Renan." In: A History of French Literature. New York: Henry Holt & Company, pp. 645–656.
  • Rae, W. Fraser (1861). "The Critical Theory and Writings of H. Taine," The Westminster Review, Vol. 76, pp. 55–90.
  • Rawlinson, G.C. (1917). "Hippolyte Taine." In: Recent French Tendencies. London: Robert Scott, pp. 19–24.
  • Roe, F.C. (1949). "A Note on Taine's Conception of the English Mind." In: Studies in French Language, Literature and History. Cambridge University Press, pp. 189–192.
  • Sullivan, Jeremiah J. (1973). "Henry James and Hippolyte Taine: The Historical and Scientific Method in Literature," Comparative Literature Studies, Vol. 10, No. 1, pp. 25–50.
  • Thieme, Hugo P. (1902). "The Development of Taine Criticism since 1893," Part II, Modern Language Notes, Vol. 17, No. 2/3, pp. 36–41, 70–77.
  • Wellek, René (1959). "Hippolyte Taine's Literary Theory and Criticism," Criticism, Vol. 1, No. 1, pp. 1–18.
  • White, John S. (1943). "Taine on Race and Genius," Social Research, Vol. 10, No. 1, pp. 76–99.

External links

hippolyte, taine, hippolyte, adolphe, taine, french, pronunciation, ipɔlit, adɔlf, tɛn, april, 1828, march, 1893, french, historian, critic, philosopher, chief, theoretical, influence, french, naturalism, major, proponent, sociological, positivism, first, prac. Hippolyte Adolphe Taine French pronunciation ipɔlit adɔlf tɛn 21 April 1828 5 March 1893 was a French historian critic and philosopher He was the chief theoretical influence on French naturalism a major proponent of sociological positivism and one of the first practitioners of historicist criticism Literary historicism as a critical movement has been said to originate with him 3 Taine is also remembered for his attempts to provide a scientific account of literature Hippolyte TainePortrait of Hippolyte Taine by Leon Bonnat BornHippolyte Adolphe Taine 1828 04 21 21 April 1828Vouziers FranceDied5 March 1893 1893 03 05 aged 64 Paris FranceNationalityFrenchAcademic backgroundAlma materEcole Normale SuperieureInfluencesLivy La Fontaine Burke Herder 1 Germaine 2 Academic workSchool or traditionConservatismNaturalismPositivismMain interestsPhilosophy of art History of France Political philosophyInfluencedBourget Chmielowski Cobban France Koneczny Kuehnelt Leddihn Krzywicki Le Bon Maupassant Maurras Mosca Prus Sorel Unamuno early ZolaSignatureTaine had a profound effect on French literature the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica asserted that the tone which pervades the works of Zola Bourget and Maupassant can be immediately attributed to the influence we call Taine s 4 Out of the trauma of 1871 Taine has been said by one scholar to have forged the architectural structure of modern French right wing historiography 5 Contents 1 Early years 2 Assessment 3 Influence 4 Works 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 7 1 History 7 2 Language and literature 8 External linksEarly years EditTaine was born in Vouziers 6 into a fairly prosperous Ardennes family His father a lawyer his uncle and his grandfather encouraged him to read eclectically and offered him art and music lessons In 1841 Taine then aged 13 lost his father 4 and was sent to a boarding school in Paris in the Institution Mathe whose classes were conducted in the College Bourbon located in the Batignolles district He excelled in his studies and in 1847 obtained two Baccalaureat degrees Science and Philosophy and received the honorary prize of the concours He was awarded a first in the entrance examination of the letters section of the Ecole Normale Superieure to which he was admitted in November 1848 4 Among the 24 students in the letters section he is the classmate of Francisque Sarcey who in his Souvenirs de jeunesse Memories of Youth painted a portrait of young Hippolyte at the Rue d Ulm campus and Edmond About But his attitude he had a reputation for stubbornness and his intellectual independence from then fashionable ideas embodied by Victor Cousin caused him to fail the examination for the national Concours d Agregation in philosophy in 1851 7 After his essay on sensation was rejected he abandoned the social sciences and turned to literature 8 Having relocated outside Paris he took up teaching positions in Nevers and Poitiers during which time he continued his intellectual development In 1853 he obtained a doctorate