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{{Short description|French journalist, playwright and poet (1840–1902)}}
'''Émile Zola''' ([[April 2]], [[1840]] - [[September 29]], [[1902]]) was an influential French [[novelist]], the most important example of the literary school of [[naturalism]] and a major figure in the political liberalization of [[France]].
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2020}}
{{Infobox writer
| birth_name = Émile Édouard Charles Antoine Zola
| image = Emile Zola 1902.jpg
| caption = Self-portrait, 1902
| pseudonym =
| birth_date = {{birth date|df=y|1840|4|2}}
| birth_place = Paris, [[July Monarchy|France]]
| death_date = {{death date and age|df=y|1902|9|29|1840|4|2}}
| death_place = Paris, [[Third French Republic|France]]
| resting_place = [[Panthéon, Paris]]
| occupation = Novelist, journalist, playwright, poet
| nationality = French
| genres = {{cslist|[[Novel]]|[[short story]]}}
| movement = [[Naturalism (literature)|Naturalism]]
| notableworks = {{Lang|fr|[[Les Rougon-Macquart]]}}, ''[[Thérèse Raquin]]'', ''[[Madeleine Férat]]''
| spouse = Éléonore-Alexandrine Meley
| parents = {{ubl|[[François Zola]] (father)|Émilie Aubert (mother)}}
| signature = Zola signature.svg
}}


'''Émile Édouard Charles Antoine Zola''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|z|oʊ|l|ə}},<ref>{{cite web |url=http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/zola |title=Zola |work=[[Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary]]}}</ref><ref>{{Cite dictionary |url=http://www.lexico.com/definition/Zola,+%C3%89mile |title=Zola, Émile |dictionary=[[Lexico]] UK English Dictionary |publisher=[[Oxford University Press]]}}{{dead link|date=September 2022|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref> <small>also</small> {{IPAc-en|US|z|oʊ|ˈ|l|ɑː}},<ref>{{Cite American Heritage Dictionary|Zola |accessdate=22 August 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/zola |title=Zola |work=[[Collins English Dictionary]] |publisher=[[HarperCollins]]|access-date=22 August 2019}}</ref> {{IPA-fr|emil zɔla|lang}}; 2 April 1840{{snd}}29 September 1902)<ref>{{cite web |title=Emile Zola Biography (Writer) |work=infoplease |url=http://www.infoplease.com/biography/var/emilezola.html|access-date=15 July 2011}}</ref> was a French novelist, journalist, playwright, the best-known practitioner of the literary school of [[Naturalism (literature)|naturalism]], and an important contributor to the development of [[Naturalism (theatre)|theatrical naturalism]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Mitterand |first=Henri |title=Zola et le naturalisme |publisher=Presses universitaires de France |year=2002 |isbn=978-2130525103 |location=Paris, France |pages=23}}</ref> He was a major figure in the political [[liberalization]] of France and in the exoneration of the falsely accused and convicted army officer [[Alfred Dreyfus]], which is encapsulated in his renowned newspaper opinion headlined ''[[J'Accuse…!]]''{{hair space}} Zola was nominated for the first and second [[Nobel Prize in Literature]] in 1901 and 1902.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.nobelprize.org/nomination/literature/nomination.php?string=1901&action=simplesearch&submit.x=20&submit.y=8&submit=submit |title=Nomination Database – Literature – 1901 |publisher=Nobel Foundation|access-date=7 February 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.nobelprize.org/nomination/literature/nomination.php?string=1902&action=simplesearch&submit.x=11&submit.y=4&submit=submit |title=Nomination Database – Literature – 1902 |publisher=Nobel Foundation|access-date=7 February 2014}}</ref>
[[Image:Emile_Zola.jpg|thumb|right|Émile Zola]]


==Early life==
Born in [[Paris, France]], the son of an Italian engineer, Émile Zola spent his childhood in [[Aix en Provence|Aix-en-Provence]] and was educated at the Collège Bourbon. At age 18 he would return to Paris where he studied at the Lycée Saint-Louis. After working at several low-level clerical jobs, he began to write a literary column for a newspaper. Controversial from the beginning, he did not hide his disdain for [[Napoleon III of France|Napoleon III]], who used the [[Second Republic]] as a vehicle to become Emperor.
Zola was born in Paris in 1840 to [[François Zola]] (originally Francesco Zolla) and Émilie Aubert. His father was an Italian engineer with some [[Greeks|Greek]] ancestry,<ref name="EB1911">{{Cite EB1911|wstitle=Zola, Émile Édouard Charles Antoine|volume=28|page=1001|first=Frank Thomas|last=Marzials}}</ref> who was born in [[Venice]] in 1795, and engineered the [[Zola Dam]] in [[Aix-en-Provence]]; his mother was French.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Sacquin |first1=Michèle |last2=Cabannes |first2=Viviane |title=Zola et autour d'une oeuvre : Au bonheur des dames |date=2002 |publisher=Bibliothèque nationale de France |isbn=9782717722161 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=avqRAAAAIAAJ}}</ref> The family moved to Aix-en-Provence in the [[Provence|southeast]] when Émile was three years old. In 1845, five-year-old Zola was sexually molested by an older boy.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Brown |first1=Frederick |title=Zola: A Life |year=1995 |publisher=Farrar Straus Giroux |isbn=0374297428 |page=23|quote=«It is described in a report filed by the Marseille police on April 3, 1845: "We conducted to the Palace of Justice a person named Mustapha, twelve years old, a native of Algiers and a domestic in the service of Monsieur Zola, civil engineer, number 4, rue de l'Arbre, who committed indecent assault [''attentat à la pudeur''] on the young Émile Zola, five years old."»}}</ref> Two years later, in 1847, his father died, leaving his mother on a meager pension. In 1852, Zola entered the Collège Bourbon as a boarding student. He would later complain about poor nutrition and [[bullying]] in school.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Brown |first1=Frederick |title=Zola: A Life |year=1995 |publisher=Farrar Straus Giroux |isbn=0374297428 |page=21 and 23|quote="During the six years I remained there, I was hungry." (page 21) and «"Let us remember how it was at secondary school. Vices had fertile ground, so that one lived in true Roman putrescence. Any cloistered association of people who belong to the same sex is morally reprehensible," he wrote in 1870, and the Goncourts report him lamenting on one occasion that "I had a perverted youth in wretched provincial school. Yes, a rotten childhood!"» (page 23)}}</ref>


