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Topic: Georges Izambard


In the News (Thu 16 Feb 12)

  
  Georges Izambard - Arthur Rimbaud, sillages   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-10)
Georges Izambard, né en 1848, a été professeur puis journaliste.
Izambard ouvre à Rimbaud sa bibliothèque, l'initiant notamment aux poèmes parnassiens et lui permettant de lire Hugo.
Destinataire en mai 1871 de la première des deux Lettres du Voyant, Izambard semble par la suite s'être éloigné de Rimbaud : sans doute ne partageait-il pas les positions radicales de l'adolescent sur la création poétique, exprimées dans cette sorte de « manifeste ».
azurs.net /arthur-rimbaud/index.php?title=Georges_Izambard&...   (186 words)

  
 Izambard
Georges Alphonse Fleury Izambard est né le 11 décembre 1848 à; paris.
Izambard, Monsieur le Ministre, est un jeune fonctionnaire instruit, intelligent, actif mais il n'a pas encore toute l'expérience désirable, et c'est à son défaut d'expérience, sans doute, qu'on doit attribuer certains actes de légèreté qui ont provoqué contre lui les plaintes de quelques familles.
Izambard dut assez vite quitter l'enseignement, se consacra d'abord au journalisme, puis à des recherches bibliographiques.
michel.balmont.free.fr /pedago/rimbaudouai/izambard.html   (784 words)

  
 Rimbaud, Arthur Criticism and Essays
He attended the College de Charleville, where he was an outstanding student in every subject, but he was permitted no contact with other boys outside school hours by his mother who insisted on accompanying him to and from school each day.
Georges Izambard, a professor at the school, befriended Rimbaud and encouraged him to read the poetry of the Romantics and the Parnassians, and to write his own poetry.
Izambard left the school in 1870 at the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian war, and over the next two years Rimbaud ran away from home on three different occasions, at least once in an attempt to find his mentor.
www.enotes.com /poetry-criticism/rimbaud-arthur   (1421 words)

  
 Arthur Rimbaud Biography - Page 1   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-10)
Around that time Georges Izambard, a new rhetoric teacher from Paris, grows fond of Arthur and grants him access to his personal library.
As Rimbaud's mother finds out that Izambard allows her son to read books which in her mind are inappropriate for a child, such as Victor Hugo's Les Miserables, she reprimands Izambard in a letter.
Today, Rimbaud is considered to have been one of the first proponents of the free verse style and a predecessor to the surrealists.
www.wildweb.de /art-rimbaud/html/e-art-rimbaud-bio-text-1.htm   (882 words)

  
 Rimbaud . Jean Nicolas Arthur Rimbaud
Izambard is a young teacher with revolutionary tendencies, who encourages him, to the outage of his mother, to read Rabelais and Hugo.
He took off to Brussels, where he appears unannounced at the house of some friends of Izambard's, who send him to Douai where Izambard's adoptive 'aunts' live.
He returned to Paris in late September 1871 at the invitation of the eminent Parnassian poet Paul Verlaine (after Rimbaud had sent him a letter containing several samples of his work) and resided briefly in Verlaine's home.
www.rimbaud.150m.com /biography.html   (1291 words)

  
 Meningar.com om Demeny. Paul, Rimbaud, Georges mm.
Rimbaud, Sillages À propos de Paul Demeny Accueil > Biographie de Rimbaud > Paul Demeny Paul Demeny Poète douaisien, Paul Demeny était l’ami de Georges Izambard...
Arthur Rimbaud   À propos de "Seconde lettre du Voyant (à Paul Demeny, 15 mai 1871)" :   Paul Demeny, poète et ami de Georges Izambard, était également éditeur...
rimbaldien _ Arthur Rimbaud : correspondance (extraits) Arthur Rimbaud : Correspondance (extraits) TABLE DES MATIÈRES À Théodore de Banville, I À Georges Izambard, I À Georges Izambard, II À Georges Izambard, III À Paul Demeny, I À Paul Demeny, II À Théo..
www.meningar.com /demeny.html   (990 words)

