STENDHAL

stăNdälˈ, pseud. of Marie Henri Beylemärē äNrēˈ bĕl, 1783–1842, French writer, recognized as one of the great French novelists.

He grew up in Grenoble hating his father and the Jesuit, Royalist atmosphere in his home, and he went to Paris at his earliest opportunity. There influential relatives obtained a place for him at the ministry of war. In 1800 he became a dragoon in Napoleon's army, and the invasion of Italy took him to Milan. By 1802 he was back in Paris, where he pursued the amorous adventures that continued to interest him all his life. He read widely and kept notes and journals, which have been published. He again served with Napoleon's army in the disastrous Russian campaign (1812). After Napoleon's fall in 1814, Stendhal went to Milan, remaining there until 1820. There he began his literary career.

In Vie de Haydn, de Mozart, et de Métastase (1814) and in Rome, Naples, et Florence en 1817 (1817), he borrowed facts freely from other writers, but the point of view and wit were his own. His books were better known in England than in France, and from c.1817 he wrote for British journals. In this period, when he was suffering from his most genuine and most unhappy love affair, he wrote De l'amour (1822), a psychological analysis of love that predates Freud. Stendhal's first novel, Armance (1827), was scorned by the critics.

In 1831 the first of his two great novels, Le Rouge et le Noir (tr. The Red and the Black), was published. The Red in the title symbolizes the army and liberalism, and the Black the reactionary clergy. It is, baldly, the story of a sensitive but calculating youth, Julien Sorel, who pursues his ambitions by seduction and is eventually guillotined for shooting his mistress. Its sympathetic and acute character analysis and its picture of the period make it one of the world's great novels.

After the accession (1830) of Louis Philippe, Stendhal was appointed consul at Trieste, but because Metternich objected to his books and liberal ideas, he was shifted to Civitavecchia in 1831. He wrote constantly there, although he did not publish; among the works of that period are Souvenirs d'égotisme and La Vie d'Henri Brulard, both autobiographical, and Lucien Leuwen, a novel.

During a three-year leave of absence (1836–39), which he spent in Paris or in traveling about France, he wrote what many consider his greatest novel, La Chartreuse de Parme (1839, tr. The Charterhouse of Parma). Its plot is from the Renaissance, but it is set in Italy of the 1830s. Its hero, Fabrizio del Dongo, like Julien Sorel, possesses a special egoism (termed Beylism by Stendhal) that derives its great energy from passion, has its own moral code, and consists of unswerving pursuit of happiness in the form of love or power. Stendhal returned to Paris a few months before he died. Nearly 50 years after his death, his unprinted works were discovered and published.

See translations of his autobiographical works, The Life of Henri Brulard (1939), Memoirs of Egotism (1949), and The Private Diaries of Stendhal (1954); biography by J. Keates (1997).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Stendhal  - 2115 results

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...even during these later leaner years, Stendhal was never really in dire poverty. Factory...workmen got four or five. 45 Even if Stendhal had done nothing at all and lived only...a skilled artisans fulltime pay. But Stendhal was accustomed to a comfortable bourgeois...
...du Pavois, 1943. FRANCE ANATOLE, "Stendhal" in La Revue de Paris , 1 September...France, 1906 and 1913. GREEN F. C., Stendhal , Cambridge University Press, 1939. GUNNELL DORIS, Stendhal et lAngleterre . Paris: BOSSE, 1909...
...might be gathered from the writings of Stendhal that would equal Rivarol and Roche foucauld...in Beyond Good and Evil , described Stendhal as "that remarkable man who, with a...France." He also spoke of him as "Stendhal, who has, perhaps, had the most profound...
...any valor had to act and not talk." Stendhal sketches in a scene at this point in...it as immutable and therefore true, Stendhal challenges its power by refusing to use...By detaching the image from its name, Stendhal achieves a new way of seeing. What William...
Critical works on Stendhal Adams, R., Notes on a novelist, Merlin Press, 1959. Alain, Stendhal, PUF, 1959. Alb6r?s, F., Stendhal et le sentiment religieux, Nizet, 1956. Le naturel chez Stendhal, Nizet, 1956. Arbelet, P...
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journal articles on: Stendhal  - 359 results

