Revue de Paris

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Title page of the first edition of the Revue de Paris (1829)

Revue de Paris was a French literary magazine founded in 1829[1] by Louis-Désiré Véron[2] in order to compete with the Revue des deux Mondes, it welcomed many of rhe greatest writers of France. After two years Veron left the magazine to head the Paris Opera.[2]

The magazine ceased to be published in 1970.[3]

History

Honoré de Balzac delivered L'Elixir de longue vie and Sarrasine in 1830, then the second part of La Femme de trente ans in 1831, before giving to its rival, the Revue des deux Mondes, the short story that constituted the first part of the same novel entitled Le Rendez-vous.

He also published there: L'Auberge rouge in 1831, La Grenadière under the title Les Orphelins in 1832, La Femme abandonnée in 1832, part of the Histoire des Treize and Ferragus in 1833, the beginning of Père Goriot in 1834, an excerpt from La Peau de chagrin under the title Le Suicide d'un poète and Les Employés ou la Femme supérieure in 1837.

Bought in 1834 by François Buloz, with whom Balzac was in litigation from the third issue of Le Lys dans la vallée, the magazine declined and its publication was interrupted in 1845. It was then taken over by Arsène Houssaye within L'Artiste, with, among others, Théophile Gautier, and Louis Marie de Lahaye Cormenin, welcoming writers rejected by the Revue des deux Mondes, notably Gustave Flaubert, who contributed Madame Bovary. At that time, the Revue de Paris had suppressed several passages of the book, because it feared, not without reason, a lawsuit. Flaubert, who had published in this review, because his friend Maxime Du Camp was a staff member, regretted the decision. He expressed his opposition to the suppression of extracts from his novel and never again published his works in periodicals.

Suppressed by the government in 1858 and dissociated from L'Artiste, the magazine reappeared in 1864–1865 under the title La Nouvelle Revue de Paris before being absorbed by the Revue française.

In 1894, a new Revue de Paris was launched by Edmond de Fels (1858–1951). He passed it on to his son André, and his daughter the duchess Edmée de La Rochefoucauld, who entrusted its direction to the baroness Solange de La Baume.

The Revue de Paris was suspended in 1940, reappeared in May 1945 and disappeared permanently in 1970.

For the period 1829–1854, there are Belgian forgeries of this journal that republish pirated versions of literary pieces and articles that appeared in the Revue de Paris, but also in other journals of the Parisian press: Revue des deux mondes, Revue nouvelle, etc., sometimes with variations.

Contributors

Since the magazine's founding, many notable writers, poets, academics, and politicians have written for the Revue de Paris.

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References

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External links

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