Lucien Muhlfeld
Lucien Muhlfeld (born August 4, 1870 in Paris , † December 1, 1902 there ) was a French writer and literary critic .
Life
Muhlfeld attended the Lycée Condorcet in Paris, then studied at the Sorbonne University and earned a doctorate in law and literary history . From 1891 to 1897 he was the first literary critic and deputy editor of the magazine La Revue blanche and, as editor, decisively determined the direction of the paper. With his wife Jeanne he ran a literary salon in his Parisian house . He wrote short stories , novels and plays.
Works
- Le Mauvais Désir (1890)
- La Carrière d'André Tourette (1900) / Éditions Larousse, Paris [1923]
- L'Associée (1902) / Éditions Larousse, Paris [1922]
- La Fin d'un art (1890)
- Le monde où l'on imprime (1897)
- Dix ans après (with Pierre Veber, 1897)
Web links
- Literature by and about Lucien Muhlfeld in the SUDOC catalog (Association of French University Libraries)
Individual evidence
- ^ Isaac Landman: The Universal Jewish encyclopedia, Volume 8 (1942), p. 31, excerpt
- ↑ Venita Datta: Birth of a National Icon , 1999, page 215 Digitalisat
- ^ Helen Southworth: The intersecting realities and fictions of Virginia Woolf and Colette , 2004, p. 200 excerpt
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Muhlfeld, Lucien |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | French writer and literary critic |
DATE OF BIRTH | 4th August 1870 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Paris |
DATE OF DEATH | December 1, 1902 |
Place of death | Paris |