Belles-lettres

Belles-lettres

:"See also Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres".

Belles-lettres or belles lettres is a term that is used to describe a category of writing. A writer of belles-lettres is a belletrist. However the boundaries of that category vary in different usages.

Literally, "belles lettres" is a French phrase meaning "beautiful" or "fine" writing. In this sense, therefore, it includes all literary works – especially fiction, poetry, drama, or essays – valued for their aesthetic qualities and originality of style and tone (usually with regard to the language used but sometimes even in terms of the visual typography employed) rather than their informative or moral content. The term can thus be used to refer to literature generally. The Nuttall Encyclopedia, for example, described "belles lettres" as the "department of literature which implies literary culture and belongs to the domain of art, whatever the subject may be or the special form; it includes poetry, the drama, fiction, and criticism", while the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition describes it as "the more artistic and imaginative forms of literature, as poetry or romance, as opposed to more pedestrian and exact studies."

The phrase is sometimes used in a derogatory manner when speaking about the study of English literature: those who study rhetoric often deride English departments for focusing on the aesthetic qualities of language rather than its practical application. A quote from Brian Sutton's article in "Language and Learning Across the Disciplines," "Writing in the Disciplines, First-Year Composition, and the Research Paper," serves to illustrate the rhetoricians' opinion on this subject and their use of the term:

Writing-in-the-disciplines adherents, well aware of the wide range of academic genresa first-year composition student may have to deal with in the future, are unlikelyto force those students to venture so deeply into any one genre as torequire slavish imitation. The only first-year composition teachers likely todemand “conformity and submission” to a particular kind of academic discourseare those English-department fixtures, the evangelical disciples of literature,professors whose goal in first-year composition is to teach students toexplicate "belles lettres". Writing-in-the-disciplines adherents, unlike teachersof literature-as-composition, generally recognize the folly of forcing studentsto conform to the conventions of a discourse community they have no desireto join.

However, for many modern purposes, "belles lettres" is used in a rather narrower sense, to identify literary works that do not fall into other major categories such as fiction, poetry or drama. Thus it would include essays, récits, published collections of speeches and letters, satirical and humorous writings, and other miscellaneous writings. The Oxford English Dictionary (2nd Edition) says that "it is now generally applied (when used at all) to the lighter branches of literature". The term remains in use among librarians and others who have to classify books: While a large library might have separate categories for essays, letters, humour and so forth (and most of them are assigned different codings in, for example, the Dewey decimal classification system), in libraries of modest size they are often all grouped together under the heading "belles lettres".

References

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External links

* http://www.absolutearts.com/artsnews/2004/11/01/32491.html


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  • Belles Lettres — (frz. belles lettres „schöne Literatur“) ist ein im 17. Jahrhundert aufgekommener Begriff für den vor allem von französischen Moden geprägten Bereich des Buchmarkts, der sich zwischen der geisteswissenschaftlichen und naturwissenschaftlichen… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Belles lettres — (französisch belles lettres = „schöne Literatur“) ist ein im 17. Jahrhundert aufgekommener Begriff für den vor allem von französischen Moden geprägten Bereich des Buchmarkts, der sich zwischen der geisteswissenschaftlichen und… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • belles-lettres — elegant literature, aesthetics, 1710, French, lit. fine letters, from belles, plural of belle, fem. of beau fine, beautiful (see BEAU (Cf. beau)) + lettres, plural of lettre letter (see LETTER (Cf. letter)). The literary equivalent of bea …   Etymology dictionary

  • Belles-lettres — Belles let tres, n. pl. [F.] Polite or elegant literature; the humanities; used somewhat vaguely for literary works in which imagination and taste are predominant. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Belles-lettres — (fr., spr. Bell letter), die schönen Wissenschaften, s.d …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Belles-lettres — (franz., spr. bäl lettr ), die »schönen Wissenschaften«; s. Belletristik …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Belles lettres — (frz., spr. bell lettr), s. Belletristik …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • Belles lettres — (frz. Bäll lettr), die sogenannten schönen Wissenschaften (Poesie etc.) …   Herders Conversations-Lexikon

  • Belles lettres — (fransk), skønne videnskaber , skønlitteratur …   Danske encyklopædi

  • belles-lettres — [bel le′tr , le′trə] pl.n. [Fr, lit., beautiful letters, fine literature] literature as one of the fine arts; imaginative writings as distinguished from technical and scientific writings, esp. when characterized by a polished, highly literary… …   English World dictionary

  • belles-lettres — lettre [ lɛtr ] n. f. • Xe; lat. littera I ♦ 1 ♦ (XIIe) Signe graphique qui, employé seul ou combiné avec d autres, représente, dans la langue écrite (écriture alphabétique, syllabique), un phonème ou un groupe de phonèmes. ⇒ caractère, graphème …   Encyclopédie Universelle

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