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Academic literature on the topic 'Lyrisme (littérature) – 16e siècle'
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Journal articles on the topic "Lyrisme (littérature) – 16e siècle"
Braunstein, Philippe. "L'État, Tel Qu'en Lui-Même Enfin la Cité se Change… (note critique)." Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales 52, no. 2 (April 1997): 257–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/ahess.1997.279565.
Full textBurg, Gaëlle. "Lire la littérature médiévale en classe de français langue étrangère : une utopie ?" Swiss Journal of Educational Research 43, no. 1 (April 14, 2021): 129–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.24452/sjer.43.1.10.
Full textMinel, Emmanuel. "Fischer, Caroline ; Wehinger, Brunhilde (dir.). Un siècle sans poésie ? Le lyrisme des Lumières entre sociabilité, galanterie et savoir. Sous la direction de Caroline Fischer et Brunhilde Wehinger. Paris : Honoré Champion, 2016 (= « Colloques, congrès et conférences sur la littérature comparée », n° 25). 284 pp." Kritikon Litterarum 43, no. 3-4 (January 1, 2016). http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/kl-2016-0038.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Lyrisme (littérature) – 16e siècle"
Pisacane, Badini Confalonieri Chiara. "Pétrarquisme au féminin : l'itinéraire poétique de Vittoria Colonna du lyrisme amoureux à l'écriture spirituelle." Chambéry, 2000. http://www.theses.fr/2000CHAML001.
Full textGuillet-Laburthe, Suzanne. "Les Hymnes de 1537 de Jean Salmon Macrin : edition, traduction et commentaire." Paris 4, 2007. http://www.theses.fr/2007PA040177.
Full textJean Salmon Macrin (1490-1557), famous neo-latin poet, native from Loudun, in France’s Touraine region, held the position of official valet and poet from the king François the first, like his colleague Clément Marot. He was considered during his lifetime as the greatest lyric poet after the great Horatius. This book proposes an edition, a French translation and a commentary of the Hymns of 1537, a key book in Macrin’s production. In these poems, Macrin returns to a more ardent yet intimistic devotion, a sign of his shift towards family topics. Macrin’s poems are a synthesis between profane lyrism and Erasmus’ philosophy. The reader will find in this book occasion lyricism, official odes, spiritual meditations, praise to humanists, hymns to God, the virgin Mary and the saints, as well as domestic and autobiographic odes. All poems demonstrating a wonderful harmony between erudition, metric virtuosity and seekness of sincerity
Alonso, Béatrice. "Louise Labé ou la lyre humaniste : "écriture féminine", écriture féministe." Lyon 2, 2005. http://theses.univ-lyon2.fr/documents/lyon2/2005/alonso_b.
Full textThe critical postulate of women's writing is one of the keys that are used to criticise Louise Labé's Euvres. My study offers to question this analysis and to replace it by a political and poetic perspective based on the heterogeneous coherence of Louise Labé's works. The point is to show how the claims of Renaissance Humanism is integrated or how the Euvres develop a humanist lyricism
Sort-Jacotot, Aurélia. "La lyre tragique : le discours pathétique sur la scène française, 1634-1648." Versailles-St Quentin en Yvelines, 2010. http://ezproxy.normandie-univ.fr/login?url=http://www.classiques-garnier.com/numerique-bases/garnier?filename=astms01.
Full textThis dissertation attempts to define the meaning of “lyricism” when assessing 17th century theatre today, and to understand the historical foundations of this label. Using the pathetic discourse as its historical entry point, this investigation first defines it according to the period’s frames of thought. Through an analysis of the lexicon of passions first, and then a reading of contemporary moral treatises, it shows how important the notion of interest, and the mechanical conception of sensibility, were for the understanding of the emotions stirred by discourse. A study of rhetorical frames then points to an evolution : the focus, in that time, increasingly shifts from impression and the pathetic effects of discourse, to expression and the rightful imitation of passions. Secondly, an analysis of dramaturgy highlights the crucial place kept by the pathetic discourse in contemporary tragedies, and the presence of a permanent dialectics between ornamentation and integration. Finally, in the light of these first two moments, the third part questions the connections between pathetic discourse and the later notion of lyricism : after closely studying lyrical monologue, which is the meeting point of pathetic discourse and lyrical verse, it contemplates various forms of genericity, in a diachronic progression. This conclusion is reached : the pathetic discourse of tragedy may have been the laboratory and model of the theoretical formation of the lyrical genre in the 18th century ; our modern generic approach would thus owe much to the 17th century rhetorical practices
Bouscharain, Anne. "La poétique de Battista Spagnoli de Mantoue (Bucoliques, Silves, Parthenices) et sa réception en France au XVIè siècle, à partir de l'édition des Syluarum Sex Opuscula (Paris, Josse Bade, 1503)." Paris, EPHE, 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2003EPHE4061.
