22 mai 2013
https://www.openedition.org/12554 , info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Jeanne Delbaere-Garant, « Barrès, France and Proust », Presses universitaires de Liège, ID : 10.4000/books.pulg.927
By the end of the century most of the French writers James had known were dead. “Their places in Henry James’s affection,” Edmund Gosse relates in Aspects and Impressions “were partly filled by Paul Bourget and Maurice Barrès, whose remarkable and rather ‘gruesome’ book, Les Déracinés, now supplied James with an endless subject of talk and reflection.” If it was so we can only deplore that Edmund Gosse should not have told us more on this point. As it is he does not in the least contribute to...