at the Sorbonne His thesis Essai sur les fables de La Fontaine would later be published in revised form in 1861 His subsequent Essay on Livy won a prize from the Academie francaise in 1854 9 Taine adopted the positivist and scientist ideas that emerged around this time After defending his doctorate he was automatically transferred to Besancon but he refused this assignment He settled first in Paris where he enrolled in the medical school From there he went on a medical cure in the Pyrenees in 1855 after which he wrote his famous Voyage aux Pyrenees and began contributing numerous philosophical literary and historical articles to the Revue des deux Mondes and the Journal des debats two major newspapers at the time He then took leave and travelled to England where he spent six weeks In 1863 he published his History of English Literature in five volumes Bishop Felix Dupanloup who had made it his career to oppose the election of agnostic intellectuals to the French Academy opposed the latter s awarding Taine a prize for this work 10 In 1868 he married Therese Denuelle daughter of Alexandre Denuelle They had two children Genevieve wife of Louis Paul Dubois and Emile The immense success of his work allowed him not only to live by his pen but also to be named professor of the History of Art and Aesthetics at the Ecole des Beaux Arts and professor of history and German at the Ecole speciale militaire de Saint Cyr 11 He also taught at Oxford 1871 where he was a Doctor in Law In 1878 he was elected member of the French Academy by 20 out of the 26 voters 10 Taine was interested in many subjects including art literature but especially history Deeply shaken by the defeat of 1870 as well as by the insurrection and violent repression of the Paris Commune Taine became fully devoted to his major historical work The Origins of Contemporary France 1875 1893 on which he worked until his death and which had a significant impact Conceived by Taine with the aim of understanding the France of his day the six volume work achieved originality in its use of a long perspective to analyse the causes of the French Revolution In particular Taine denounced the artificiality of the revolution s political constructions the excessively abstract and rational ideas of Robespierre for example which in his mind violently contradicted the natural and slow growth of the institutions of a State In 1885 while visiting the Hospital de la Salpetriere Taine and Joseph Delboeuf attended a session of hypnotism in which Jean Martin Charcot induced vesications blistering by suggestion Taine died on 5 March 1893 He was buried in the Roc de Chere National Natural Reserve Talloires on the shores of Lake Annecy 12 Taine had bought the Boringes property in Menthon Saint Bernard in Haute Savoie in order to work there every summer and had served as councillor of the commune Assessment EditTaine s writing on the Revolution has remained popular in France While admired by liberals like Anatole France it has served to inform the conservative view of the Revolution since Taine rejected its principles 13 14 as well as the French Constitution of 1793 on account of their being dishonestly presented to the people 15 He argued that the Jacobins had responded to the centralisation of the ancien regime with even greater centralisation and favoured the individualism of his concepts of regionalism and nation Taine s alternative to rationalist liberalism influenced the social policies of the Third Republic 16 On the other hand Taine has likewise received criticism from across the political spectrum his politics being idiosyncratic complex and difficult to define Among others attacks came from the Marxist historian George Rude a specialist in the French Revolution and in history from below on account of Taine s view of the crowd 17 and from the Freudian Peter Gay who described Taine s reaction to the Jacobins as stigmatisation 18 Yet Alfred Cobban who advocated a revisionist view of the French Revolution in opposition to the orthodox Marxist school considered Taine s account of the French Revolution a brilliant polemic 19 Taine s vision of the Revolution stands in contrast to the Marxist interpretations that gained prominence in the 20th century as in the works of Albert Mathiez Georges Lefebvre and Albert Soboul before the revisionist accounts