In 1858, the Zolas moved to Paris, where Émile's childhood friend [[Paul Cézanne]] soon joined him. Zola started to write in the [[Romanticism|Romantic]] style. His widowed mother had planned a law career for Émile, but he failed his [[baccalauréat]] examination twice.<ref name="nom">[[Éditions Larousse|Larousse]], [http://www.larousse.fr/encyclopedie/personnage/Zola/150676 ''Émile Zola'']</ref><ref name=":0">{{Cite web |last=Berg |first=William J. |date=24 September 2020 |title=Émile Zola {{!}} French author|url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Emile-Zola|access-date=2020-11-09|website=Encyclopedia Britannica|language=en}}</ref>
More than half of Zola's [[novel]]s were part of a set of 20 collectively known as [[Les Rougon-Macquart]]. Set in France's [[Second French Empire|Second Empire]], it traces the hereditary influence of violence, [[alcohol]]ism, and [[prostitution]] in two branches of a family, the respectable Rougons and the disreputable Macquarts, for five generations.


Before his breakthrough as a writer, Zola worked for minimal pay as a clerk in a shipping firm and then in the sales department for the publisher [[Hachette (publisher)|Hachette]].<ref name=":0" /> He also wrote literary and art reviews for newspapers. As a political journalist, Zola did not hide his dislike of [[Napoleon III]], who had successfully run for the office of president under the constitution of the [[French Second Republic]], only to use this position as a springboard for the [[French coup d'état of 1851|coup d'état that made him emperor]].
As he described his plans for the series, "I want to portray, at the outset of a century of liberty and truth, a family that cannot restrain itself in its rush to possess all the good things that progress is making available and is derailed by its own momentum, the fatal convulsions that accompany the birth of a new world."


==Later life==
Zola and the painter [[Paul Cezanne]] were friends from childhood and youth, but broke in later life over Zola's fictionalized depiction of Cezanne and the bohemian life of painters in the his novel ''L'Oeuvre'' (''The Masterpiece,'' [[1886]]).
In 1862 Zola was naturalized as a French citizen.{{cn|date=March 2024}} In 1865, he met Éléonore-Alexandrine Meley, who called herself Gabrielle, a seamstress, who became his mistress.<ref name="nom"/> They married on 31 May 1870.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Brown |first1=Frederick |title=Zola: A Life |year=1995 |publisher=Farrar Straus Giroux |isbn=0374297428 |page=195}}</ref> Together they cared for Zola's mother.<ref name=":0" /> She stayed with him all his life and was instrumental in promoting his work. The marriage remained childless. Alexandrine Zola had had a child before she met Zola that she had given up, because she had been unable to take care of it. When she confessed this to Zola after their marriage, they went looking for the girl, but she had died a short time after birth.


In 1888, he was given a camera, but he only began to use it in 1895 and attained a near professional level of expertise.<ref>{{Cite news |title=IN LATER YEARS, ZOLA SAW WORLD THROUGH A CAMERA |last=August |first=Marilyn |date=14 December 2000 |work=Pittsburgh Post-Gazette |page=F-8 |via=ProQuest}}</ref> Also in 1888, Alexandrine hired Jeanne Rozerot, a 21-year-old seamstress who was to live with them in their home in [[Médan]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Brown |first1=Frederick |title=Zola: A Life |year=1995 |publisher=Farrar Straus Giroux |isbn=0374297428 |pages=614, 615}}</ref> The 48-year-old Zola fell in love with Jeanne and fathered two children with her: Denise in 1889 and Jacques in 1891.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Brown |first1=Frederick |title=Zola: A Life |year=1995 |publisher=Farrar Straus Giroux |isbn=0374297428 |pages=646–648}}</ref> After Jeanne left Médan for Paris, Zola continued to support and visit her and their children. In November 1891 Alexandrine discovered the affair, which brought the marriage to the brink of divorce.{{citation needed|date=January 2019}} The discord was partially healed, which allowed Zola to take an increasingly active role in the lives of the children. After Zola's death, the children were given his name as their lawful surname.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Brown |first1=Frederick |title=Zola: A Life |year=1995 |publisher=Farrar Straus Giroux |isbn=0374297428 |page=802}}</ref>
He risked his career and even his life on [[January 13]], [[1898]] when his "''J'accuse''" was published on the front page of the Paris daily, ''L'Aurore''. The paper was run by Ernest Vaughan and [[Georges Clemenceau]] who decided that the controversial story would be in the form of an open letter to the President, [[Félix Faure]]. ''J'accuse'' accused the French government of [[anti-Semitism]] and wrongfully placing [[Alfred Dreyfus]] in jail. Zola was brought to trial for [[libel]] for publishing ''J'Accuse'' on [[February 7]], [[1898]] and was convicted on [[February 23]]. Zola declared that the conviction and transportation to [[Devil's Island]] of the [[Anti-semitism|Jewish]] army captain [[Alfred Dreyfus]] came after a false accusation of espionage was a miscarriage of justice. The case, known as the [[Dreyfus affair]], had divided France deeply between the reactionary army and church and the more liberal commercial society. The ramifications would continue for years so much so that on the 100th anniversary of Émile Zola's article, France's [[Roman Catholic]] daily paper, "La Croix", apologized for its [[Anti-Semitism|anti-Semitic]] editorials during the Dreyfus affair.