  
 Arthur Rimbaud : lettres à Georges Izambard
Lettre à Georges Izambard du 25 août 1870
Lettre à Georges Izambard du 2 novembre 1870
A.R. Le document a été détérioré par un flacon de colle et c'est Izambard lui-même qui a rétabli de mémoire les parties du texte placés entre crochets.
www.mag4.net /Rimbaud/LettresIzambard.html   (1458 words)

  
 Biographie - Arthur Rimbaud, sillages   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-10)
Entré en classe de rhétorique, Rimbaud rencontre Georges Izambard.
Izambard jouera un rôle important pour Rimbaud ; il conserve notamment ses premiers textes.
En mai, il est encore à Charleville, d'où il écrit à Georges Izambard et Paul Demeny les deux « lettres du Voyant ».
www.azurs.net /arthur-rimbaud/rimbaud_biographie.htm   (2988 words)

  
 Wikinfo | Arthur Rimbaud   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-10)
By the age of thirteen or fourteen, he had won many prizes in literature and writing; he also composed poems and dialogues in Latin.
In 1870, he met Professor Georges Izambard, who became a mentor for the young poet.
Rimbaud ran away from home in 1870, and eventually arrived in Paris, where he was forced to live on the streets.
www.wikinfo.org /wiki.php?title=Arthur_Rimbaud   (346 words)

  
 Arthur Rimbaud
In 1870 his teacher Georges Izambard became Rimbaud's literary mentor and his original verses in French began to improve rapidly.
At the same time he wrote to Izambard and Paul Démeny about his method for attaining poetical transcendence or visionary power through a "long, immense and rational derangement of all the senses" ("Les lettres du Voyant" ["The Letters of the Seer"]).
He returned to Paris in late September 1871 at the invitation of the eminent Symbolist poet Paul Verlaine (after Rimbaud had sent him a letter containing several samples of his work) and resided briefly in Verlaine's home.
www.languageisavirus.com /bios/Rimbaud.htm   (1586 words)

  
 Poets.org - Poetry, Poems, Bios & More - Arthur Rimbaud
By the age of thirteen, he had already won several prizes for his writing and was adept at composing verse in Latin.
His teacher and mentor Georges Izambard nurtured his talents and passion for literature, although Madame Rimbaud strongly disapproved when her son brought home a copy of Victor Hugo’s Les Miserables.
His school shut down in 1870 during the Franco-Prussian War, and the young Rimbaud took the opportunity to seek adventure, running away from home twice.
www.poets.org /poet.php/prmPID/1268   (674 words)

  
 Caxtonian: January 2002
A good student, Rimbaud read voraciously and without much discrimination, won several prizes in Latin composition and attracted the attention of a young teacher of liberal views, Georges Izambard, some five years older than he was.
The very proper and decent Izambard lent him books, encouraged him to write, and treated him like a younger brother.
The account of his teacher, Georges Izambard, Rimbaud Tel Que Je L’ai Connu, Paris, 1946, is still worth reading.
www.caxtonclub.org /reading/2002/Jan/rimbaud.htm   (1942 words)

  
 Carlton Lake Manuscript Collection: Harry Ransom Center
GEORGES BATAILLE: manuscripts of two of his major works, L'Orestie and Dianus [Histoire de rats.
SAMUEL BECKETT: multiple drafts of "Ceiling" and "The Way" ("8") as well as manuscripts of some of Beckett's other later works; letters to Georges Belmont and Rick Cluchey, and information on the 1992 and 1993 publications of his Dream of Fair to Middling Women.
ARTHUR RIMBAUD: collection of numerous documents relating to Rimbaud's life and poetry, many of them unpublished, including manuscripts, letters, drawings, corrected proofs and similar materials by Rimbaud's sister, Isabelle; his brother-in-law, Paterne Berrichon, poet and artist; his teacher Georges Izambard, and other poets such as Paul Verlaine, Stéphane Mallarmé, and Paul Claudel.
www.hrc.utexas.edu /collections/french/holdings/manuscripts   (1101 words)

