Victor Cherbuliez

Victor Cherbuliez
Victor Cherbuliez

Charles Victor Cherbuliez (19 July 1829 – 1 July 1899) was a French novelist and author. He was the eleventh member elected to occupy seat 3 of the Académie française in 1881.

Contents

Biography

Cherbuliez was born at Geneva, Switzerland, where his father, André Cherbuliez (1795-1874), was a classical professor at the Université de Genève. He was descended from a family of Protestant refugees, and many years later Victor Cherbuliez resumed his French nationality, taking advantage of an act passed in the early days of the Revolution. Geneva was the scene of his early education; thence he proceeded to Paris, and afterwards to the universities of Bonn and Berlin.

Cherbuliez returned to his native town and engaged in the profession of teaching. After his resumption of French citizenship he was elected a member of the Académie Française (1881), and having received the Légion d'honneur in 1870, he was promoted to be officer of the order in 1892.

Cherbuliez was a voluminous and successful writer of fiction. His first book, originally published in 1860, reappeared in 1864 under the title of Un Cheval de Phidias: it is a romantic study of art in the golden age of Athens. He went on to produce a series of novels.

Most of these novels first appeared in the Revue des deux mondes, to which Cherbuliez also contributed a number of political and learned articles, usually printed with the pseudonym G Valbert. Many of these have been published in collected form under the titles L'Allemagne politique (1870), L'Espagne politique (1874), Profils étrangers (1889), L'Art et la nature (1892), etc. The volume Etudes de littérature et d'art (1873) includes articles for the most part reprinted from Le Temps.

The earlier novels of Cherbuliez have been said with truth to show marked traces of the influence of George Sand; and in spite of modification, his method was that of an older school. He did not possess the sombre power or the intensely analytical skill of some of his later contemporaries, but his books are distinguished by a freshness and honesty, fortified by cosmopolitan knowledge and lightened by unobtrusive humour, which fully account for their wide popularity in many countries besides his own. His genius was the reverse of dramatic, and attempts to present two of his stories on the stage have not succeeded. His essays have all the merits due to liberal observation and thoroughness of treatment; their style, like that of the novels, is admirably lucid and correct.

Bibliography

  • Le Comte Kostia (1863)
  • Le Prince Vitale (1864)
  • Le roman d'une honnête femme (1866)
  • L'aventure de Ladislas Bolski (1869)
  • Miss Rovel (1875)
  • Samuel Brohl et Cie (1877)
  • L'idée de Jean Téterol (1878)
  • Noirs et rouges (1881)
  • La vocation du comte Ghislain (1888)
  • Une gageure (1890)
  • Le Secret du précepteur (1893)
  • Jacquine Vanesse (1898)

References

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Victor Cherbuliez — photographié par Eugène Pirou Victor Cherbuliez, né à Genève le 19 juillet 1829 et mort à Combs la Ville le 1er juillet 1 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Victor Cherbuliez — (* 19. Juli 1829 in Genf, Schweiz; † 1. Juli 1899 in Combs la Ville, Dept. Seine et Marne) war ein schweizerisch französischer Schriftsteller …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Victor Cherbuliez — (19 de julio de 1829 en Ginebra 2 de julio de 1899 en Combs la Ville) Novelista y dramaturgo nacido suizo, pero de una familia francesa de refugiados por lo que era considerado francés. Entro a formar parte de la Academia francesa en 1881. Obras… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Victor Duruy — Victor Jean Duruy, né le 11 septembre 1811 à Paris, mort le 25 novembre 1894 à Paris, est un homme politique et historien français, ministre de l instruction publique de 1863 à 1869 sous le Second Empire …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Victor-Marie Hugo — Victor Hugo Pour les articles homonymes, voir Hugo et Victor Hugo (homonymie) …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Victor Marie Hugo — Victor Hugo Pour les articles homonymes, voir Hugo et Victor Hugo (homonymie) …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Victor de Laprade — Pierre Martin Victor Richard de Laprade, né à Montbrison le 13 janvier 1812 et mort à Lyon le 13 ou 14 décembre[1] 1883, est un poète, h …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Victor de laprade — Pierre Martin Victor Richard de Laprade, né à Montbrison le 13 janvier 1812 et mort à Lyon le 13 ou 14 décembre[1] …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Víctor — Hugo Origen Latino Género Masculino …   Wikipedia Español

  • Victor (prenom) — Victor (prénom) Pour les articles homonymes, voir Victor. Sommaire 1 Sens et origine du nom 2 Variantes 3 Popu …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”