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HEMINGWAY VS. STENDHAL, OR PAPAS LAST FIGHT WITH A DEAD WRITER...Guy de Maupassant (1850-93) and Stendhal (1783-1842)--in a struggle to...DeMaupassant.... Then try and take Stendhal" (SL 624). In September 19 49...
Stendhal En Sa Correspondance Ou "LHistoire Dun...by Maryline Lukacher Diaz, Brigitte. Stendhal en sa correspondance ou "LHistoire dun...peut se voir soi-meme?" que posait Stendhal dans Vie de Henry Brulard, Brigitte Diaz...
Brombert, Victor. Stendhal: Roman et Liberte. by Janice Best Brombert, Victor. Stendhal: Roman et liberte. Paris: Editions Fallois...978-2-87706-641-9 (Titre original: Stendhal: Fiction and the Themes of Freedom, 1968...
Stendhal: Dictionnaire De Stendhal. by Christopher Thompson , Valentina Ponzetto , Annarosa Poli , Philippe Andres Stendhal Dictionnaire de Stendhal. Publie sous la direction de Yves Ansel...
LAnnee Stendhal 4. Paris: Klincksieck, 2000. by James...established annual review, LAnnee Stendhal continues with the successful format...universities, are grouped under the heading "Stendhal en Angleterre." The "Notes et documents...
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magazine articles on: Stendhal  - 112 results

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...Fun and Fame Reminds Lesbian Writer Renate Stendhal of Her Own Youthful Exploits. by Renate Stendhal Reading the intriguing biography Charlotte...its very nature, a sexual empowerment. Stendhal is a therapist and author of books including...
The Worldly Stendhal. by PHILLIP LOPATE Stendhal first came into my life through the impassioned offices of...Kafka. I was immediately drawn to the mystical sound of Stendhal, an author with one name, like a magician (or a charlatan...
Jeff Scher: Maya Stendhal Gallery. by Lisa Pasquariello The saxophone riff audible on entering...appropriate accompaniment to Jeff Schers second solo exhibition at Maya Stendhal Gallery. With its bouncy, singsong tone, the sound track to the...
George Maciunas: Maya Stendhal Gallery. by Fionn Meade Between 1957 and 1965, before establishing the downtown artist cooperatives that garnered him the nickname...
Bill Morrison: Maya Stendhal Gallery. by Elizabeth Schambelan In A Voyage on the North Sea, Rosalind Krauss recalls that in the late 60s and early 70s artists...
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newspaper articles on: Stendhal  - 59 results

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Erratic, restless but also Stendhal by Colin Walters Some days in the...one forever. The author we know as Stendhal, writing his memoir of Napoleon...one of the merits of Mr. Keates "Stendhal" that he manages to limn so well...
...genuine medical condition-known as Stendhal Syndrome, named after the French novelist...in 1817. At Santa Croce church, when Stendhal saw Giottos famous frescoes for the first...Stendhals symptoms, she named the condition Stendhal Syndrome (visitors to the Holy Land...
...exercise in how a certain kind of writer - Stendhal once characterized himself as being really...fiction" provisionally, thinking again of Stendhal - this one comes with illustrations...unique, style. The 17-year-old Stendhal, as he would become, rode into Milan...
...having been put in place by the writer Stendhal, who as a 17-year-old in 1800 had...This is useful to know, since it shows Stendhal and his contemporaries as not just spoiled...brought full-circle the project begun by Stendhal, and in her closing chapter (aside...
...dealing with the face of the Other, beginning, with a hint of Stendhal, in those aspects of the loved ones face "seen as contemptible...complex and marvelous one worthy of Proust, Lord Byron and Stendhal, neither trivial in that "Bridges of Madison County" way...
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encyclopedia articles on: Stendhal  - 10 results

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STENDHAL staNdal , pseud. of Marie Henri Beyle...1812). After Napoleons fall in 1814, Stendhal went to Milan, remaining there until...accession (1830) of Louis Philippe, Stendhal was appointed consul at Trieste, but...
BEYLE, MARIE HENRI see Stendhal . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...Evans), Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens), Lewis Carroll (Charles Lutwidge Dodgson), O. Henry (William Sydney Porter), Stendhal (Marie Henri Beyle), and George Sand (Mme Amandine Aurore Lucie Dupin, baronne Dudevant). Perhaps because the genre...
...piano pieces, and a setting of the Stabat Mater (1842), in which his operatic style is still evident. See biographies by Stendhal (1822, repr. 1982), F. Toye (1934, repr. 1987), and H. Weinstock (1968, 2d ed. 1987...
...Moliere, Marquis de La Rochefoucauld, Duc de Saint-Simon, Jean Jacques Rousseau, Honore de Balzac, Gustave Flaubert, Stendhal, Emile Zola, and Marcel Proust. But not all omissions from the academy roster are attributable to literary criteria, for...
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