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La poésie comme une arme de combat: Victor Hugo, Les Châtiments
ID
Pergar, Nina
(
Author
),
ID
Marinčič, Katarina
(
Mentor
)
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Abstract
Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte, président de la France sous la IIe République, n'a pas réussi à réformer la constitution pour se maintenir légalement au pouvoir et c’est pourquoi il s’est emparé du pouvoir par le biais d’un coup d’État, le 2 décembre 1851. Victor Hugo, en soutenant l’insurrection, s’est publiquement opposé au règne de Napoléon III. Menacé d’arrestation, il s’est réfugié à Jersey où il a continué son combat politique en publiant un recueil « Châtiments ». Lorsque finalement Napoléon III est déchu, Hugo revient en France, où il publie une seconde édition, composée de plus de 100 poèmes, désormais intitulée « Les Châtiments ». C’est le chef d'œuvre d'Hugo, dans lequel l’auteur ridiculise et attaque violemment Napoléon III et son régime sanglant. À travers la caricature et la satire, il se moque de Louis-Napoléon et de tous ceux qui sont impliqués dans cette «grande tragédie», comme l'appelle Hugo lui-même.
Language:
Slovenian
Keywords:
Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte
,
coup d’État
,
Victor Hugo
,
Les Châtiments
,
la poésie engagée
,
la satire
Work type:
Bachelor thesis/paper
Organization:
FF - Faculty of Arts
Year:
2021
PID:
20.500.12556/RUL-132055
Publication date in RUL:
11.10.2021
Views:
1748
Downloads:
67
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:
PERGAR, Nina, 2021,
La poésie comme une arme de combat: Victor Hugo, Les Châtiments
[online]. Bachelor’s thesis. [Accessed 11 April 2025]. Retrieved from: https://repozitorij.uni-lj.si/IzpisGradiva.php?lang=eng&id=132055
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Language:
English
Title:
Poetry as a weapon: Victor Hugo, Les Châtiments
Abstract:
Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte, the president of the Second Republic of France, was not allowed by the constitution to be re-elected, so he seized power by force in a coup d’état on December 2 1851. Victor Hugo, who supported the insurrection, publicly opposed the reign of Napoleon III. Threatened with arrest, he fled to Jersey where he continued his political uprising by publishing a collection of poems called Châtiments ("Castigations"). When Napoleon III was defeated, Hugo returned to France where he published the second edition of a collection composed of more than 100 poems, now titled Les Châtiments. In the masterpiece Hugo ridicules and violently attacks Napoleon III and his bloody regime. Through caricature and satire, he mocks Louis-Napoleon and all others involved in the "great tragedy", as Hugo himself calls it.
Keywords:
Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte
,
coup d’état
,
Victor Hugo
,
Les Châtiments
,
political poetry
,
satire
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