fbpx
Wikipedia

Pierre Loti

Pierre Loti (French: [lɔti]; pseudonym of Louis Marie-Julien Viaud [vjo]; 14 January 1850 – 10 June 1923)[1] was a French naval officer and novelist, known for his exotic novels and short stories.[2]

Louis Marie-Julien Viaud
Pierre Loti on the day of his reception at the Académie Française, 7 April 1892
Born(1850-01-14)14 January 1850
Rochefort, Charente-Maritime, France
Died10 June 1923(1923-06-10) (aged 73)
Hendaye, France
Pen namePierre Loti
OccupationFrench navy officer, novelist
NationalityFrench
Signature

Biography

Born to a Protestant family,[3] Loti's education began in his birthplace, Rochefort, Charente-Maritime. At age 17 he entered the naval school in Brest and studied at Le Borda. He gradually rose in his profession, attaining the rank of captain in 1906. In January 1910 he went on the reserve list. He was in the habit of claiming that he never read books, saying to the Académie française on the day of his introduction (7 April 1892), "Loti ne sait pas lire" ("Loti doesn't know how to read"), but testimony from friends proves otherwise, as does his library, much of which is preserved in his house in Rochefort. In 1876 fellow naval officers persuaded him to turn into a novel passages in his diary dealing with some curious experiences in Istanbul. The result was the anonymously published Aziyadé (1879), part romance, part autobiography, like the work of his admirer, Marcel Proust, after him.

Loti proceeded to the South Seas as part of his naval training, living in Papeete, Tahiti for two months in 1872, where he "went native". Several years later he published the Polynesian idyll originally titled Rarahu (1880), which was reprinted as Le Mariage de Loti, the first book to introduce him to the wider public. His narrator explains that the name Loti was bestowed on him by the natives, after his mispronunciation of "roti" (a red flower). The book inspired the 1883 opera Lakmé by Léo Delibes. Loti Bain, a shallow pool at the base of the Fautaua Falls, is named for Loti.[4]

This was followed by Le Roman d'un spahi (1881), a record of the melancholy adventures of a soldier in Senegal. In 1882, Loti issued a collection of four shorter pieces, three stories and a travel piece, under the general title of Fleurs d'ennui (Flowers of Boredom).

In 1883 Loti achieved a wider public spotlight. First, he published the critically acclaimed Mon Frère Yves (My Brother Yves), a novel describing the life of a French naval officer (Pierre Loti), and a Breton sailor (Yves Kermadec, inspired by Loti companion Pierre le Cor), described by Edmund Gosse as "one of his most characteristic productions". Second, while serving in Tonkin (northern Vietnam) as a naval officer aboard the ironclad Atalante, Loti published three articles in the newspaper Le Figaro in September and October 1883 about atrocities that occurred during the Battle of Thuận An (20 August 1883), an attack by the French on the Vietnamese coastal defenses of Hue. He was threatened with suspension from the service for this indiscretion, thus gaining wider public notoriety. In 1884 his friend Émile Pouvillon dedicated his novel L'Innocent to Loti.

In 1886 Loti published a novel of life among the Breton fisherfolk, called Pêcheur d'Islande (An Iceland Fisherman), which Edmund Gosse characterized as "the most popular and finest of all his writings."[2] It shows Loti adapting some of the Impressionist techniques of contemporary painters, especially Monet, to prose, and is a classic of French literature. In 1887 he brought out a volume "of extraordinary merit, which has not received the attention it deserves", Propos d'exil, a series of short studies of exotic places, in his characteristic semi-autobiographic style. Madame Chrysanthème, a novel of Japanese manners that is a precursor to Madama Butterfly and Miss Saigon (a combination of narrative and travelogue) was published the same year.[5]

 
Loti (right) with "Chrysanthème" and Pierre le Cor in Japan, 1885.

In 1890 Loti published Au Maroc, the record of a journey to Fez in company with a French embassy, and Le Roman d'un enfant (The Story of a Child), a somewhat fictionalized recollection of Loti's childhood that would greatly influence Marcel Proust. A collection of "strangely confidential and sentimental reminiscences", called Le Livre de la pitié et de la mort (The Book of Pity and Death) was published in 1891.

