Jean de La Taille
Jean de La Taille (French pronunciation: [ʒɑ̃ də la taj]; c.1540 – c.1607) was a French poet and dramatist born in Bondaroy.
Life
[edit]He studied the humanities in Paris under Muretus, and law at Orléans under Anne de Bourg. He began his career as a Huguenot, but afterwards adopted a mild Catholicism. He was wounded at the Battle of Arnay-le Duc in 1570, and retired to his estate at Bondaroy, where he wrote a political pamphlet entitled Histoire abrégée des singeries de la ligue. His chief poem is a satire on the follies of court life, Le Courtisan retiré; he also wrote a political poem, Le Prince Nécessaire. But his fame rests on his achievements in drama. In 1572 appeared the tragedy of Saül le furieux, with a preface on L'Art de la tragédie. He wrote, not for the general public to which the mysteries and farces had addressed themselves, but for the limited audience of a lettered aristocracy. He therefore depreciated the native drama and insisted on the Senecan model. He objected to deaths on the stage on the ground that the representation is unconvincing.[1]
French and Francophone literature |
---|
by category |
History |
Movements |
Writers |
Countries and regions |
Portals |
References
[edit]- Attribution
public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "La Taille, Jean de". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
This article incorporates text from a publication now in theSources
[edit]- Corinne Noirot-Maguire. "Conjurer le mal: Jean de La Taille et le paradoxe de la tragédie humaniste." EMF: Studies in Early Modern France 13, "Spectacle in Late Medieval and Early Modern France," eds. J. Persels and R. Ganim. Feb. 2010. 121-43.