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Academic literature on the topic 'Poésie pastorale – 17e siècle'
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Journal articles on the topic "Poésie pastorale – 17e siècle"
Gladu, Kim. "Le débat sur le style pastoral au xviiie siècle : Madame Deshoulières, modèle de l’élégiaque galant." Tangence, no. 109 (September 8, 2016): 89–109. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1037386ar.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Poésie pastorale – 17e siècle"
Sarant, Mylène. "Histoires d'amours pastorales, iconographie de la pastorale narrative dans les arts du XVIIe siècle." Paris 4, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2005PA040009.
Full textIn literature, the watershed between the 16th and 17th centuries was, in certain terms, the age of the pastoral. All over Europe, writers such as Torquato Tasso, Gian Battista Guarini, Guidobaldo Bonarelli, Philip Sidney, Honoré d'Urfé, Pieter Corneliszoon Hooft chose to set certain romantic works in an arcadian context. These novels and plays, because they were the symbol of a refined and aristocratic lifestyle while remaining easily accessible, were very successful. They gave rise to fashions, aroused the attention of musicians, painters and craftsmen. Although the literary works are well known to historians of literature, this is not the case of the numerous tapestries, engravings and paintings which were inspired by the texts. Artists who devoted themselves to these subjects, even though they did not always produce masterpieces, did however show imagination and knew how to translate into images the wealth of their subjects. Their production, deeply marked by the tragic-comic genre, offered to the public entertaining stories where events and romantic dramas succeeded and followed on from each other with great vitality and sometimes even humour. They are not devoid either of a certain eroticism for those who make the effort to take a second look at them
Macé, Stéphane. "La pastorale dans la poésie française de l'âge baroque." Paris 4, 1999. http://www.theses.fr/1999PA040194.
Full textCarrols, 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
Bisconti, Donatella. "Luca Pulci et sa place dans la culture du XVe siècle italien." Paris 3, 2001. http://www.theses.fr/2001PA030125.
Full textLuca Pulci (1431-1470), the elder of the more famous Luigi, left us some literary works which, although appreciated by his contemporaries, have been severly criticised in the 20th century. In my thesis I intend to replace these works in the 15th century cultural context, by showing their links between them and the literary innovations which began to be outlined around the 1560's : on the one hand, the bucolic written in the vernacular, promoted by all three Pulci brothers, particulary by Luca and Bernardo, and, on the other hand, the diffusion, beyond the stricly humanistic movement, of texts in latin and Greek tongue. Luca shows, in fact, not only a large and specific knowledge of a lot of classical sources, but also of the Florentine literary tradition : he exploits them inall his works (Driadeo, Pistole, Ciriffo) with great liberty. . .
Garnier, Sylvain. "Érato et Melpomène ou les sœurs ennemies : langage poétique et poétique dramatique dans le théâtre français de Jodelle à Scarron (1553-1653)." Thesis, Paris 4, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017PA040148.
Full textPoetical expression seems to be an inherent aspect of classical theatre. However, plays written in the second half of the seventeenth century, particularly the tragedies, were conceived to adhere to regular standards of form which tended towards the removal of poetic expression from theatre and which largely succeeded in doing so. To summarise this process, it is necessary to recount the history of poetic expression in plays from the advent of humanist tragedy in the mid-sixteenth century to the establishment of what would be later called « classicism ». It can then be demonstrated that lyrical elocution shifted over time from tragedy to comedy, following the same evolution as lyrical poetry which evolved from the noble style of the Pleiade all the way to Scarron’s burlesque expression, through the simplicity of Malherbe’s expression, the ingenuity of marinism, or the preciosity of the gallant style. Poetical expression thus progressively shifted from the choirs and pathetic discourses of the humanist tragedy, towards the sighs, songs, and conceits of the lovers of tragi-comedy and pastorales, before being parodied in the ridiculous manner of speech of the characters in burlesque comedy. Simultaneously, theorists of regularity theorised the fundamental opposition between poetic and dramatic language, thus making the development of a regular poetical tragedy nearly impossible
Boneu, Violaine. "Fin de l’idylle ? : étude sur les formes et les significations de l’idylle dans la littérature française du dix-neuvième siècle." Thesis, Paris 4, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010PA040001.
Full textThis work aims to re-think the status of the idyll in the French literature during the 19th century by combining theory of literary genres, literary history and hermeneutics. Objecting to the common-sensical idea that the idyll has evolved into a frozen genre full of anachronical clichés after André Chénier, it provides some conceptual ressources to analyze the actual dynamics of the idyll, both in terms of form and signification. The notion follows three main logics : a rhetorical one, which places the idyll into the poetic of literary genres, an historical and philosophical one, which, since the 18th century, considers the idyll as a cue of a mythical origin and an image of the Ideal, and lastly, a psychological one, born with the romantic revolution, which understands the idyll in terms of illusion, fantasies or dreams. Because of its intrinsic complexity, the idyll provides a priviliged point of view to examine the most important changes of the modern times. This work gives an overview of the evolution of the genre during the 19th century and examines the explicit references to the idyll made by Nerval, Hugo, Baudelaire, Mallarmé, Balzac and Zola in some of their major poetical works and novels. In doing so, it develops a new perspective on the crisis of the subjectivity, the crisis of literary representation and the redrawing of the traditional distinction between prose and poetry
Chométy, Philippe. ""Philosopher en langage des dieux" : la poésie d'idées en France, 1653-1716." Aix-Marseille 1, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2005AIX10044.
Full textMantero, Anne. "La muse théologienne : poésie et théologie en France de 1629 à 1680." Paris 4, 1991. http://www.theses.fr/1991PA040012.
Full textThis study turns its attention to the poems of doctrinal inspiration in the field of the French religious poetry of the 17th century, raising the question of the relationship between poetry and conceptual language. Here indeed theology is understood in the narrowest sense of the scientific dogma. Close analysis of the texts demonstrates it varies between a set of truths to be taught and the learning shared by both the poet and the reader, present in the verse expressed through allusion. First, the didactic works are considered for their coherence and their limits. Next, the point is to show how doctrinal considerations have aroused poetics seeming relatively original, once the teaching objective has been set aside. The attention paid to the function reserved to doctrinal terms allows to define the otherness that relates poem and theology. The metaphors and structure - of the sentence as well as the discourse - point out how theological problematics act upon the problematics of poetry
Méniel, Bruno. "Le miroir du monde : la poésie épique, en France, de 1572 à 1616." Paris 10, 2000. http://www.theses.fr/2000PA100167.
Full textTonolo, Sophie. "L'épître en vers et la société mondaine en France de Tristan à Boileau : partez, courez, volez mes vers !" Versailles-St Quentin en Yvelines, 2002. http://www.theses.fr/2002VERS008S.
Full textBorne by a constallation of minor authors, the subject of a specific presentation in a second volume, yet at the same time invested by major poets, the epistle, an allusive and entertaining poem, rises from the world of the 1630s between a social pole and rich literary models. Until 1680, the flowing structure based on brevity welcomes metric innovations. A poetry of life, seduced by epic and manifesto, careful to produce an efficient style joining life and ethics, it displays on that occasion its taste for the fable, the pictorial aesthetics and the study of self. Its visual poetics reaches the human truth: the epistle wavers between contemplation and consumption of the world, some hesitation that the omnipresent culinary metaphor, the parisian strolls or the garden walks, symbols of mental activity,render with strength. Sometimes the poets re-create the world, sometimes they seize the very flow of life, giving birth to moving self-portraits. The epistle makes do with triteness and lyricism