Loti was aboard ship at the port of Algiers when news reached him of his election, on 21 May 1891, to the Académie française. In 1892 he published Fantôme d'orient, a short novel derived from a subsequent trip to Constantinople, less a continuation of Aziyadé than a commentary on it. He described a visit to the Holy Land in three volumes, The Desert, Jerusalem, and Galilee, (1895–1896), and wrote a novel, Ramuntcho (1897), a story of contraband runners in the Basque province. In 1898 he collected his later essays as Figures et Choses qui passaient (Passing Figures and Things).

 
Loti caricatured by Guth for Vanity Fair, 1895

In 1899 and 1900 Loti visited British India, with the view of describing what he saw; the result appeared in 1903 in L'Inde (sans les anglais) (India (without the English)). During the autumn of 1900 he went to China as part of the international expedition sent to combat the Boxer Rebellion. He described what he saw there after the siege of Peking in Les Derniers Jours de Pékin (The Last Days of Peking, 1902).

Loti's later publications include: La Troisième jeunesse de Mme Prune (The Third Youth of Mrs. Plum, 1905), which resulted from a return visit to Japan and once again hovers between narrative and travelog; Les Désenchantées (The Unawakened, 1906); La Mort de Philae (The Death of Philae, 1908), recounting a trip to Egypt; Judith Renaudin (produced at the Théâtre Antoine, 1898), a five-act historical play that Loti presented as based on an episode in his family history; and, in collaboration with Emile Vedel, a translation of William Shakespeare's King Lear, produced at the Théâtre Antoine in 1904. Les Désenchantées, which concerned women of the Turkish harem, was based like many of Loti's books, on fact. It has, however, become clear that Loti was in fact the victim of a hoax by three prosperous Turkish women.[6]

In 1912 at the Century Theatre in New York City, Loti mounted a production of The Daughter of Heaven, a George Egerton adaptation of his French play La fille du ciel, commissioned in March 1903 by Sarah Bernhardt, written in collaboration with Judith Gautier and published in 1911.[7][8][9][10] The play was never performed in France, since apparently Bernhardt lost interest when she learned she would have to wear a black wig over her red hair.[11] In New York the title role was performed by Viola Allen.[8]

He died in 1923 in Hendaye and was interred on the island of Oléron with a state funeral.

Loti was an inveterate collector and his marriage into wealth helped him support this habit. His house in Rochefort, a remarkable reworking of two adjacent bourgeois row houses, is preserved as a museum.[12] One elaborately tiled room is an Orientalist fantasia of a mosque, including a small fountain and five ceremoniously draped coffins containing desiccated bodies. Another room evokes a medieval banqueting hall. Loti's own bedroom is rather like a monk's cell, but mixes Christian and Muslim religious artifacts. The courtyard described in The Story of a Child, with the fountain built for him by his older brother, is still there. There is also a museum in Istanbul named after him located on a hill where Loti used to spend his free time during his sojourn in Turkey.

Works

 
Portrait of Pierre Loti by Henri Rousseau, 1891

Contemporary critic Edmund Gosse gave the following assessment of his work:[2]

At his best Pierre Loti was unquestionably the finest descriptive writer of the day. In the delicate exactitude with which he reproduced the impression given to his own alert nerves by unfamiliar forms, colors, sounds and perfumes, he was without a rival. But he was not satisfied with this exterior charm; he desired to blend with it a moral sensibility of the extremest refinement, at once sensual and ethereal. Many of his best books are long sobs of remorseful memory, so personal, so intimate, that an English reader is amazed to find such depth of feeling compatible with the power of minutely and publicly recording what is felt. In spite of the beauty and melody and fragrance of Loti's books his mannerisms are apt to pall upon the reader, and his later books of pure description were rather empty. His greatest successes were gained in the species of confession, half-way between fact and fiction, which he essayed in his earlier books. When all his limitations, however, have been rehearsed, Pierre Loti remains, in the mechanism of style and cadence, one of the most original and most perfect French writers of the second half of the 19th century.