==Career==
[[Image:Zola.jpg|right|thumb|Actor Paul Muni portraying Émile Zola at trial in a 1937 film biography]]
[[File:Émile Zola by Carjat.jpg|thumb|right|upright|Zola early in his career]]


During his early years, Zola wrote numerous short stories and essays, four plays, and three novels. Among his early books was ''Contes à Ninon'', published in 1864.<ref name="EB1911"/> With the publication of his sordid autobiographical novel ''La Confession de Claude'' (1865) attracting police attention, Hachette fired Zola. His novel ''Les Mystères de Marseille'' appeared as a serial in 1867. He was also an aggressive critic, his articles on literature and art appearing in [[Hippolyte de Villemessant|Villemessant's]] journal ''L'Événement''.<ref name="EB1911"/> After his first major novel, ''[[Thérèse Raquin]]'' (1867), Zola started the series called {{lang|fr|[[Les Rougon-Macquart]]}}.
Zola was a leading light of France and his letter formed a major turning-point in the Dreyfus affair, causing the captain's case to be reopened, whereupon he was acquitted. In the course of events, Zola was convicted of libel and sentenced himself and removed from the [[Legion of Honor]]. Rather than go to jail, he fled to [[England]] to escape imprisonment. Soon he was allowed to return in time to see the government fall. Dreyfus was convicted again, but was ultimately freed, in large part due to the moral force of Zola's arguments. Zola said "The truth is on the march, and nothing shall stop it." In 1906, Dreyfus was entirely exonerated by the Supreme Court.


In Paris, Zola maintained his friendship with [[Cézanne]], who painted a portrait of him with another friend from Aix-en-Provence, writer [[Paul Alexis]], entitled ''Paul Alexis Reading to Zola''.
Zola died in Paris on [[September 29]], [[1902]] of [[carbon monoxide]] poisoning caused by a stopped chimney. His enemies were blamed, but nothing was proved. He was initially buried in the [[Cimetière de Montmartre]] in [[Paris]], but on [[June 4]], [[1908]], almost six years after his death, his remains were moved to the [[Panthéon, Paris|Panthéon]].

===Literary output===
[[Image:Paul Cézanne - Paul Alexis Lê um Manuscrito a Zola.jpg|thumb|left|[[Paul Cézanne]], ''[[Paul Alexis]] Reading to Émile Zola'', 1869–1870, [[São Paulo Museum of Art]]]]
More than half of Zola's novels were part of the twenty-volume {{lang|fr|Les Rougon-Macquart}} cycle, which details the history of a single family under the reign of Napoléon III. Unlike [[Honoré de Balzac|Balzac]], who in the midst of his literary career resynthesized his work into ''[[La Comédie Humaine]]'', Zola from the start, at the age of 28, had thought of the complete layout of the series.{{Citation needed|date=October 2016}} Set in France's [[Second Empire (France)|Second Empire]], in the context of [[Haussmann's renovation of Paris|Baron Haussmann's changing Paris]], the series traces the environmental and hereditary influences of violence, alcohol, and prostitution which became more prevalent during the second wave of the [[Industrial Revolution]]. The series examines two branches of the family—the respectable (that is, legitimate) Rougons and the disreputable (illegitimate) Macquarts—over five generations.

In the preface to the first novel of the series, Zola states, "I want to explain how a family, a small group of regular people, behaves in society, while expanding through the birth of ten, twenty individuals, who seem at first glance profoundly dissimilar, but who are shown through analysis to be intimately linked to one another. Heredity has its own laws, just like gravity. I will attempt to find and to follow, by resolving the double question of temperaments and environments, the thread that leads mathematically from one man to another."<ref>{{Cite book |last=Zola |first=Émile |title=La Fortune des Rougon |publisher=Gallimard |year=1981 |isbn= |location=Paris, France |pages=27}}</ref>

Although Zola and Cézanne were friends from childhood, they experienced a falling out later in life over Zola's fictionalised depiction of Cézanne and the [[Bohemianism|Bohemian]] life of painters in Zola's novel {{Lang|fr|[[L'Œuvre]]}} (''The Masterpiece'', 1886).

[[File:Émile François Zola, Vanity Fair, 1880-01-24.jpg|thumb|160px|Captioned "French Realism", caricature of Zola in the London magazine ''[[Vanity Fair (British magazine)|Vanity Fair]]'', 1880]]
From 1877, with the publication of ''[[L'Assommoir]]'', Émile Zola became wealthy; he was better paid than [[Victor Hugo]], for example.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Zola |first=Émile |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4FDCvwEACAAJ |title=The Three Cities Trilogy Complete: Lourdes, Rome and Paris |date=2005 |publisher=Library of Alexandria |isbn=978-1-4655-2672-4 |language=en}}</ref> Because ''L'Assommoir'' was such a success, Zola was able to renegotiate his contract with his publisher Georges Charpentier to receive more than 14% royalties and the exclusive rights to serial publication in the press.<ref>{{Cite book |title=Books : a living history |last=Martyn |first=Lyons |date=2011 |publisher=J. Paul Getty Museum |isbn=9781606060834 |location=Los Angeles |pages=143 |oclc=707023033}}</ref> Subsequently, sales of ''L'Assommoir'' were even exceeded by those of ''[[Nana (novel)|Nana]]'' (1880) and ''La Débâcle'' (1892).<ref name="EB1911"/> He became a figurehead among the literary bourgeoisie and organised cultural dinners with [[Guy de Maupassant]], [[Joris-Karl Huysmans]], and other writers at his luxurious villa (worth 300,000 francs)<ref>{{cite journal |title=Literary gossip |journal=The Week: A Canadian Journal of Politics, Literature, Science and Arts |date=27 December 1883 |volume=1 |issue=4 |page=61 |url=https://archive.org/stream/weekcanadianjour01toro#page/n30/mode/1up|access-date=23 April 2013}}</ref> in Médan, near Paris, after 1880. Despite being nominated several times, Zola was never elected to the {{lang|fr|[[Académie française]]}}.<ref name="EB1911"/>

Zola's output also included novels on population (''Fécondité'') and work (''Travail''), a number of plays, and several volumes of criticism. He wrote every day for around 30 years, and took as his motto {{lang|la|[[Nulla dies sine linea]]}} ("not a day without a line").

