Paul Alexis

Paul Alexis (16 June 1847 – 28 July 1901) was a French novelist, dramatist, and journalist. He is best remembered today as the friend and biographer of Émile Zola.

Paul Cézanne, Paul Alexis reading to Zola, (1869-70)

Life

Alexis was born at Aix-en-Provence. He attended the Collège Bourbon where he first learned of Zola, who was himself a graduate. At the direction of his parents he studied law at the University of Aix, but he longed for the life of a writer, and finally left Aix-en-Provence for Paris. He arrived in the capital in 1869 where he quickly became acquainted with Zola and his family. He contributed articles to a number of newspapers including L'Avenir national, La Cloche, Le Corsaire, Le Cri du peuple (under the pseudonym Trublot), Gil Blas,, Le Journal, La Réforme, Le Recueil, and Le Voltaire. He wrote novels in the naturalist style as well as several plays, some of which were written in collaboration with Oscar Méténier.

In 1875, he was briefly incarcerated on the mistaken suspicion of being a Communard who as such would have faced the prospect of life in prison, but Zola was able to use his influence to have him released.

Along with J.-K. Huysmans, Henri Céard, Guy de Maupassant, Léon Hennique, and Zola, he formed part of the groupe des Médan which was responsible for publishing Les Soirées de Médan in 1880, a collection of six naturalist stories dealing with the Franco-Prussian War. Alexis' contribution was the story Après la bataille ("After the Battle").

Alexis was also a great admirer of Flaubert and friend to Renoir. Céard called him "Zola's shadow". Cézanne painted a portrait of them together entitled Paul Alexis reading to Zola.

After his wife Marie died of typhoid fever in 1900, he sank into alcoholism and eventually succumbed to an aneurysm, dying at Levallois-Perret. He was survived by two daughters, Paule and Marthe.

Quotes

  • ”Naturalism (is) not dead.” (“Naturalisme pas mort.”)

On Zola:

  • “He is as ambitious and domineering in the intellectual realm as he is soft and conciliatory in every other.”
  • “He yields points grudgingly and never on the spot. Not being right causes him intense pain. So deeply rooted is this rivalrous spirit that it will seize the most trivial pretext to manifest itself. Thus, I have sometimes played chess with him and won. He confesses that, momentarily, his defeat irks him as much as if someone denied him literary talent.”
  • "If only you knew all that I owe this man! What would I be today without him? I have no doubt that the little bit of notoriety I and a few others enjoy is a spark from the blaze this extraordinary man has created around himself! Reviled, misunderstood, ignored, he fought the good fight all alone and suffered the anguish of it . . . whilst we, like young men of means who will inherit a fortune they didn’t earn, all we had to do was show up. Even before we’ve sowed, we’ve harvested!”

Works

English translations of two of Alexis's works, Lucie Pellegrin and Monsieur Fraque, are forthcoming from Snuggly Books.[1]

Novels

  • La Fin de Lucie Pellegrin (1880)
  • Après la bataille (as part of Les Soirées de Médan) (1880)
  • Le Besoin d'aimer (1885)
  • Un amour platonique (1886)
  • Le Collage (1883)
  • Les Femmes du père Lefèvre (1886)
  • L'Infortune de monsieur Fraque (1887)
  • L'Education amoureuse (1890)
  • Madame Meuriot, mœurs parisiennes (1890)
  • Trente romans ; Le cœur ; La chair ; L'esprit (1895)
  • La Comtesse. Treize symboles. Quelques originaux (1897)
  • Le Collage (1899)
  • Vallobra (1901)

Drama

  • Celle qu'on n'épouse pas (1879)
  • La Fin de Lucie Pellegrin (1888)
  • Les Frères Zemganno (1890)
  • Monsieur Betsy (1890)
  • Charles Demailly (1892)
  • La Provinciale (1893)

Letters and Memoirs

  • Émile Zola : notes d'un ami (1882)
  • «Naturalisme pas mort» : lettres inédites de Paul Alexis à Émile Zola, 1871-1900 (1971)
gollark: Yes, but they do *sometimes* confiscate them and it would be a hassle to have to pick it up again later.
gollark: As a somewhat more rule-abiding person I mostly don't, although the cost/benefit probably does come out in favour.
gollark: Yes. Quite a lot of people use them anyway and just deal with them being confiscated occasionally.
gollark: Also, I can have internet access all day - my school foolishly banned use of phones during lunch break (not just while eating, during the entire 1 hour 30 minute break).
gollark: I do less pointless busywork, less work generally, have a more comfortable home environment to work in, get to type things instead of foolish "writing", and don't have a 45 minute commute to school, which is all nice.

References

  • Brown, Frederick (1995). Zola: A Life. Baltimore and London: The Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-5463-6.
  • France, Peter (Ed.) (1995). The New Oxford Companion to Literature in French. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-866125-8.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.