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Most of this article comes from the Catholic Encyclopedia, which explains the very authoritative tone (ergo, the comment above) and was written in 1913. It needs expansion and to be udgraded to modern standards.
I feel that it is my obligation to refute your spurious claim that the source of this article is the Catholic Encyclopedia. It is I who entered the article originally. The basis of the article is from the introduction to the section on French Literature in an anthology of World Literature published in Great Britain in 1936. I then added to it from my research into the subject, along with translations from the works of Lagarde & Michard, an omnipresent literary manual used in French lycées to prepare students for the Baccalauréat, following the standards of the National Programme. You will note, in fact, that I have removed your reference to the Catholic Encyclopedia in the article, itself. If you should feel that it be necessary to cite the sources of the article, I shall certainly be willing to insert these particular citations. 12 Jun 2004
I made some updates to my original edit of this article last year. Most importantly, I updated the modern sections, adding one about the End of the Century. It was translated from French wikipedia. --11 Aug 05. [edit] Need for major editThere is so much on this page that is wrong or laughable. Pronouncements like "Saint Beuve is the greatest of all French literary critics" (what would Proust say? what about Sartre? Barthes?) or 'Rabelais writes formless works in the manner of fiction" (what does this mean?!) or "French can be regarded as a modern form of Latin" (!) are unworthy of the wiki. The introductory paragraph is full of stereotypes that border on insulting. The last time I heard the terms "mixed origin", "strains" and "composition" -- "the French people are of mixed origin, having Celtic and Germanic as well as Roman strains in their composition" -- it was in connection with racial theories from the 1930s. A similar tone is unfortunately also found in almost any lit or art article that uses material from the 1911 encyclopedia. How can we get these pages to be well written and accurate? At the very least, the introduction section to this article needs to be rewritten, but I also think that each century needs a thorough discussion on its own subpage, each page linked with the template. Template:French literature (I encourage people to check out the Lit site on the French wiki [fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Littérature].) I have started these pages and I hope no one takes it the wrong way -- NYArtsnWords 07:55, 23 August 2005 (UTC)
Before modifying the French literature main page or the template Template:French literature, please keep in mind that there has been EXTENSIVE ADDITIONS and CHANGES on the subpages Medieval French literature, French Renaissance literature, French literature of the 17th century. Also: PLEASE SIGN YOUR COMMENTS ON THE TALK PAGE (using four tildes). It would also help if you logged in with a user name rather than an anonymous user number. Thanks NYArtsnWords 03:16, 3 September 2005 (UTC) Dear all, I deleted "In contrast to Americans"...Literature is important to the French. Although the point that popular French television discusses literature, while American television does not is valid, the statement has an implied value judgement and violates NPOV. [edit] about removal and insertion of Samuel BeckettI don't think that Samuel Beckett should be included in the list of Nobel Prize Winners because he wasn't a French citizen, even though he wrote in French. Mostyn 13:14, 10 April 2008 (UTC) I decided to reinsert Samuel Beckett because while he was Irish, we wrote in French and then translated his work into English. The question is, what constitutes French literature? Must it be written by someone of French nationality, or just in the French language, or some other criteria? Consider the poet José Maria de Heredia, who was born in Cuba, or the author Marguerite Duras, who was born in Indochina; both of them are considered to have written French literature. I've noticed that Beckett is often removed from this article and then later added again, which is why I decided to bring this up. --Kyoko 01:21, 18 November 2006 (UTC) [edit] LatinAlmost all of France's older literature was written in Latin. Why isn't this mentioned in the article? Aaker 16:39, 16 September 2007 (UTC) | |||||||||||||||
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