The self-proclaimed leader of French naturalism, Zola's works inspired operas such as those of [[Gustave Charpentier]], notably ''[[Louise (opera)|Louise]]'' in the 1890s. His works were inspired by the concept of [[heredity]] and milieu ([[Claude Bernard]] and [[Hippolyte Taine]])<ref>{{Citation |last=Zola |first=Émile |title=Le Roman expérimental |date=1902 |url=https://fr.wikisource.org/wiki/Le_Roman_exp%C3%A9rimental |pages=1–53 |publisher=Paris : Charpentier|access-date=2021-01-07}}</ref> and by the realism of Balzac and Flaubert.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Mitterand |first=Henri |title=Zola et le naturalisme |publisher=Presses universitaires de France |year=1986 |isbn= |location= |pages=}}</ref> He also provided the libretto for several operas by [[Alfred Bruneau]], including ''[[Messidor (opera)|Messidor]]'' (1897) and ''[[L'Ouragan (opera)|L'Ouragan]]'' (1901); several of Bruneau's other operas are adapted from Zola's writing. These provided a French alternative to Italian [[verismo]].<ref>{{Cite Grove |title=Zola, Emile |author=Richard Langham Smith |url=https://doi.org/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.O004671}}</ref>

He is considered to be a significant influence on those writers that are credited with the creation of the so-called [[new journalism]]: [[Tom Wolfe|Wolfe]], [[Truman Capote|Capote]], Thompson, [[Norman Mailer|Mailer]], [[Joan Didion|Didion]], Talese and others.
[[Tom Wolfe]] wrote that his goal in writing fiction was to document contemporary society in the tradition of John Steinbeck, Charles Dickens, and Émile Zola.{{citation needed|date=October 2019}}

==Dreyfus affair==
{{Main|Dreyfus affair|J'accuse}}
[[File:J’accuse.jpg|thumb|Front page cover of the newspaper ''L'Aurore'' for Thursday 13 January 1898, with the open letter ''[[J'Accuse…!]]'', written by Émile Zola about the [[Dreyfus affair]]. The headline reads "I Accuse...! Letter to the President of the Republic"—Paris [[Musée d'Art et d'Histoire du Judaïsme|Museum of Jewish Art and History]]]]

Captain [[Alfred Dreyfus]] was a French-Jewish artillery officer in the French army. In September 1894, French intelligence discovered someone had been passing military secrets to the German Embassy. Senior officers began to suspect Dreyfus, though there was no direct evidence of any wrongdoing. Dreyfus was court-martialed, convicted of treason, and sent to [[Devil's Island]] in French Guiana.

Lt. Col. [[Georges Picquart]] came across evidence that implicated another officer, [[Ferdinand Walsin Esterhazy]], and informed his superiors. Rather than move to clear Dreyfus, the decision was made to protect Esterhazy and ensure the original verdict was not overturned. Major [[Hubert-Joseph Henry]] forged documents that made it seem as if Dreyfus were guilty, while Picquart was reassigned to duty in Africa. However, Picquart's findings were communicated by his lawyer to the Senator [[Auguste Scheurer-Kestner]], who took up the case, at first discreetly and then increasingly publicly. Meanwhile, further evidence was brought forward by Dreyfus's family and Esterhazy's estranged family and creditors. Under pressure, the general staff arranged for a closed court-martial to be held on 10–11 January 1898, at which Esterhazy was tried ''in camera'' and acquitted. Picquart was detained on charges of violation of professional secrecy.{{cn|date=September 2022}}

{{Wikisourcehas|the original text of Zola's article|[[:fr:s:J’accuse…!|J’accuse…!]]}}
{{Wikisourcehas|an English translation of|[[s:Translation:J'Accuse...!|J'Accuse...!]]}}

In response Zola risked his career and more, and on 13 January 1898 published ''[[J'Accuse…!]]''<ref name=":1">[//en.wikisource.org/wiki/J'accuse...!?match=fr J'accuse letter] at French [[wikisource]]</ref> on the front page of the Paris daily ''[[L'Aurore]]''. The newspaper was run by Ernest Vaughan and [[Georges Clemenceau]], who decided that the controversial story would be in the form of an [[open letter]] to the president, [[Félix Faure]]. Zola's ''J'Accuse...!'' accused the highest levels of the French Army of obstruction of justice and [[antisemitism]] by having wrongfully convicted Alfred Dreyfus to life imprisonment on Devil's Island. Zola's intention was that he be prosecuted for libel so that the new evidence in support of Dreyfus would be made public.<ref>{{cite web |title=Correspondence Between Emile Zola and Imprisoned Alfred Dreyfus |url=http://www.shapell.org/manuscript.aspx?170038 |publisher=Shapell Manuscript Foundation |access-date=29 January 2012 |archive-date=7 July 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120707223535/http://www.shapell.org/manuscript.aspx?170038 |url-status=dead }}</ref>

The case, known as the Dreyfus affair, deeply divided France between the reactionary army and Catholic Church on one hand, and the more liberal commercial society on the other. The ramifications continued for many years; on the 100th anniversary of Zola's article, France's [[Catholic Church|Catholic]] daily paper, ''[[La Croix (newspaper)|La Croix]]'', apologised for its [[antisemitic]] editorials during the Dreyfus affair.<ref>{{cite news |title=World News Briefs; French Paper Apologizes For Slurs on Dreyfus |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1998/01/13/world/world-news-briefs-french-paper-apologizes-for-slurs-on-dreyfus.html |agency=[[Reuters]] |date=13 January 1998 |newspaper=[[The New York Times]]|access-date=25 March 2018}}</ref> As Zola was a leading French thinker and public figure, his letter formed a major turning point in the affair.{{Citation needed|date=October 2016}}

[[File:Nadar (atelier de) - Emile Zola, 13-556535.jpg|thumb|Portrait of Zola by [[Nadar]], 3 March 1898]]
Zola was brought to trial for criminal libel on 7 February 1898, and was convicted on 23 February and removed from the [[Légion d'honneur|Legion of Honour]]. The first judgment was overturned in April on a technicality, but a new suit was pressed against Zola, which opened on 18 July. At his lawyer's advice, Zola fled to England rather than wait for the end of the trial (at which he was again convicted). Without even having had the time to pack a few clothes, he arrived at [[London Victoria station|Victoria Station]] on 19 July, the start of a brief and unhappy residence in the UK.

