When Clement Marot gave the title Elegies to a group of poems published in the Suite de l'Adolescence Clementine, in 1532, he was the first poet to give this title to a poem, or poems in French. Marot's first group of Elegies were in fact quite simply love epistles, and in order to study the birth of the Elegy in France, we have therefore studied the origins of the --Epitre Amoureuse, and its growth in popularity from 1500, until Marot's creation of the Elegie. We have shown how the love epistle owed its wide diffusion to the influence of Ovid's Heroides, and more particularly Octovien de Saint-Gelais' translation of them, Les XXI Epistres d'Ovide. We have further shown that although Ovid's influence was decisive in the creation of the genr...
In this article I discuss recent trends and publications on Ovidian scholarship, focussing on Heroid...
Clément Marot was the first French translator of Petrarch’s Rerum Vulgarium Fragmenta. His translati...
This paper consists in three parts. The first contains a new discussion about the consistence and th...
This dissertation focuses on the evolution of French poetry in the early Renaissance, by way of Clém...
This thesis begins by outlining the origins of the elegy as a literary form, passing from the fragme...
In 1529, and again in 1533, Lyon printer Claude Nourry published the epistle Lepistre de la belle Cl...
Ce travail porte sur l’évolution de la poésie française au début de la Renaissance, à travers la det...
This dissertation focuses on the evolution of French poetry in the early Renaissance, by way of Clém...
This study provides a synoptic account of the development of Latin elegiac poetry from the first cen...
The present paper studies the theme of illness and remedies proper to poetry in four collections of ...
In 1543 Claude Chappuys published Le Discours de la court, a long poem in praise of the court of Fra...
In this paper, we intend to understand the historical criteria that guided the first editions of Fra...
In 1543 Claude Chappuys published Le Discours de la court, a long poem in praise of the court of Fra...
1538, Marot publishes his Œuvres. In 1560, it’s time for Ronsard to have a complete edition publishe...
The elegy was fashionable at the dawn of modernity, during the periods which are known as Pre-Romant...
In this article I discuss recent trends and publications on Ovidian scholarship, focussing on Heroid...
Clément Marot was the first French translator of Petrarch’s Rerum Vulgarium Fragmenta. His translati...
This paper consists in three parts. The first contains a new discussion about the consistence and th...
This dissertation focuses on the evolution of French poetry in the early Renaissance, by way of Clém...
This thesis begins by outlining the origins of the elegy as a literary form, passing from the fragme...
In 1529, and again in 1533, Lyon printer Claude Nourry published the epistle Lepistre de la belle Cl...
Ce travail porte sur l’évolution de la poésie française au début de la Renaissance, à travers la det...
This dissertation focuses on the evolution of French poetry in the early Renaissance, by way of Clém...
This study provides a synoptic account of the development of Latin elegiac poetry from the first cen...
The present paper studies the theme of illness and remedies proper to poetry in four collections of ...
In 1543 Claude Chappuys published Le Discours de la court, a long poem in praise of the court of Fra...
In this paper, we intend to understand the historical criteria that guided the first editions of Fra...
In 1543 Claude Chappuys published Le Discours de la court, a long poem in praise of the court of Fra...
1538, Marot publishes his Œuvres. In 1560, it’s time for Ronsard to have a complete edition publishe...
The elegy was fashionable at the dawn of modernity, during the periods which are known as Pre-Romant...
In this article I discuss recent trends and publications on Ovidian scholarship, focussing on Heroid...
Clément Marot was the first French translator of Petrarch’s Rerum Vulgarium Fragmenta. His translati...
This paper consists in three parts. The first contains a new discussion about the consistence and th...