EMILE ZOLA
G'day folks,
Welcome to a post on Emile Zola. Émile Édouard Charles Antoine Zola was a French writer, the most
important exemplar of the literary school of naturalism and an important
contributor to the development of theatrical naturalism.
Émile Zola was born in Paris, France on 2nd April 1840,
the son of François Zola, an engineer and his wife Emilie Aubert. He grew up in
Aix-en-Provence, attending the (now named) Collège Mignet, then the Lycée Saint
Louis in Paris. Under the harsh straits of poverty after his father died Zola
worked various clerical jobs. He then moved on to writing literary columns for
Cartier de Villemessant’s newspapers. A sign of things to come he was harsh and
outspoken in his criticism of Napoleon. He was also harshly anti-Catholic .
One of Zola’s first works
published was his autobiographical La Confession de Claude (1865), which
attracted many critics and brought negative attention to him including the
police. Guilt and shame haunt Thérèse Raquin (1867), another of Zola’s works to
inspire many film and television adaptations. Madeleine Férat was published a
year later. Zola further explores the scientific model in Le Roman Experimental
(The Experimental Novel) (1880). He next wrote his Les Trois Villes series
consisting of Lourdes (1894), Rome (1896), and Paris (1898).
Perhaps the most sensational
and certainly politically influential work of Zola’s is “J’accuse” (I Accuse!)
(1898), his open letter to then French president Félix Faure. Accusing the
French government of anti-semitism it was published on the front page of the
Paris newspaper `L’Aurore’ (The Dawn) on 13 January 1898 in response to the
Dreyfus affair, a scandal that had divided the country in two as the rest of
the world watched on uneasily. Captain Alfred Dreyfus was a Jewish military
officer in the French army, hastily tried and convicted of treason in 1894.
Realizing their error in haste and bureaucratic bungling, the government was
not willing to back down and release him from imprisonment on Devil’s Island
till many years later. Zola’s article of exposure and ensuing furore led to
France’s enactment of the law in 1905 that separates church and state.
Zola was convicted of libel
and after his internationally covered trial sentenced to a year-long jail term
but fled to England. He returned to France when the charge against him was
dismissed. Dreyfus was exhonerated and regained full honors with the military.
Back in France Zola continued writing, including his Les Quatre Évangiles (Four
Gospels); Fécondité (Fruitfulness) (1900), Travail (Labor) (1901), Vérité
(Truth) (1903), and Justice (unfinished).
Émile Zola died on 29 September 1902
at his home in Paris under what some claim to be suspicious circumstances of
carbon monoxide poisoning by stopping up his chimney. He was first interred at
the Cimetière de Montmartre in Paris, then later moved to The Panthéon in the
Latin Quarter of Paris, France.
Clancy's comment: I wonder if he ever smiled or laughed?
I'm ...
No comments:
Post a Comment