Zola visited historic locations including a Church of England service at [[Westminster Abbey]].<ref>{{cite web | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=T2tBAAAAIAAJ&dq=%22emile+zola%22+%22westminster+abbey%22&pg=PA335 | title=Émile Zola, Novelist and Reformer: An Account of His Life & Work | last1=Vizetelly | first1=Ernest Alfred | year=1904 }}</ref> After initially staying at the [[Grosvenor House Hotel|Grosvenor Hotel]], Victoria, Zola went to the Oatlands Park Hotel in [[Weybridge]] and shortly afterwards rented a house locally called Penn where he was joined by his family for the summer. At the end of August, they moved to another house in [[Addlestone]] called Summerfield. In early October the family moved to London and then his wife and children went back to France so the children could resume their schooling. Thereafter Zola lived alone in the Queen's Hotel, Norwood.<ref>{{cite web| url = https://www.weybridgesociety.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Newsletter-Spring-2019.pdf| title = Zola in Exile in Weybridge| work= Weybridge Society Newsletter |date= Spring 2019| page= 24| publisher= Weybridge Society | via= weybridgesociety.org.uk| access-date= February 13, 2023}}</ref> He stayed in [[Upper Norwood]] from October 1898 to June 1899.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://greatwen.com/tag/michael-rosen/|title= Zola's bicycle women| work= The Great Wen| format= blog| date= September 21, 2017 |first= Peter| last= Watt| access-date= February 13, 2023}}</ref>

In France, the furious divisions over the Dreyfus affair continued. The fact of Major Henry's forgery was discovered and admitted to in August 1898, and the Government referred Dreyfus's original court-martial to the Supreme Court for review the following month, over the objections of the General Staff. Eight months later, on 3 June 1899, the Supreme Court annulled the original verdict and ordered a new military court-martial. The same month Zola returned from his exile in England. Still the anti-Dreyfusards would not give up, and on 9 September 1899 Dreyfus was again convicted.

Dreyfus applied for a retrial, but the government countered by offering Dreyfus a pardon (rather than exoneration), which would allow him to go free, provided that he admit to being guilty. Although he was clearly not guilty, he chose to accept the pardon. Later the same month, despite Zola's condemnation, an amnesty bill was passed, covering "all criminal acts or misdemeanours related to the Dreyfus affair or that have been included in a prosecution for one of these acts", indemnifying Zola and Picquart, but also all those who had concocted evidence against Dreyfus. Dreyfus was finally completely exonerated by the Supreme Court in 1906.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hZqpCrG3qw0C&q=In+1906%2C+Dreyfus+was+completely+exonerated+by+the+Supreme+Court.&pg=PA117 |title=The New Jewish Encyclopedia |last1=Bridger |first1=David |last2=Wolk |first2=Samuel |date=1 January 1976 |publisher=Behrman House, Inc |isbn=978-0874411201 |pages=111 |language=en}}</ref>

Zola said of the affair, "The truth is on the march, and nothing shall stop it."<ref name=":1" /> Zola's 1898 article is widely viewed in France as the most prominent manifestation of the new power of the intellectuals (writers, artists, academicians) in shaping [[public opinion]], the media and the state.<ref name="Swardson-1998">{{cite news |last=Swardson |first=Anne |title=The Dreyfus Affair's Living History |date=14 January 1998 |newspaper=The Washington Post |url= https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1998/01/14/the-dreyfus-affairs-living-history/d3cb9815-a7e9-4131-95a1-18d9f47f6ffd/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://archive.today/20220907182159/https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1998/01/14/the-dreyfus-affairs-living-history/d3cb9815-a7e9-4131-95a1-18d9f47f6ffd/ |archive-date=7 September 2022 |quote=Because of Zola's article, ... the intellectual class was accorded the status it still holds as molder of public opinion. |access-date=7 September 2022}}</ref>

== The Manifesto of the Five ==
On August 18, 1887, the French daily newspaper ''[[Le Figaro]]'' published "The Manifesto of the Five" shortly after ''[[La Terre]]'' was released. The signatories included Paul Bonnetain, J. H. Rosny, [[Lucien Descaves]], [[Paul Margueritte]] and Gustave Guiches, who strongly disapproved of the lack of balance of both morals and aesthetics throughout the book's depiction of the revolution. The manifesto accused Zola of having "lowered the standard of Naturalism, of catering to large sales by deliberate obscenities, of being a morbid and impotent hypochondriac, incapable of taking a sane and healthy view of mankind. They freely referred to Zola's physiological weaknesses and expressed the utmost horror at the crudeness of La Terre."<ref>{{Cite magazine |last=Boyd |first=Ernest |date=2013-08-19 |title=From the Stacks: "Realism in France" |magazine=The New Republic |url=https://newrepublic.com/article/114374/french-realism-balzac-flaubert-zola-and-romanticisms-remains|access-date=2020-11-25 |issn=0028-6583}}</ref>