  
 Revolting Literature - Other   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-10)
Other - “I is an Other” is a quote from Rimbaud’s letter to Georges Izambard.
A letter that Rimbaud uses to condemn Izambard’s poetry saying it “will always be horribly wishy-washy.” “ I is an other” can be explained from two directions, both of which necessary for fully understanding the complexity of the phrase.
First, lets start with a different quote from Rimbaud that helps to explain “I is an other”.
www.prism.gatech.edu /~gtg693w/english/other.html   (245 words)

  
 Carlton Lake: An Inventory of His Collection at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center
Georges Hugnet (1906-1974): handwritten and typed manuscripts, correspondence, printed material, photographs, collages, and artwork document the surrealist artist and poet Georges Hugnet's life and work.
Georges Jean-Aubry (1882-1950): a sizable portion of the papers of the versatile critic of art, music, and literature.
Arthur Rimbaud (1854-1891): collection of numerous documents relating to Rimbaud's life and poetry, including manuscripts, letters, drawings, corrected proofs and similar materials by Rimbaud's sister, Isabelle; his brother-in-law, Paterne Berrichon, poet and artist; his teacher Georges Izambard, and other poets such as Paul Verlaine, Stéphane Mallarmé, and Paul Claudel.
www.lib.utexas.edu /taro/uthrc/00291/hrc-00291p1.html   (2847 words)

  
 Arthur Rimbaud   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-10)
By the age of fifteen, he had won many prizes and composed original verses and dialogues in Latin.
In 1870 his teacher Georges Izambard became Rimbaud's first literary mentor, and his original verses in French began to improve rapidly.
He ran away from home to briefly join the Paris Commune of 1870, which he portrayed in his poem "L'Orgie parisienne ou Paris se repeuple" (the Parisian orgy or Paris repopulates).
arthur-rimbaud.kiwiki.homeip.net   (576 words)

  
 VQR » "RIMBAUD" EST UN AUTRE   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-10)
Shortly after his teacher and mentor Georges Izambard left Charleville, Rimbaud's hometown, to return home to Douai during the unstable wartime, major civic institutions, including the schools, closed indefinitely and young Rimbaud was left to his own devices.
Though he tried to enlist to be a soldier like his brother, he was too young to fight.
"And that is not nothing," Mason quips at the end of his introduction, alluding to Rimbaud's letter to Izambard that includes his early poem "Coeur Supplicie." This is not nothing, Rimbaud warns his mentor—although Izambard nonetheless mistakes as parody the poet's painful articulation of his mistreatment and abuse by soldiers in Paris.
www.vqronline.org /articles/2004/winter/grotz-rimbaud-autre   (3273 words)

  
 Geneva, Wisconsin - Giovanni Maria Angioy
George Evans (Canadian jazz vocalist) - George Foulkes, Baron Foulkes of Cumnock
George James Welbore Agar-Ellis, Baron Dover - George Klein (comics)
George Watson (accountant) - George William, Elector of Brandenburg
omniknow.com /common/midlists.php?in=en&slice=035   (458 words)

  
 [No title]
The Rimbaud of whom Adorno speaks appears to be primarily the writer of the famous "lettres Ç du voyant È" (342) ["Letters of the Visionary" (v)], written to Georges Izambard and Paul Demeny.
If, as Adorno claims, "artworks became artworks only by negating their origin" (3), if "only by virtue of the absolute negativity of collapse does art enunciate the unspeakable: utopia" (32), perhaps no artistic testimony more completely embodies the sweeping gesture of repudiation than the rash words of this poet.
To reach the beyond requires jettisoning not only the "poŽsie subjective" (345) ["subjective poetry" (xxvi)] Izambard taught him, but also the subjective self.
www.genders.org /g32/g32_cole.txt   (7614 words)