Full textThe poet B. Spagnoli Mantuanus (1447-1516) had acquired great fame in Renaissance Europe. Often compared to Virgil, he drew his celebrity from his earlier works : the eclogues of Adulescentia, the Parthenice and the Silvae. From the end of the Quattrocento, an original poetic art arises through his works, combining the author's spirituality and the influence of the theory on literary style and emotional inspiration of Angelo Poliziano based upon Statius and Quintilian. In the Silvae - the 1503 anthology providing obvious evidence - Mantuan embraces the Alexandrian tradition brought back into fashion by Poliziano. He does this in order to take for himself the principle of an improvised epideictic writing, adapted to his ingenium and oriented towards self-expression. Arguing for the mediocritas of Horace, he promoted modern virtue and Christian meditation on glory and salvation. He chose to define the simplicity of a spontaneous celebration of faith as a writing principle, as opposed to the high poetic styles he considered to be impersonal and beyond reach. The influence of his poetry on the French poets of the Marot generation and the Pleiade is explained by the freedom of style inherent to the principles that Mantuan selected for his own poetry. These lie inbetween brief extemporary writing and search for erudite variety, as illustrated by the fragile impromptu of the Silvae where a refined celebration arose in his confession about the world and virtue. The afore-mentioned French authors, following Erasmus and various humanists of the 16th century, did consider him as a model of the lyrical poetry of the Renaissance, allying spirituality, praise and familiar inspiration
Kim, Jihyun. "Les poèmes du Crépuscule urbain chez Baudelaire : l’ironie dans le lyrisme de la modernité." Thesis, Rennes 2, 2020. http://www.theses.fr/2020REN20030.
Full textAfter having tried to be modern through his romantic aspirations during the 1840s, Baudelaire’s vision depends more and more on a pessimistic and critical perception of historical and existential reality. It is then that the first of the four poems, which are thedirect object of the present thesis, appears: “Le Crépuscule du soir”, in 1852, followed by the prose poem of the same title in 1855, then “La Fin de la journée” and “Recueillement” in 1861; finally, by a new version of the prose poem in 1862. When readtogether successively, these five texts, composed in the course of more than ten years, and which share the same theme —the feeling that the subject feels at nightfall in the modern metropolis— seem to us very likely to reveal a profound meaning in the evolution of Baudelaire’s poetics.Revolving around the immanent tension in their theme, the “urban crepuscule” : a tension between an intimate, lyrical pole of the “evening”, and a realistic, disenchanted pole of the “city”, our reading of these poems tries to show how Baudelaire, defining his position in the fluctuating literary field of mid-nineteenth century France, has imposed a new path, as paradoxical as “heroic”, yet without seeking to hide his oscillation between “modernity”— even if still vague in definition— and an ideal of “pure”lyricism
Carrols, Anne. "De l'ode à la pastorale : formes de la célébration politique en France (1549-1572)." Thesis, Aix-Marseille, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014AIXM3104/document.
Full textThis thesis studies The Pleiade's poetry of political celebration in relation to the epic, with the examples of Deffense as a statement of this project (1549) and Franciade as an incomplete realization of it (1572). The celebration poems are part of this project of a new Aeneid, which removes them from the ephemeral splendour of the celebration which created them in the first place ; these poems fall both within the moment of the festive event and the virtuality of the great work in which they must come to fruition. This great work, seen as a tale of foundation legitimating the hope of an immortal Empire, wants to shape History as well as depict an ideal image of the sovereign and present a poetic construction inserting the culture of Antiquity to the French genius. During Henri II's reign, the poets celebrate the princes as the heroes of the developing epic and explore the forms that this celebration of the Valois monarchy could take. The prophetic furor becomes the privileged statement of political lyricism. Yet, at the end of the 1550s, the formula only creates its own disenchanted repetition, or poets abandon it by ironically pointing out its vacuity. During the decade that follows, while the armed conflict creates historical uncertainty, the celebration poems disguise the princes as shepherds. At the beginning, the pastoral was a variation that could rejuvenate the initial project. It transforms into an alternative to an obsolete heroic model, related with political and poetic values of seduction, appeased gentleness, mannerist refinement in harmony with nature
Dupart, Dominique. "Le "lyrisme démocratique" de Lamartine : étude des discours politiques de 1834 à 1848." Paris 4-Sorbonne, 2007. http://www.theses.fr/2008PA040118.