Bibliography

  • Aziyadé (1879)
  • Le Mariage de Loti (originally titled Rarahu (1880)
  • Le Roman d'un spahi (1881)
  • Fleurs d'ennui (1882)
  • Mon Frère Yves (1883) (English translation My Brother Yves)
  • Les Trois Dames de la Kasbah (1884), which first appeared as part of Fleurs d'Ennui.
  • Pêcheur d'Islande (1886) (English translation An Iceland Fisherman)
  • Madame Chrysanthème (1887)[13]
  • Propos d'Exil (1887)
  • Japoneries d'Automne (1889)
  • Au Maroc (1890)
  • Le Roman d'un enfant (1890)
  • Le Livre de la pitié et de la mort (1891)
  • Fantôme d'Orient (1892)
  • L'Exilée (1893)
  • Matelot (1893)
  • Le Désert (1895)
  • Jérusalem (1895)
  • La Galilée (1895)
  • Ramuntcho (1897)
  • Figures et choses qui passaient (1898)
  • Judith Renaudin (1898)
  • Reflets sur la sombre route (1899)
  • Les Derniers Jours de Pékin (1902)
  • L'Inde (sans les Anglais) (1903)
  • Vers Ispahan (1904)
  • La Troisième Jeunesse de Madame Prune (1905)
  • Les Désenchantées (1906)
  • La Mort de Philae (1909)
  • Le Château de la Belle au Bois dormant (1910)
  • Un Pèlerin d'Angkor (1912)
  • Turquie Agonisante (1913). An English translation, Turkey in Agony, was published in the same year.
  • La Hyène enragée (1916)
  • Quelques aspects du vertige Mondial (1917)
  • L'Horreur allemande (1918)
  • Les massacres d'Arménie (1918)
  • Prime Jeunesse (1919)
  • La Mort de notre chère France en Orient (1920)
  • Suprêmes Visions d'Orient (1921), written with the help of his son Samuel Viaud
  • Un Jeune Officier pauvre (1923, posthumous)
  • Lettres à Juliette Adam (1924, posthumous)
  • Journal intime (1878–1885), 2 vol (private diary, 1925–1929, posthumous)
  • Correspondence inédite (unpublished correspondence from 1865 to 1904, 1929, posthumous)

Filmography

References

  1. ^ "Pierre Loti | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 15 August 2020.
  2. ^ a b c This article is derived largely from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition (1911) article "Pierre Loti" by Edmund Gosse. Unless otherwise referenced, it is the source used throughout, with citations made for specific quotes by Gosse.
  3. ^ Nemo, August (2019). Essential Novelists - Pierre Loti: literary impressionism. Tacet Books. ISBN 9788577772698. "Pierre Loti," was born in Rochefort, of an old French-Protestant family, January 14, 1850..
  4. ^ "Buste de Pierre Loti, vallée de la Fautaua - Tahiti Heritage". www.tahitiheritage.pf (in French). Retrieved 8 March 2017.
  5. ^ See also Madame Chrysanthème by André Messager.
  6. ^ Ömer Koç, 'The Cruel Hoaxing of Pierre Loti' Cornucopia, Issue 3, 1992, Cornucopia.net
  7. ^ Richard M. Berrong (2018). Pierre Loti, p. 185. London: Reaktion Books. ISBN 9781789140439.
  8. ^ a b "Loti-Gautier Play at Century Theatre", The New York Times, October 13, 1912.
  9. ^ Judith Gautier & Pierre Loti (1911). La Fille du ciel. Paris: Calmann Levy.
  10. ^ Danielle Mihram, "Judith Gautier", p. 174, in French Women Writers, edited by Eva Martin Sartori & Dorothy Wynne Zimmerman. Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 9780803292246.
  11. ^ Lesley Blanch (1983). Pierre Loti: Portrait of an Escapist. London: Collins. ISBN 9780002116497. London: BookBlast ePublishing, 2015. ISBN 9780993092787.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 14 August 2014. Retrieved 1 May 2015.
  13. ^ Pierre Loti (1908). Madame Chrysanthème. Current literature publishing company.

