Japan in French Poetry
- 1 June 1925
- journal article
- Published by Modern Language Association (MLA) in PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America
- Vol. 40 (2) , 435-449
- https://doi.org/10.2307/457233
Abstract
It is generally known that the timely discovery in Paris of specimens of Japanese color-prints and watercolor painting in the late sixties had an immediate influence on the French Impressionist painters. However, it is not always noted that the writers who supported this school of painting: Baudelaire and Zola, Manet's special friends; the Goncourt brothers who admired Degas; Clemenceau and Théodore Duret, knew certain aspects of Japanese art, and were collectors of curios. Japanese stories and legends entered Europe at about the same time as the color-prints, descriptions of Japanese life are numerous in the magazines of the period. The first poem in French about Japan appears to be this sonnet by Catulle Mendès, which he dates back in his Œuvres complètes to the volume Philoméla (1863).Keywords
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