==Death==
[[File:Zola mort.jpg|thumb|Zola on his deathbed]]
Zola died on 29 September 1902 of [[carbon monoxide poisoning]] caused by an improperly ventilated chimney.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.historytoday.com/richard-cavendish/strange-death-emile-zola |title=The Strange Death of Emile Zola |publisher=History Today Volume 52 |date=9 September 2002|access-date=21 February 2017}}</ref> His funeral on 5 October was attended by thousands. Alfred Dreyfus initially had promised not to attend the funeral, but was given permission by Zola's widow and attended.<ref>{{cite news |title=Thousands March at Funeral of Émile Zola: Municipal Guards Line the Route to Preserve Order |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1902/10/06/archives/thousands-march-at-funeral-of-emile-zola-municipal-guards-line-the.html?mtrref=undefined&gwh=352E09B00A14DDA634743B27DD7B42D0&gwt=pay |date=6 October 1902 |newspaper=The New York Times|url-access=subscription}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |date=29 June 2002 |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2002/jun/29/featuresreviews.guardianreview1 |newspaper=[[The Guardian]] |title=From the archives The tragic death of M. Zola", 30 September 1902}}</ref> At the time of his death Zola had just completed a novel, {{lang|fr|Vérité}}, about the Dreyfus trial. A sequel, {{lang|fr|Justice}}, had been planned, but was not completed.

[[Image:Grave of Emile Zola.JPG|thumb|upright|Gravestone of Émile Zola at cimetière Montmartre; his remains are now interred in the [[Panthéon (Paris)|Panthéon]].]]

His enemies were blamed for his death because of previous attempts on his life, but nothing could be proven at the time. Expressions of sympathy arrived from everywhere in France; for a week the vestibule of his house was crowded with notable writers, scientists, artists, and politicians who came to inscribe their names in the registers.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/milezolanovelis00vizegoog |page=[https://archive.org/details/milezolanovelis00vizegoog/page/n569 511] |title=Émile Zola, Novelist and Reformer: An Account of His Life & Work |last=Vizetelly |first=Ernest Alfred |date=1904 |publisher=John Lane, the Bodley Head |language=en}}</ref> On the other hand, Zola's enemies used the opportunity to celebrate in malicious glee.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://archive.org/stream/emilezolanovelis027701mbp/emilezolanovelis027701mbp_djvu.txt |title=Full text of 'Emile Zola Novelist And Reformer An Account Of His Life And Work'|access-date=7 February 2014}}</ref> Writing in ''[[L'Intransigeant]]'', [[Henri Rochefort]] claimed Zola had committed suicide, having discovered Dreyfus to be guilty.

Zola was initially buried in the [[Cimetière de Montmartre]] in Paris, but on 4 June 1908, just five years and nine months after his death, his remains were relocated to the [[Panthéon, Paris|Panthéon]], where he shares a crypt with [[Victor Hugo]] and [[Alexandre Dumas (père)|Alexandre Dumas]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.parisphotogallery.com/Paris/photos/monuments/Pantheon/Interior_crypt_Victor_Hugo_Alexandre_Dumas_Emile_Zola_10526.htm |title=Paris Monuments Panthéon-Close up picture of the interior of the crypt of Victor Hugo (left) Alexandre Dumas (middle) Emile Zola (right) |publisher=ParisPhotoGallery |access-date=30 January 2012 |archive-date=19 April 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120419194137/http://www.parisphotogallery.com/Paris/photos/monuments/Pantheon/Interior_crypt_Victor_Hugo_Alexandre_Dumas_Emile_Zola_10526.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref> The ceremony was disrupted by an assassination attempt on [[Alfred Dreyfus]] by {{ill|Louis Grégori|fr}}, a disgruntled journalist and admirer of [[Édouard Drumont]], in which Dreyfus was wounded in the arm by the gunshot. Grégori was acquitted by the Parisian court which accepted his defense that he had not meant to kill Dreyfus, meaning merely to graze him.

[[Image:Pantheon Grablege Dumas Zola Hugo.jpg|thumb|upright|Graves of [[Alexandre Dumas]], [[Victor Hugo]] and Émile Zola at the [[Panthéon, Paris|Panthéon]] in Paris]]

A 1953 investigation by journalist Jean Bedel published in the newspaper ''[[Libération (newspaper, 1941-1964)|Libération]]'' under the headline "Was Zola assassinated?" raised the idea that Zola's death might have been a murder rather than an accident.<ref name="Mounier-Kuhn-2014">{{cite news |last=Mounier-Kuhn |first=Angélique |title=L'asphyxie d'Émile Zola |work=[[Le Temps]] |date=8 August 2014 |pages=8–9 |url=https://www.letemps.ch/culture/lasphyxie-demile-zola |language=fr |quote={{hairspace}}''Hacquin, je vais vous dire comment Zola est mort''. [...] ''Zola a été asphyxié volontairement. C'est nous qui avons bouché la cheminée de son appartement''. |trans-quote=Hacquin, I'm going to tell you how Zola died. [...] Zola was asphyxiated on purpose. It was us who blocked the chimney of his apartment.{{hairspace}}}}</ref> It is based on the revelation by Norman pharmacist Pierre Hacquin, who was told by chimney-sweep Henri Buronfosse that he intentionally blocked the chimney of Zola's apartment in Paris.<ref name="Mounier-Kuhn-2014" />
Literary historian Alain Pagès believes that is likely true<ref>{{cite book |last1=Pagès |first1=Alain |title=L'affaire Dreyfus : vérités et légendes |date=2019 |publisher=Perrin |location=Paris |isbn=978-2262074944}}</ref> and Zola's great-granddaughters, Brigitte Émile-Zola and Martine Le Blond-Zola, corroborate this explanation of Zola's poisoning by carbon monoxide. As reported in ''[[L'Orient-Le Jour]]'', Brigitte Émile-Zola recounts that her grandfather Jacques Émile-Zola, son of Émile Zola, told her at the age of eight that, in 1952, a man came to his house to give him information about his father's death. The man had been with a dying friend, who had confessed to taking money to plug Emile Zola's chimney.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Andréa |first1=Alain E. |title=Émile Zola : ses arrière-petites-filles accusent... |url=https://www.lorientlejour.com/article/1185942/emile-zola-ses-arriere-petites-filles-accusent.html |access-date=6 September 2022 |work=L'Orient-Le Jour |date=10 September 2019 |quote=Brigitte Émile-Zola abonde dans le sens de M. Pagès. 'Je l’ai appris à 8 ans chez mon grand-père, le docteur Jacques Émile-Zola, fils d’Émile Zola, qui m’a élevée. En 1952, un homme s’est présenté chez mon grand-père pour lui donner une information sur la mort de son père. Il a raconté qu’il avait assisté un ami dans ses derniers instants. Celui-ci s’était confessé à lui en lui expliquant que, lorsqu’il était ouvrier sur un immeuble situé près de celui où habitait Zola, il avait été contacté par les antidreyfusards lui demandant de boucher la cheminée de la chambre de l’écrivain. Il avait été payé pour exécuter ce méfait. Donc Zola a bien été assassiné. Mon grand-père a transmis cette histoire à tous ses amis zoliens et j’ai fait de même toute ma vie.'{{hairspace}} |trans-quote=Brigitte Émile-Zola agrees with Mr. Pagès. "I learned about it at the age of 8 from my grandfather, Dr. Jacques Émile-Zola, son of Émile Zola, who raised me. In 1952, a man came to my grandfather's house to give him information about his father's death. He said that he had been present with a friend in his last moments. The friend confessed to him that when he was working on a building near the one where Zola lived, he was contacted by the antidreyfusards, who asked him to plug the chimney of the writer's room. He was paid to carry out the misdeed. So Zola was indeed murdered. My grandfather passed on this story to all his Zola friends and I have done the same all my life."}}</ref>