Sources

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainGosse, Edmund William (1911). "Loti, Pierre". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). pp. 19–20.
  • Berrong, Richard M. (2013). Putting Monet and Rembrandt into Words: Pierre Loti's Recreation and Theorization of Claude Monet's Impressionism and Rembrandt's Landscapes in Literature. Chapel Hill: North Carolina Studies in Romance Language and Literature. vol 301.
  • Aldrich, Robert (2002). Who's Who in Gay and Lesbian History from Antiquity to World War II. Routledge; London. ISBN 0-415-15983-0.
  • Lesley Blanch (UK:1982, US:1983). Pierre Loti: Portrait of an Escapist. US: ISBN 978-0-15-171931-0 / UK: ISBN 978-0-00-211649-7 – paperback re-print as Pierre Loti: Travels with the Legendary Romantic (2004) ISBN 978-1-85043-429-0
  • Edmund B. D'Auvergne (2002). Pierre Loti: The Romance of a Great Writer. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4325-7394-2 (paper), ISBN 978-0-7103-0864-1 (hardcover).
  • Ömer Koç, 'The Cruel Hoaxing of Pierre Loti' Cornucopia, Issue 3, 1992

External links

Official

  • Official site of Maison Pierre Loti, house museum in Rochefort, in French.

Sources

Commentary

  • René Doumic. Contemporary French Novelists. New York, Boston : T. Y. Crowell & company. 1899. Biography and critical summary of Loti. From Internet Archive.
  • Edmund Gosse. French Profiles. New York : Dodd, Mead and company. 1905. Collected reviews of Loti's works, by literary critic Edmund Gosse. From Internet Archive.
  • Albert Leon Guerard. Five Masters of French Romance: Anatole France, Pierre Loti, Paul Bourget, Maurice Barrès, Romain Rolland. London T. Fisher Unwin. 1916. Biography and literary survey of major works. From Internet Archive.
  • Frank Harris. Contemporary portraits. Second series. New York. 1919. Personal recollections of Loti. From Internet Archive.
  • Henry James, ed. Impressions. Westminster : A. Constable and Co. 1898. Introduction by Henry James about Loti's life and works. From Internet Archive.
  • Winifred (Stephens) Whale. French Novelists of To-day. London : John Lane; New York, John Lane company. 1908; see chapter "Pierre Loti", biography and literary survey. From Internet Archive.
  • sells an English translation of Loti's account of his visit to Easter Island, along with those of Eugène Eyraud, Hippolyte Roussel and Alphonse Pinart, under the title Early Visitors to Easter Island 1864–1877.
  • Newspaper clippings about Pierre Loti in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW

pierre, loti, other, meanings, loti, loti, french, lɔti, pseudonym, louis, marie, julien, viaud, january, 1850, june, 1923, french, naval, officer, novelist, known, exotic, novels, short, stories, louis, marie, julien, viaud, reception, académie, française, ap. For other meanings of Loti see Loti Pierre Loti French lɔti pseudonym of Louis Marie Julien Viaud vjo 14 January 1850 10 June 1923 1 was a French naval officer and novelist known for his exotic novels and short stories 2 Louis Marie Julien ViaudPierre Loti on the day of his reception at the Academie Francaise 7 April 1892Born 1850 01 14 14 January 1850Rochefort Charente Maritime FranceDied10 June 1923 1923 06 10 aged 73 Hendaye FrancePen namePierre LotiOccupationFrench navy officer novelistNationalityFrenchSignature Contents 1 Biography 2 Works 3 Bibliography 4 Filmography 5 References 6 Sources 7 External linksBiography EditBorn to a Protestant family 3 Loti s education began in his birthplace Rochefort Charente Maritime At age 17 he entered the naval school in Brest and studied at Le Borda He gradually rose in his profession attaining the rank of captain in 1906 In January 1910 he went on the reserve list He was in the habit of claiming that he never read books saying to the Academie francaise on the day of his introduction 7 April 1892 Loti ne sait pas lire Loti doesn t know how to read but testimony from friends proves otherwise as does his library much of which is preserved in his house in Rochefort In 1876 fellow naval officers persuaded him to turn into a novel passages in his diary dealing with some curious experiences in Istanbul The result was the anonymously published Aziyade 1879 part romance part autobiography like the work of his admirer Marcel Proust after him Loti proceeded to the South Seas as part of his naval training living in Papeete Tahiti for two months in 1872 where he went native Several years later he published the Polynesian idyll originally titled Rarahu 1880 which was reprinted as Le Mariage de Loti the first book to introduce him to the wider public His narrator explains that the name Loti was bestowed on him by the natives after his mispronunciation of roti a red flower The book inspired the 1883 opera Lakme by Leo Delibes Loti Bain a shallow pool at the base of the Fautaua Falls is named for Loti 4 This was followed by Le Roman d un spahi 1881 a record of the melancholy adventures of a soldier in Senegal In 1882 Loti issued a collection of four shorter pieces three stories and a travel piece under the general title of Fleurs d ennui Flowers of Boredom In 1883 Loti achieved a wider public spotlight First he published the critically acclaimed Mon Frere Yves My Brother Yves a novel describing the life of a French naval officer Pierre Loti and a Breton sailor Yves Kermadec inspired by Loti companion Pierre le Cor described by Edmund Gosse as one of his most characteristic productions Second while serving in Tonkin northern Vietnam as a naval officer aboard the ironclad Atalante Loti published three articles in the newspaper Le Figaro in September and October 1883 about atrocities that occurred during the Battle of Thuận An 20 August 1883 an attack by the French on the Vietnamese coastal defenses of Hue He was threatened with suspension from the service for this indiscretion thus gaining wider public notoriety In 1884 his friend Emile Pouvillon dedicated his novel L Innocent to Loti In 1886 Loti published a novel of life among the Breton fisherfolk called Pecheur d Islande An Iceland Fisherman which Edmund Gosse characterized as the most popular and finest of all his writings 2 It shows Loti adapting some of the Impressionist techniques of contemporary painters especially Monet to prose and is a classic of French literature In 1887 he brought out a volume of extraordinary merit which has not received the attention it deserves Propos d exil a series of short studies of exotic places in his characteristic semi autobiographic style Madame Chrysantheme a novel of Japanese manners that is a precursor to Madama Butterfly and Miss Saigon a combination of narrative and travelogue was published the same year 5 Loti right with Chrysantheme and Pierre le Cor in Japan 1885 In 1890 Loti published Au Maroc the record of a journey to Fez in company with a French embassy and Le Roman d un enfant The Story of a Child a somewhat fictionalized recollection of Loti s childhood that would greatly influence Marcel Proust A collection of strangely confidential and sentimental reminiscences called Le Livre de la pitie et de la mort The Book of Pity and Death was published in 1891 Loti was aboard ship at the port of Algiers when news reached him of his election on 21 May 1891 to the Academie francaise In 1892 he published Fantome d orient a short novel derived from a subsequent trip to Constantinople less a continuation of Aziyade than a commentary on it He described a visit to the Holy Land in three volumes The Desert Jerusalem and Galilee 1895 1896 and wrote a novel Ramuntcho 1897 a story of contraband runners in the Basque province In 1898 he collected his later essays as Figures et Choses qui passaient Passing Figures and Things Loti caricatured by Guth for Vanity Fair 1895 In 1899 and 1900 Loti visited