of Alfred Cobban and Francois Furet Notwithstanding academic politics when Alphonse Aulard a historian of the French Revolution analysed Taine s text he showed that the numerous facts and examples presented by Taine to support his account proved substantially correct few errors were found by Aulard fewer than in his own texts as reported by Augustin Cochin In his other writings Taine is known for his attempt to provide a scientific account of literature a project that has linked him to sociological positivists although there were important differences In his view the work of literature was the product of the author s environment and an analysis of that environment could yield a perfect understanding of that work this stands in contrast with the view that the work of literature is the spontaneous creation of genius Taine based his analysis on categories such as nation environment or situation and time 20 21 Armin Koller has written that in this Taine drew heavily from the philosopher Johann Gottfried Herder although this has been insufficiently recognised 22 while the Spanish writer Emilia Pardo Bazan has suggested that a crucial predecessor to Taine s idea was Germaine de Stael s work on the relationship between art and society 2 Nationalist literary movements and post modern critics alike have made use of Taine s concepts the former to argue for their unique and distinct place in literature 23 and the latter to deconstruct the texts with regards to the relationship between literature and social history Taine was criticised including by Emile Zola who owed a great deal to him for not taking sufficiently into account the individuality of the artist Zola argued that an artist s temperament could lead him to make unique artistic choices distinct from the environment that shaped him and gave Edouard Manet as a principal example Gustave Lanson argued that Taine s environmental determinism could not account for his genius 24 Influence EditTaine s influence on French intellectual culture and literature was significant He had a special relationship in particular with Emile Zola 25 As critic Philip Walker says of Zola In page after page including many of his most memorable writings we are presented with what amounts to a mimesis of the interplay between sensation and imagination which Taine studied at great length and out of which he believed emerges the world of the mind The Spanish philosopher Miguel de Unamuno was fascinated with both Zola and Taine early on although he eventually concluded that Taine s influence on literature had been negative 26 Paul Bourget and Guy de Maupassant were also heavily influenced by Taine Taine shared a correspondence with the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche who later referred to him in Beyond Good and Evil as the first of living historians 27 He was also the subject of Stefan Zweig s doctoral thesis The Philosophy of Hippolyte Taine 28 Taine was also read by Peter Kropotkin who described him as truly understanding the French Revolution because he studied the movements preceding the revolution of July 14 or as he quoted Taine himself I know of three hundred outbreaks before July 14 29 Works EditDe Personis Platonicis 1853 La Fontaine et ses Fables 1853 1861 Taine s doctoral thesis Voyage aux Pyrenees 1855 1860 Essai sur Tite Live 1856 30 Les Philosophes Classiques du XIXe Siecle en France 1857 1868 Essais de Critique et d Histoire 1858 1882 Vie et Opinions Politiques d un Chat 1858 Histoire de la Litterature Anglaise 1864 31 Philosophie de l Art 1865 1882 Nouveaux Essais de Critique et d Histoire 1865 1901 Voyage en Italie 1866 Notes sur Paris Vie et Opinions de M Frederic Thomas Graindorge 1867 De l Intelligence 1870 32 Du Suffrage Universel et de la Maniere de Voter 1872 Notes sur l Angleterre 1872 Les Origines de la France Contemporaine L Ancien Regime 1875 La Revolution I l Anarchie 1878 La Revolution II La Conquete Jacobine 1881 La Revolution III Le Gouvernement Revolutionnaire 1883 Le Regime Moderne 1890 1893 Derniers Essais de Critique et d Histoire 1894 Carnets de Voyage Notes sur la Province 1863 1897 Etienne Mayran 1910 H Taine sa Vie et sa Correspondance 1903 1907 Works in English translation The Philosophy of Art 1865 33 Italy Rome and Naples 1868 Art in Greece 1871 Art in the Netherlands 1871 English Positivism A Study