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Jean Desmarets

 
French Literature Companion: Jean Desmarets De Saint-Sorlin

Desmarets De Saint-Sorlin, Jean (c.1600-1676). Polymath, who entered the French literary scene through his active participation, as performer as well as creator, in ballets de cour. He gained fame by serving Richelieu's interests. He was, for example, principal author of several plays on which Richelieu may have collaborated, of which the comedy Les Visionnaires (1638) is the best-known. He was among the founder-members of the Académie Française and among the authors of the Sentiments de l'Académie sur le Cid (1637). In 1654 he underwent a conversion and began to write devotional prose, becoming violently antagonistic to those (like the Jansenists) whose doctrines he opposed. From this period date his epic poem, Clovis, ou la France chrétienne (1657, extensively rewritten for the 1673 edition) and his biblical poems. He ended his career with numerous contributions to the Querelle des Anciens et Modernes, all of them defences of modern literature.

[Joan Dejean]

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Jean Desmarets de Saint-Sorlin
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Desmarets de Saint-Sorlin, Jean (zhäN dāmärā' də săN-sôrlăN'), 1595-1676, French poet and dramatist. A protégé of Richelieu, he was a founding member of the French Academy. In 1670 he precipitated a controversy over the literary merits of the ancients that foreshadowed the polemics of Perrault and Boileau-Despréaux; Boileau attacked him in L'Art poétique.
Wikipedia: Jean Desmarets
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Jean Desmarets, Sieur de Saint-Sorlin (1595 - 28 October 1676) was a French writer and dramatist. He was a founding member, and the first to occupy seat 4 of the Académie française in 1634.

Biography

Born in Paris, Desmarets was introduced to Cardinal Richelieu, and became one of the band of writers who carried out the cardinal's literary ideas when he was about thirty years old. His inclination, however, was to writing novels, and the success of his romance L'Ariane in 1632 led to his formal admission to a circle of writers that met at the house of Valentine Conrart. When this circle later developed into the Académie française, Desmarets became its first chancellor.

His success led to official preferment, and he was made conseiller du roi, contrôleur-général de l'extraordinaire des guerres, and secretary-general of the fleet of the Levant.

Works

It was at Richelieu's request that he began to write for the theatre. In this genre he produced a comedy long regarded as a masterpiece, Les Visionnaires (1637); a prose-tragedy, Erigone (1638); and Scipion (1639), a tragedy in verse.

His long epic Clovis (1657) is noteworthy because Desmarets rejected the traditional pagan background, and maintained that Christian imagery should supplant it. With this standpoint he contributed several works in defence of the moderns in the famous quarrel between the Ancients and Moderns.

In his later years Desmarets devoted himself chiefly to producing a number of religious poems, of which the best known is perhaps his verse translation of the Office de la Vierge (1645). He was a violent opponent of the Jansenists, against whom he wrote a Réponse à l'insolente apologie de Port-Royal (1666). He died in Paris on 28 October 1676.

References

This article incorporates information from the revision as of January 2009 of the equivalent article on the French Wikipedia.



 
 
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French Literature Companion. The New Oxford Companion to Literature in French. Copyright © 1995, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
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