British India with the view of describing what he saw the result appeared in 1903 in L Inde sans les anglais India without the English During the autumn of 1900 he went to China as part of the international expedition sent to combat the Boxer Rebellion He described what he saw there after the siege of Peking in Les Derniers Jours de Pekin The Last Days of Peking 1902 Loti s later publications include La Troisieme jeunesse de Mme Prune The Third Youth of Mrs Plum 1905 which resulted from a return visit to Japan and once again hovers between narrative and travelog Les Desenchantees The Unawakened 1906 La Mort de Philae The Death of Philae 1908 recounting a trip to Egypt Judith Renaudin produced at the Theatre Antoine 1898 a five act historical play that Loti presented as based on an episode in his family history and in collaboration with Emile Vedel a translation of William Shakespeare s King Lear produced at the Theatre Antoine in 1904 Les Desenchantees which concerned women of the Turkish harem was based like many of Loti s books on fact It has however become clear that Loti was in fact the victim of a hoax by three prosperous Turkish women 6 In 1912 at the Century Theatre in New York City Loti mounted a production of The Daughter of Heaven a George Egerton adaptation of his French play La fille du ciel commissioned in March 1903 by Sarah Bernhardt written in collaboration with Judith Gautier and published in 1911 7 8 9 10 The play was never performed in France since apparently Bernhardt lost interest when she learned she would have to wear a black wig over her red hair 11 In New York the title role was performed by Viola Allen 8 He died in 1923 in Hendaye and was interred on the island of Oleron with a state funeral Loti was an inveterate collector and his marriage into wealth helped him support this habit His house in Rochefort a remarkable reworking of two adjacent bourgeois row houses is preserved as a museum 12 One elaborately tiled room is an Orientalist fantasia of a mosque including a small fountain and five ceremoniously draped coffins containing desiccated bodies Another room evokes a medieval banqueting hall Loti s own bedroom is rather like a monk s cell but mixes Christian and Muslim religious artifacts The courtyard described in The Story of a Child with the fountain built for him by his older brother is still there There is also a museum in Istanbul named after him located on a hill where Loti used to spend his free time during his sojourn in Turkey Works Edit Portrait of Pierre Loti by Henri Rousseau 1891 Contemporary critic Edmund Gosse gave the following assessment of his work 2 At his best Pierre Loti was unquestionably the finest descriptive writer of the day In the delicate exactitude with which he reproduced the impression given to his own alert nerves by unfamiliar forms colors sounds and perfumes he was without a rival But he was not satisfied with this exterior charm he desired to blend with it a moral sensibility of the extremest refinement at once sensual and ethereal Many of his best books are long sobs of remorseful memory so personal so intimate that an English reader is amazed to find such depth of feeling compatible with the power of minutely and publicly recording what is felt In spite of the beauty and melody and fragrance of Loti s books his mannerisms are apt to pall upon the reader and his later books of pure description were rather empty His greatest successes were gained in the species of confession half way between fact and fiction which he essayed in his earlier books When all his limitations however have been rehearsed Pierre Loti remains in the mechanism of style and cadence one of the most original and most perfect French writers of the second half of the 19th century Bibliography EditAziyade 1879 Le Mariage de Loti originally titled Rarahu 1880 Le Roman d un spahi 1881 Fleurs d ennui 1882 Mon Frere Yves 1883 English translation My Brother Yves Les Trois Dames de la Kasbah 1884 which first appeared as part of Fleurs d Ennui Pecheur d Islande 1886 English translation An Iceland Fisherman Madame Chrysantheme 1887 13 Propos d Exil 1887 Japoneries d Automne 1889 Au Maroc 1890 Le Roman d un enfant 1890 Le Livre de la pitie et de la mort 1891 Fantome d Orient 1892 L Exilee 1893 Matelot 1893 Le Desert 1895 Jerusalem 1895 La Galilee 1895 Ramuntcho 1897 Figures et choses qui passaient 1898 Judith Renaudin 1898 Reflets sur la sombre route 1899 Les Derniers Jours de Pekin 1902 L Inde sans les Anglais 1903 Vers Ispahan 1904 La Troisieme Jeunesse de Madame Prune 1905 Les Desenchantees 1906 La Mort de Philae 1909 Le Chateau de la Belle au Bois dormant 1910 Un Pelerin d Angkor 1912 Turquie Agonisante 1913 An English translation Turkey in Agony was published in the same year La Hyene enragee 1916 Quelques aspects du vertige Mondial 1917 L Horreur allemande 1918 Les massacres d Armenie 1918 Prime Jeunesse 1919 La Mort de notre chere France en Orient 1920 Supremes Visions d Orient 1921 written with the help of his son Samuel Viaud Un Jeune Officier pauvre 1923 posthumous Lettres a Juliette Adam 1924 posthumous Journal intime 1878 1885 2 vol private diary 1925 1929 posthumous Correspondence inedite unpublished correspondence from 1865 to 1904 