Émile Zola
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- | '''Émile Zola''' ([[April 2]], [[1840]] – [[September 29]], [[1902]]) was an influential [[France|French]] [[novelist]], the most important example of the literary school of [[naturalism (literature)|naturalism]], and a major figure in the political liberalization of [[France]].{{GFDL}} | + | '''Émile Zola''' ([[April 2]], [[1840]] – [[September 29]], [[1902]]) was an influential [[France|French]] [[novelist]], the most important example of the literary school of [[naturalism (literature)|naturalism]], and a major figure in the political liberalization of [[France]]. |
==Manifesto of naturalism== | ==Manifesto of naturalism== | ||
[[Émile Zola]] - the father of naturalism - wrote the manifesto of naturalism in his 1880 essay ''[[Le Roman expérimental]]'' (Eng: The experimental novel). Zola's works had a [[frankness]] about [[sexuality]] along with a pervasive [[pessimism]] which exposed the [[dark]] harshness of life, including [[poverty]], [[racism]], [[prejudice]], [[disease]], [[prostitution]], filth, etc. They were often very pessimistic and frequently criticized for being too [[blunt]]. | [[Émile Zola]] - the father of naturalism - wrote the manifesto of naturalism in his 1880 essay ''[[Le Roman expérimental]]'' (Eng: The experimental novel). Zola's works had a [[frankness]] about [[sexuality]] along with a pervasive [[pessimism]] which exposed the [[dark]] harshness of life, including [[poverty]], [[racism]], [[prejudice]], [[disease]], [[prostitution]], filth, etc. They were often very pessimistic and frequently criticized for being too [[blunt]]. | ||
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Émile Zola (April 2, 1840 – September 29, 1902) was an influential French novelist, the most important example of the literary school of naturalism, and a major figure in the political liberalization of France.
Manifesto of naturalism
Émile Zola - the father of naturalism - wrote the manifesto of naturalism in his 1880 essay Le Roman expérimental (Eng: The experimental novel). Zola's works had a frankness about sexuality along with a pervasive pessimism which exposed the dark harshness of life, including poverty, racism, prejudice, disease, prostitution, filth, etc. They were often very pessimistic and frequently criticized for being too blunt.
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