==Scope of the Rougon-Macquart series==
Zola's [[Les Rougon-Macquart|Rougon-Macquart]] novels are a panoramic account of the [[Second French Empire]]. They tell the story of a family approximately between the years 1851 and 1871. These twenty novels contain over 300 characters, who descend from the two family lines of the Rougons and Macquarts. In Zola's words, which are the subtitle of the Rougon-Macquart series, they are ''"L'Histoire naturelle et sociale d'une famille sous le Second Empire" ("The natural and social history of a family under the Second Empire").<ref name="Daily Telegraph 5 December 2015">{{cite news |last=Cummins |first=Anthony |title=How Émile Zola made novels out of gutter voices and ultra-violence |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/books/what-to-read/how-emile-zola-made-novels-out-of-gutter-voices-and-ultra-violenc/ |date=5 December 2015 |newspaper=[[The Daily Telegraph]] |location=London|access-date=3 November 2016}}</ref><ref name="Encyclopædia Britannica">{{cite web |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Rougon-Macquart-cycle |title=Rougon-Macquart cycle: Work by Zola |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |website=[[Encyclopædia Britannica]] |publisher=[[Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]]|access-date=3 November 2016}}</ref>''

Most of the Rougon-Macquart novels were written during the [[French Third Republic]]. To an extent, attitudes and value judgments may have been superimposed on that picture with the wisdom of hindsight. Some critics classify Zola's work, and naturalism more broadly, as a particular strain of decadent literature, which emphasized the fallen, corrupted state of modern civilization.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bernheimer |first=Charles |chapter=Unknowing Decadence |title=Perennial Decay: On the Aesthetics and Politics of Decadence |publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press |year=1999 |isbn=|editor-last=Constable|editor-first=Liz |location=Philadelphia |pages=50–64}}</ref> Nowhere is the doom-laden image of the [[Second French Empire|Second Empire]] so clearly seen as in ''[[Nana (novel)|Nana]]'', which culminates in echoes of the [[Franco-Prussian War]] (and hence by implication of the French defeat).<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2kdK-qPMBbAC&q=zola+nana+french+defeat&pg=PA135 |title=The Cambridge Companion to Zola |last=Nelson |first=Brian |date=15 February 2007 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=9781139827270 |language=en}}</ref> Even in novels dealing with earlier periods of Napoleon III's reign the picture of the Second Empire is sometimes overlaid with the imagery of catastrophe.{{Citation needed|date=October 2016}}

[[File:Gil_Blas_-_Germinal.jpg |thumb|right|Poster by [[Léon Choubrac]] advertising the publication of Zola's novel ''[[Germinal (novel)|Germinal]]'' in ''[[Gil Blas]]'', 25 November 1884]]
In the Rougon-Macquart novels, provincial life can seem to be overshadowed by Zola's preoccupation with the capital.{{Citation needed|date=October 2016}} However, the following novels (see the individual titles in the Livre de poche series) scarcely touch on life in Paris: ''[[La Terre]]'' (peasant life in Beauce), ''[[Le Rêve (novel)|Le Rêve]]'' (an unnamed cathedral city), ''[[Germinal (novel)|Germinal]]'' (collieries in the northeast of France), ''[[La Joie de vivre]]'' (the Atlantic coast), and the four novels set in and around Plassans (modelled on his childhood home, Aix-en-Provence), ({{Lang|fr|[[La Fortune des Rougon]]}}, ''[[La Conquête de Plassans]]'', ''[[La Faute de l'Abbé Mouret]]'' and ''[[Le Docteur Pascal]]'').{{Citation needed|date=October 2016}} ''[[La Débâcle]]'', the military novel, is set for the most part in country districts of eastern France; its dénouement takes place in the capital during the civil war leading to the suppression of the [[Paris Commune]]. Though Paris has its role in {{Lang|fr|La Bête humaine}} the most striking incidents (notably the train crash) take place elsewhere. Even the Paris-centred novels tend to set some scenes outside, if not very far from, the capital. In the political novel ''[[Son Excellence Eugène Rougon]]'', the eponymous minister's interventions on behalf of his so-called friends, have their consequences elsewhere, and the reader is witness to some of them. Even Nana, one of Zola's characters most strongly associated with Paris, makes a brief and typically disastrous trip to the country.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Zola |first=Émile |title=Nana |publisher=Livre de poche |year=2003 |isbn=978-2253003656 |location=Paris, France |pages=}}</ref>