Full text1820. « The Meditations. » « The Lake. » Who remembers what comes after ? Nonetheless, Lamartine has not only invented romantic lyricism, he has also actualized his poetic doctrine in the field apparently furthest apart from his green shady hills: in parliamentary politics. From 1834 to 1848, and then practically until his death, he built his destiny as an exceptionally talented multi-facetted writer. He became simultaneously and successively an orator at the Parliament, a historian, a journalist, a novelist. With one single mission: to invent on Earth one of his « imaginary Republics » which are evoked in political and poetical manifestos as soon as 1830. He is the founding father of modern democracy and he reminds us that the politics led by the governments is and always will be in debt towards poetry. In February 1848, did he spectacularly succeed in combining the poem with the political tribune ? Or did he, on the contrary, fail to take the turn of disenchantment, surpassed by the new generation, Flaubert and Baudelaire ? There is no doubt that the modern poet has not always managed to avoid failure. Sometimes lyrical – « successful », as would Stendhal would have put it (using the English word) – but also sometimes hated, mocked, and finally fallen from both poetry and power, Lamartine is the democratic poet « par excellence ». He gave a revolutionary sovereignty to public opinion, to popular gossip, to street rumour, to the voices of the people. He consecrated them with a language sensitive and rebellious, inventing mass lyricism: as lyric as his ancient and glorious muses, at the risk of losing poetry
Lombart, Nicolas. "Réinventer un "genre" : l'Hymne dans la poésie française de la Renaissance." Montpellier 3, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004MON30072.
Full textThe hymn, specially devoted to singing the praises of Gods in ancient pagan poetry or in ecclesiastical Christian poetry, is with the ode or the canticle one of the great lyric genres of eulogy in the XVIth century French poetry. But because of its abundance and heterogeneousness, the hymnary corpus presents two difficulties : the French hymn can take any possible shape (stanzaic or not, long or short. . . ), and it can sing the praises of a great diversity of subjects, either religious ones (Olympian deities, liturgical occasions, Christian notions. . . )or not (places, individuals, profane abstractions, events. . . ). There is no problem in giving the historical definition of the hymn : "It is a song with praise of God" wrote Saint Augustine whose definition has been taken up by the classical scholars about Greek hymns. However, when dealing with the French corpus, the problematic extension of the field covered by the praise of gods needs questioning. Far from defining an essence of the genre, the thesis proposes a pragmatical study of a large corpus of French pieces so as to set up a typology of the French hymn of the Renaissance which is regarded as the original acclimatization of both a pagan and Christian poetic inheritance. Three parts are devoted to the re-invention of the hymn : its slow emergence between 1500 and 1549 in its traditional ecclesiastical form ; its taken-up by the Brigade between 1550 and 1556 (from the ancient pagan species to the natural ronsardian hymns) ; its multiple militant takovers (both political and religious) between the 1560's and the end of the reign of Henry IV
Plançon, Séverine. "Le lyrisme élégiaque dans les mélodies d'Henri Duparc : une approche du "drame d'âme"." Thesis, Toulouse 2, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015TOU20015.
Full textThis dissertation highlights lyric and elegiac works in the corpus of seventeen melodies of Henri Duparc, through an analysis of the poetic and musical speeches. From the abstract point of view, the transfer of the notion of lyricism, from poetics to music, helps to build a representation of Duparc’s personal lyricism, that lays between the poetic lyricism and the possibilities of the musical structure. The first part of this study presents the various ways of lyricism through stylistic means of poetic lyricism (elevation of thought and repetition) and of musical lyricism (the idea of "violin-voice", the level of the voice, the rewriting of the works, the brevity, the bombast). The second part - the interpretative reading of the poetic texts – sheds lights on four elegiac situations, which are the more representative of the composer’s style. This prism reveals the Henri Duparc’s approach of composition: he works by themes, which he handles several times under different angles, to show the various emotional sides. Revealing Henri Duparc's dramatic ideas from his correspondence, the third part demonstrates that his melodies establish for this composer a laboratory of experiment of what he called himself the "drama of the soul", which he developed within the project of "La Roussalka", his unique operatic drama, unfinished then destroyed. These melodies highlight the limits of this musician writing skills regarding operatic drama, developed separate from action, without sequence of dramatic situations and without characters. At the end of this study, the melodies appear as the most accomplished shape in which Henri Duparc was proficient
Books on the topic "Lyrisme (littérature) – 16e siècle"
Olivier, Guerrier, and Vanoflen Laurence, eds. Littérature et morale 16e-18e siècle de l'humaniste au philosophe. Paris: Armand Colin, 2001.
Find full textLes sources documentaires du courant libertin français: Giulio Cesare Vanini. Fasano (Brindisi): Schena, 2004.
Find full textNewman, Karen. Fashioning femininity and English Renaissance drama. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991.
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