2014
DOI: 10.1515/fabula-2014-0015
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The Reception of the Grimms in Nineteenth- Century France

Abstract: This study proposes to fill a gap in Grimm and folklore studies by staking out the landscape of the reception of the Brothers Grimm in nineteenthcentury France. While E. T. A. Hoffmann's tales received high literary acclaim, those by the Grimms seemed to make little impact on French literature of the period. However, among the French scholarly community, the Grimms were celebrated for their erudition, their integrity, and served as models for many scholars, from the historian Jules Michelet, who corresponded w… Show more

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“… 8. For a bibliography of nineteenth-century French editions of d’Aulnoy's fairy tales, see “D’Aulnoy's Works in French, 1800-1899” from the blog “Debunking Myths about Fairy Tales,” https://www.debunking-myths-about-fairytales.com and Appendix II in Duggan 2014: 283-85. Lewis Seifert generally characterizes the fairy tales emerging from the 1690s in terms of “aristocratic romanticism.” See Seifert 1996: 75, 79, 89-90.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“… 8. For a bibliography of nineteenth-century French editions of d’Aulnoy's fairy tales, see “D’Aulnoy's Works in French, 1800-1899” from the blog “Debunking Myths about Fairy Tales,” https://www.debunking-myths-about-fairytales.com and Appendix II in Duggan 2014: 283-85. Lewis Seifert generally characterizes the fairy tales emerging from the 1690s in terms of “aristocratic romanticism.” See Seifert 1996: 75, 79, 89-90.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%