Talk:Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve

Latest comment: 12 years ago by KD Tries Again in topic Needs attention

Contre Sainte Beuve edit

"Marcel Proust took issue with this contention and began an essay meant to refute it. Proust's essay eventually developed into À la recherche du temps perdu."

Well, not quite. Around 1909 Proust completed (although it seems to not have been published until many years later by Gallimard) a long set of essays titled "Contre Sainte Beuve" whose opening words are "Every day I set less store on intellect". English translation by Sylvia Townsend Warner (Chatto and Windus, 1958). Many of the themes of À la recherche were mooted in these essays. See George Painter's biography. Xxanthippe 23:11, 26 September 2007 (UTC).Reply

"Contre Sainte Beuve" is the title of a set of twenty-five essays. None of the individual essays is titled "Contre Sainte Beuve". Xxanthippe 02:54, 15 October 2007 (UTC).Reply

Needs attention edit

Reads like it has been copied from somewhere, possibly from a non-English source. Badly written. What can "the Premier lundis of his collected Works" possibly mean? He was an "acute sufferer" - er, from what exactly? Maybe a history of the Port-Royal abbey counts as literary research - but why? The reader gets no sense of what he did or why he was an "important" figure.KD Tries Again (talk) 21:56, 12 June 2011 (UTC)KD Tries AgainReply