Gustave Planche

Jean-Baptiste-Gustave Planche (February 16, 1808September 18, 1857), was a French critic. Planche was born in Paris. Having been introduced by Alfred de Vigny to Franois Buloz, he began to write for the Revue des deux mondes, and continued to do so until 1840. He resumed his connection with the journal in 1846 and contributed to it until his death in Paris. Gustave Planche was an honest critic and refused to accept a place from Napoleon III of France for fear of compromising his freedom. Having been a fervent admirer of George Sand and lavished praise on de Vigny, he was contemptuous of Victor Hugo, whose earlier dramas he characterized as odes, those following Le Roi s'amuse as antitheses, and the later ones as nothing but spectacle. His critical papers were collected under the titles: Portraits littraires (1836-1849); Nouveaux portraits littraires (1854); and art criticisms, Etudes sur l'cole franaise (1855). See Ernest Montgut, in the Revue des deux mondes (June 1858).

Reference

Planche, Gustave Planche, Gustave Planche, Gustave

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
finite group
nu jazz
mediawiki
drawing straws
troy (movie)
palace of whitehall
moinmoin
oracle database
crown entities
treaty of london, 1839
crown owned companies
cercla
cinematic orchestra
theo epstein
carlos saavedra lamas
walter de gray
new england (australia)
italian city states
pierre jean de branger
phyllodactylus
pachydactylus
bathurst, new south wales
tarentola
uroplatus
jules janin
teratoscincus
microscalabotes
geckolepis
ebenavia
irreligion
homopholis
jean baptiste rousseau
ivor caplin
lalla ward
roel felius
lepidodactylus
hemiphyllodactylus
how to care for a pet cockatoo
genome project
abortifacient
mesannepada
list of tier 1 internet service providers
daniel auteuil
electoral systems of the australian states and territories