  
 The New Yorker : critics : books   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-10)
Even on a scribbled note to his teacher Georges Izambard, Rimbaud’s flair for the dramatic is apparent, his handwriting full of swirls and flourishes.
Writing a few months later to the poet Théodore de Banville, the editor of the anthology “Le Parnasse Contemporain,” he is both self-deprecating and infatuated with his own promise.
The first, addressed to Izambard, begins by insulting the teacher’s “dry-as-dust subjective poetry” and includes a singsong ditty that crudely depicts anal intercourse.
newyorker.com /critics/books/?031117crbo_books   (3554 words)

  
 glbtq >> literature >> Rimbaud, Arthur
With the encouragement of his young professor-mentor Georges Izambard, he had written twenty-two poems by 1870.
In his art, Rimbaud assumes the mask of diverse personalities, both male and female.
In his letter to Izambard of May 13, 1871, appears a novel concept, "I is someone else" ("Je est un autre").
www.glbtq.com /literature/rimbaud_a.html   (1182 words)

  
 Rimbaud
Stimulated by a yearning for more in life, he became a gifted student.
In 1870, restless and despondent over the loss of his favorite teacher, Georges Izambard, who had left to fight in the Franco-Prussian War, Rimbaud ran away from home to Paris.
In 1871, Rimbaud met Paul Verlaine-who was twenty years older-and moved into his household.
members.tripod.com /~Mr_MojoRisin/Influences/rimbaudie4.htm   (473 words)

  
 blog.myspace.com/sethpollins   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-10)
It was vicious, detestable he later said—the young poet seemed to want to screw himself up, as much as possible, physically, emotionally, and spiritually.
At this point, the young poet was certain: the new form was meant to be amorphous, as a man's life is, essentially, amorphous.
And although Izambard and Demeny both dismissed the letters as utter inanity, practical jokes at best, utter filth at worst, Rimbaud was certainly not joking.
blog.myspace.com /sethpollins   (4857 words)

  
 Life and Times of Arthur Rimbaud Artistic Culture
While attending Charleville College in France, Arthur Rimbaud met professor, Georges Izambard.
  Impressed by Arthur’s intelligence, Izambard lent him books to read such as Victor Hugo’s Les Miserables.
Ten years before Arthur met Verlaine in Paris, Arthur had talked about this quest with Georges Izambard in a letter from May of 1871 saying, he “was busy ‘wallowing in vice’ with the goal of being a poet and a ‘seer’: ‘It’s a matter of arriving
www.etsu.edu /writing/teaching&theory_s06/radical.htm   (2131 words)

  
 Holly Tannen's Practical Alchemy : The Tortured Heart
His high-school teacher, Georges Izambard, sends the money and gets him released.
But he sends Izambard the poem, "The Tortured Heart" as a first example of his voyance:
They squirt on it their jets of soup,
hollytannen.com /play/Tortured.htm   (360 words)

  
 another: other Archives
I should probably put up a sidebar link to a FAQ about my blog's title and the strange French embedded in the index page's banner.
"Je est un autre" comes from one of Rimbaud's “Lettres du Voyant” (“Seer Letters”), addressed to his teacher Georges Izambard.
It can be translated into English as "I is someone else," or "I is another," the second translation being what my blog title refers to.
www.nchicha.com /other/archives/cat_other.html   (972 words)

  
 Arthur Rimbaud: documents and letters
Letter from Rimbaud to Theodore de Banville, May 24, 1870
Letter from Rimbaud to Georges Izambard, May 13, 1871
Letter from Rimbaud to Paul Demeny, May 15, 1871
www.mag4.net /Rimbaud/DocumentsE.html   (116 words)

  
 Angry 6
Unspeakable torment, where he will need the greatest faith, a superhuman strength, where he becomes among all men the great invalid, the great criminal, the great accursed--and the Supreme Scientist!
The passage appears in Rimbaud's lettre du voyant (his letter to Georges Izambard, dated 13 May 1871), and the idea here is that artistic "vision" requires decadence and the destruction of rationality: the artist disorganizes his senses in order to break free of all social and moral constraints and liberate his "inner self."
French feminist theorists have found male avant-garde practices and concepts like Rimbaud's relevant to feminist aims.
www.cinema.ucla.edu /women/carter/carter6.html   (1494 words)

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