1929 posthumous Filmography EditLe Roman d un spahi directed by Henri Pouctal 1914 based on the novel Le Roman d un spahi Pecheur d Islande directed by Henri Pouctal 1915 short film based on the novel Pecheur d Islande Ramuntcho directed by Jacques de Baroncelli 1919 short film based on the novel Ramuntcho Pecheur d Islande fr directed by Jacques de Baroncelli 1924 based on the novel Pecheur d Islande Pecheur d Islande fr directed by Pierre Guerlais fr 1934 based on the novel Pecheur d Islande Le Roman d un spahi fr directed by Michel Bernheim 1936 based on the novel Le Roman d un spahi Ramuntcho directed by Rene Barberis 1938 based on the novel Ramuntcho The Marriage of Ramuntcho directed by Max de Vaucorbeil 1947 based on the novel Ramuntcho Ramuntcho directed by Pierre Schoendoerffer 1959 based on the novel Ramuntcho Pecheur d Islande fr directed by Pierre Schoendoerffer 1959 based on the novel Pecheur d Islande References Edit Pierre Loti Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com Retrieved 15 August 2020 a b c This article is derived largely from the Encyclopaedia Britannica Eleventh Edition 1911 article Pierre Loti by Edmund Gosse Unless otherwise referenced it is the source used throughout with citations made for specific quotes by Gosse Nemo August 2019 Essential Novelists Pierre Loti literary impressionism Tacet Books ISBN 9788577772698 Pierre Loti was born in Rochefort of an old French Protestant family January 14 1850 Buste de Pierre Loti vallee de la Fautaua Tahiti Heritage www tahitiheritage pf in French Retrieved 8 March 2017 See also Madame Chrysantheme by Andre Messager Omer Koc The Cruel Hoaxing of Pierre Loti Cornucopia Issue 3 1992 Cornucopia net Richard M Berrong 2018 Pierre Loti p 185 London Reaktion Books ISBN 9781789140439 a b Loti Gautier Play at Century Theatre The New York Times October 13 1912 Judith Gautier amp Pierre Loti 1911 La Fille du ciel Paris Calmann Levy Danielle Mihram Judith Gautier p 174 in French Women Writers edited by Eva Martin Sartori amp Dorothy Wynne Zimmerman Lincoln and London University of Nebraska Press ISBN 9780803292246 Lesley Blanch 1983 Pierre Loti Portrait of an Escapist London Collins ISBN 9780002116497 London BookBlast ePublishing 2015 ISBN 9780993092787 Pierre Loti s House Rochefort Michelin Travel Archived from the original on 14 August 2014 Retrieved 1 May 2015 Pierre Loti 1908 Madame Chrysantheme Current literature publishing company Sources Edit This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Gosse Edmund William 1911 Loti Pierre Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed pp 19 20 Berrong Richard M 2013 Putting Monet and Rembrandt into Words Pierre Loti s Recreation and Theorization of Claude Monet s Impressionism and Rembrandt s Landscapes in Literature Chapel Hill North Carolina Studies in Romance Language and Literature vol 301 Aldrich Robert 2002 Who s Who in Gay and Lesbian History from Antiquity to World War II Routledge London ISBN 0 415 15983 0 Lesley Blanch UK 1982 US 1983 Pierre Loti Portrait of an Escapist US ISBN 978 0 15 171931 0 UK ISBN 978 0 00 211649 7 paperback re print as Pierre Loti Travels with the Legendary Romantic 2004 ISBN 978 1 85043 429 0 Edmund B D Auvergne 2002 Pierre Loti The Romance of a Great Writer Kessinger Publishing ISBN 978 1 4325 7394 2 paper ISBN 978 0 7103 0864 1 hardcover Omer Koc The Cruel Hoaxing of Pierre Loti Cornucopia Issue 3 1992External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pierre Loti Official Official site of Maison Pierre Loti house museum in Rochefort in French Sources Works by Pierre Loti at Project Gutenberg Works by Pierre Loti at Faded Page Canada Works by or about Pierre Loti at Internet Archive Works by or about Julien Viaud at Internet Archive Works by Pierre Loti at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Commentary Rene Doumic Contemporary French Novelists New York Boston T Y Crowell amp company 1899 Biography and critical summary of Loti From Internet Archive Edmund Gosse French Profiles New York Dodd Mead and company 1905 Collected reviews of Loti s works by literary critic Edmund Gosse From Internet Archive Albert Leon Guerard Five Masters of French Romance Anatole France Pierre Loti Paul Bourget Maurice Barres Romain Rolland London T Fisher Unwin 1916 Biography and literary survey of major works From Internet Archive Frank Harris Contemporary portraits Second series New York 1919 Personal recollections of Loti From Internet Archive Henry James ed Impressions Westminster A Constable and Co 1898 Introduction by Henry James about Loti s life and works From Internet Archive Winifred Stephens Whale French Novelists of To day London John Lane New York John Lane company 1908 see chapter Pierre Loti biography and literary survey From Internet Archive Easter Island Foundation sells an English translation of Loti s account of his visit to Easter Island along with those of Eugene Eyraud Hippolyte Roussel and Alphonse Pinart under the title Early Visitors to Easter Island 1864 1877 Pierre Lotis Madame Chrysantheme Newspaper clippings about Pierre Loti in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pierre Loti amp oldid 1133343786, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.