on John Stuart Mill 1870 On Intelligence 1871 translated by T D Haye History of English Literature 1872 translated by Henry Van Laun and revised 1906 07 34 35 36 Notes on England 1872 translated by William Fraser Rae Edward Hyams 1957 The Ideal in Art 1874 translated by John Durand A Tour Through the Pyrenees 1874 translated by John Safford Fiske Lectures on Art 1875 The Origins of Contemporary France 1876 translated by John Durand 37 38 Notes on Paris 1879 translated by John Austin Stevens Journeys Through France 1896 Life and Letters of H Taine 1902 translated by R L Devonshire 39 Selected articles Socialism as Government The Contemporary Review Vol XLVI October 1884 Napoleon s Views of Religion The North American Review Vol 152 No 414 1891 On Style Scribner s Magazine Vol 334 No 4329 1928 See also EditBoleslaw Prus Piotr Chmielowski Thomas BlackwellReferences Edit Evans Brad 2005 Before Cultures University of Chicago Press p 90 a b DuPont Denise 2003 Masculinity Femininity Solidarity Emilia Pardo Bazan s Construction of Madame de Stael and George Sand In Comparative Literature Studies Vol 40 No 4 372 393 Kelly R Gordon 1974 Literature and the Historian American Quarterly 26 2 141 159 doi 10 2307 2712232 JSTOR 2712232 a b c Baring Maurice 1911 Taine Hippolyte Adolphe In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 26 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 360 363 Susanna Barrows Distorting Mirrors Visions of the Crowd in Late Nineteenth century France New Haven Yale U 1981 p 83 Duclaux Mary 1903 The Youth of Taine The Living Age Vol 236 pp 545 560 Lombardo Patrizia 1990 Hippolyte Taine Between Art and Science Yale French Studies Vol 77 p 119 Wolfenstein Martha 1944 The Social Background of Taine s Philosophy of Art Journal of the History of Ideas Vol 5 No 3 p 335 Bosky a b Hippolyte TAINE Academie francaise archive sur academie francaise fr Hippolyte Adolphe Taine Encyclopedia Britannica ITA Retrieved 15 February 2021 Maison d Hippolyte Taine archive Federation des Maisons d ecrivains et des patrimoines litteraires McElrone Hugh P 1887 Taine s Estimate of Napoleon Bonaparte The Catholic World Vol 45 pp 384 397 Soltau Roger Henry 1959 Hippolyte Taine In French Political Thought in the 19th Century New York Russell amp Russell pp 230 250 Gay 665 Pitt Alan 1998 The Irrationalist Liberalism of Hippolyte Taine The Historical Journal Vol 41 No 4 p 1051 George Rude Interpretations of the French Revolution Historical Association Pamphlet General Series no 47 London 1961 Gay Peter 1961 Rhetoric and Politics in the French Revolution The American Historical Review Vol 66 No 3 p 665 Aulard F A 1907 Taine Historien de la Revolution Francaise Paris Librairie Armand Colant Terrier Jean 2011 Visions of the Social Society as a Political Project in France 1750 1950 BRILL pp 25 26 Hauser Arnold 2012 Art as a Product of Society In The Sociology of Art Routledge pp 96 97 Taine s indebtedness to Herder has not yet fully been recognized Every element of Taine s theory is containd in Herder s writings Koller Armin H 1912 Johann Gottfried Herder and Hippolyte Taine Their Theories of Milieu PMLA Vol 27 p xxxix Jones R A 1933 Taine and the Nationalists In The Social and Political Ideas of Some Representative Thinkers of the Victorian Age New York Barnes amp Noble Inc pp 222 249 Wolff Mark 2001 Individuality and l Esprit Francais On Gustave Lanson s Pedagogy MLQ Modern Language Quarterly Vol 62 No 3 pp 239 257 Butler Ronnie 1974 Zola between Taine and Sainte Beuve 1863 1869 The Modern Language Review Vol 69 No 2 pp 279 289 Basdekis Demetrios 1973 Unamuno and Zola Notes on the Novel Modern Language Notes Vol 88 No 2 p 369 Nietzsche Friedrich 1907 Beyond Good and Evil New York The Macmillan Company p 214 Vanwesenbeeck Birger amp Mark H Gelber 2014 Stefan Zweig and World Literature Twenty First Century Perspectives New York Camden House p 102 Peter Kropotkin 5 March 1902 Kropotkin to Nettlau March 5 1902 On Individualism and the Anarchist Movement in France revoltlib com Lombardo Patrizia 1990 Hippolyte Taine between Art and Science Yale French Studies No 77 pp 117 133 Rae W Fraser 1864 Taine s History of English Literature The Westminster Review Vol 81 pp 473 511 Mill John Stuart 1870 On Taine s De l Intelligence The Fortnightly Review Vol XIV pp 121 124 Rae W Fraser 1866 H Taine