Les Nouvelles littéraires

Les Nouvelles littéraires was a French literary and artistic newspaper created in October 1922 by the Éditions Larousse. It disappeared in 1985 after having taken the title L'Autre Journal.

Les Nouvelles littéraires
EditorÉditions Larousse
CategoriesLiterature
FrequencyWeekly
Year founded1922
Final issue1985
CountryFrance
Based inParis

History

Les Nouvelles littéraires were headed by Maurice Martin du Gard from 1922 to 1936 then by André Gillon, and then his son Étienne Gillon. René Minguet was its director from 1971 to 1975 followed by Philippe Tesson from 1975 to 1983.

The editors were successively Gilbert Charles, Frédéric Lefèvre from 1922 until 1949, Georges Charensol from 1949 to 1962, and André Bourin until its disestablishment in 1985.

The magazine, at first artistic and literary, became interested in cinema and science afterwards. It ceased publication from 1940 until 1945. In 1924, the newspaper published an appendix entitled L'Art vivant.

Some collaborators

Sources

  • 1973: D'une rive à l'autre, Georges Charensol, Mercure de France, ISBN 2715209983
  • 2006: Gavroche, André Demonsais, L'Harmattan, series des poings et des roses
gollark: Er, I think a month or two at this point.
gollark: It's me, <@160279332454006795>, and some other people.
gollark: The autocrafting system of the Unicode Consortium on there can actually do roughly the same things, because it contains similar AE2 hardware and has a lot of machines hooked up, but this has the potatOS installation machine and is faster through having dedicated machines for things.
gollark: It makes computers *with no external inputs*, and also makes OC computers, you see.
gollark: Here is one.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.