on Art and Italy The Westminster Review Vol LXXXV pp 224 237 Stephen Leslie 1873 Taine s History of English Literature The Fortnightly Review Vol XX pp 693 714 Sainte Beuve Charles Augustin 1890 Taine s History of English Literature In Essays London Walter Scott Ltd pp 228 265 Scherer Edmond 1891 Taine s History of English Literature In Essays on English Literature London Sampson Low Marston amp Company pp 62 84 Morley John 1876 M Taine s New Work The Fortnightly Review Vol XXV pp 370 384 Gasquet J R 1904 Taine s French Revolution In Studies Contributed to the Dublin Review Westminster Art and Book Company pp 1 33 Payne William Morton 1904 Letters of H H Taine The International Quarterly Vol X pp 196 200 Further reading EditHistory Edit Belloc Hilaire 1906 Ten Pages of Taine The International Quarterly Vol 12 pp 255 272 Cobban Alfred 1968 Hippolyte Taine Historian of the French Revolution History Vol 53 No 179 pp 331 341 DiVanna Isabel 2010 Writing History in the Third Republic Cambridge Scholars Publishing excerpt and text search Evans Colin 1978 Taine and his Fate Nineteenth century French Studies Vol 6 pp 118 128 Furet Francois and Mona Ozouf eds 1989 A Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution Harvard University Press pp 1011 20 Guerard Albert Leon 1913 Critics and Historians Sainte Beuve Taine In French Prophets of Yesterday New York D Appleton and Company pp 201 223 Weinstein Leo 1972 Hippolyte Taine New York Twayne Publishers Wilson H Schutz 1894 Carlyle and Taine on the French Revolution The Gentleman s Magazine Vol CCLXXVII pp 341 359 Language and literature Edit Babbitt Irving 1912 Taine In The Masters of Modern French Criticism New York Houghton Mifflin Company pp 218 256 Eustis Alvin A 1951 Hippolyte Taine and the Classical Genius Berkeley Calif University of California Press Fouillee Alfred 1902 The Philosophy of Taine and Renan The International Quarterly Vol 6 pp 260 280 Kamuf Peggy 1997 The Analogy of Science Taine In The Division of Literature Or the University in Deconstruction University of Chicago Press pp 85 92 Lemaitre Jules 1921 Hippolyte Taine In Literary Impressions London Daniel O Connor pp 219 225 Brown Marshall 1997 Why Style Matters The Lessons of Taine s History of English Literature In Turning Points Stanford Stanford University Press 33 87 Gates Lewis E 1900 Taine s Influence as a Critic In Studies and Appreciations New York The Macmillan Company pp 192 204 Morawski Stefan 1963 The Problem of Value and Criteria in Taine s Aesthetics The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism Vol 21 No 4 pp 407 421 Nias Hilary 1999 The Artificial Self The Psychology of Hippolyte Taine Oxford Legenda Nitze William amp Dargan E Preston 1922 The Philosophers Comte Taine Renan In A History of French Literature New York Henry Holt amp Company pp 645 656 Rae W Fraser 1861 The Critical Theory and Writings of H Taine The Westminster Review Vol 76 pp 55 90 Rawlinson G C 1917 Hippolyte Taine In Recent French Tendencies London Robert Scott pp 19 24 Roe F C 1949 A Note on Taine s Conception of the English Mind In Studies in French Language Literature and History Cambridge University Press pp 189 192 Sullivan Jeremiah J 1973 Henry James and Hippolyte Taine The Historical and Scientific Method in Literature Comparative Literature Studies Vol 10 No 1 pp 25 50 Thieme Hugo P 1902 The Development of Taine Criticism since 1893 Part II Modern Language Notes Vol 17 No 2 3 pp 36 41 70 77 Wellek Rene 1959 Hippolyte Taine s Literary Theory and Criticism Criticism Vol 1 No 1 pp 1 18 White John S 1943 Taine on Race and Genius Social Research Vol 10 No 1 pp 76 99 External links Edit Wikisource has original works by or about Hippolyte Taine Wikiquote has quotations related to Hippolyte Taine Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hippolyte Taine Works by Hippolyte Taine at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Hippolyte Taine at Internet Archive Works by Hippolyte Taine at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Works by Hippolyte Taine at Hathi Trust Johns Hopkins Guide to Literary Theory Article on Taine Obituary from The Times Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hippolyte Taine amp oldid 1159051607, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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