==Quasi-scientific purpose==
In ''Le Roman expérimental'' and ''Les Romanciers naturalistes,'' Zola expounded the purposes of the "naturalist" novel. The experimental novel was to serve as a vehicle for scientific experiment, analogous to the experiments conducted by [[Claude Bernard]] and expounded by him in ''Introduction à la médecine expérimentale''. Claude Bernard's experiments were in the field of clinical [[physiology]], those of the Naturalist writers (Zola being their leader) would be in the realm of [[psychology]] influenced by the natural environment.<ref name="nom"/> [[Balzac]], Zola claimed, had already investigated the psychology of lechery in an experimental manner, in the figure of Hector Hulot in ''[[La Cousine Bette]]''.{{Citation needed|date=October 2016}} Essential to Zola's concept of the experimental novel was dispassionate observation of the world, with all that it involved by way of meticulous documentation. To him, each novel should be based upon a dossier.{{Citation needed|date=October 2016}} With this aim, he visited the colliery of [[Anzin]] in northern France, in February 1884 when a strike was on; he visited La [[Beauce, France|Beauce]] (for ''[[La Terre]]''), [[Sedan, Ardennes]] (for ''[[La Débâcle]]'') and travelled on the railway line between Paris and [[Le Havre]] (when researching ''[[La Bête humaine]]'').<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gidSAAAAMAAJ&q=train+researce+bete+humaine |title=Steel Wheels: The Evolution of the Railways and how They Stimulated and Excited Engineers, Architects, Artists, Writers, Musicians and Travellers |last=Garnett |first=A. F. |date=1 January 2005 |publisher=Cannwood |isbn=9780955025709 |language=en}}</ref>

==Characterisation==
[[Image:Manet, Edouard - Portrait of Emile Zola.jpg|thumb|right|upright|[[Édouard Manet]], ''Portrait of Émile Zola'', 1868, [[Musée d'Orsay]]]]
Zola strongly claimed that Naturalist literature is an experimental analysis of human psychology.{{Citation needed|date=October 2016}} Considering this claim, many critics, such as [[György Lukács]],<ref>György Lukács, ''Studies in European Realism. A Sociological Survey of the Writings of Balzac, Stendhal, Zola, Tolstoy, Gorki and Others'', London: 1950, pp. 91–95.</ref> find Zola strangely poor at creating lifelike and memorable characters in the manner of [[Honoré de Balzac]] or [[Charles Dickens]], despite his ability to evoke powerful crowd scenes. It was important to Zola that no character should appear ''larger than'' life;<ref>Émile Zola, ''Les Romanciers naturalistes'', Paris: 1903, pp. 126–129.</ref> but the criticism that his characters are "cardboard" is substantially more damaging. Zola, by refusing to make any of his characters larger than life (if that is what he has indeed done), did not inhibit himself from also achieving [[Verisimilitude_(fiction)|verisimilitude]].

Although Zola found it scientifically and artistically unjustifiable to create larger-than-life characters, his work presents some larger-than-life symbols which, like the mine Le Voreux in ''[[Germinal (novel)|Germinal]]'',{{Citation needed|date=October 2016}} take on the nature of a surrogate human life. The mine, the still in ''[[L'Assommoir]]'' and the locomotive La Lison in ''[[La Bête humaine]]'' impress the reader with the vivid reality of human beings.{{Citation needed|date=October 2016}} The great natural processes of seedtime and harvest, death and renewal in ''[[La Terre]]'' are instinct with a vitality which is not human but is the elemental energy of life.<ref>Letter from Émile Zola to Jules Lemaître, 14 March 1885.</ref> Human life is raised to the level of the mythical as the hammerblows of [[Titan (mythology)|Titans]] are seemingly heard underground at Le Voreux, or as in ''[[La Faute de l'Abbé Mouret]]'', the walled park of Le Paradou encloses a re-enactment—and restatement—of the [[Book of Genesis]].{{Citation needed|date=October 2016}}

==Zola's optimism==
[[File:Luc Barbut Davray Zola.jpg|thumb|Luc Barbut-Davray, Portrait of Zola, oil on canvas, 1899]]
In Zola there is the theorist and the writer, the poet, the scientist and the optimist – features that are basically joined in his own confession of [[positivism]];{{Citation needed|date=October 2016}} later in his life, when he saw his own position turning into an anachronism, he would still style himself with irony and sadness over the lost cause as "an old and rugged Positivist".<ref>{{Cite web |title=Émile Zola to France's Young Generation (1893) – Positivism |date=14 November 2012 |url=http://positivists.org/blog/archives/652 |access-date=2022-05-31 |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>See Émile Zola's speech at the annual banquet of the Students' Association at the Hotel Moderne in Paris, 20 May 1893, published in English by ''The New York Times'' on 11 June 1893 at [http://positivists.org/blog/archives/652 http://www.positivists.org].</ref>

The poet is the artist in words whose writing, as in the racecourse scene in ''[[Nana (novel)|Nana]]'' or in the descriptions of the laundry in ''[[L'Assommoir]]'' or in many passages of ''[[La Faute de l'Abbé Mouret]]'', ''[[Le Ventre de Paris]]'' and ''[[La Curée]]'', vies with the colourful impressionistic techniques of [[Claude Monet]] and [[Pierre-Auguste Renoir]]. The scientist is a believer in some measure of scientific determinism – not that this, despite his own words "devoid of free will" ("''dépourvus de libre arbitre''"),<ref>Émile Zola, ''Les Œuvres complètes'', vol. 34, Paris: 1928, ''[[Thérèse Raquin]]'', preface to 2nd edition, p. viii.</ref> need always amount to a philosophical denial of [[free will]]. The creator of "''la littérature putride''", a term of abuse invented by an early critic of ''[[Thérèse Raquin]]'' (a novel which predates {{lang|fr|Les Rougon-Macquart}} series), emphasizes the squalid aspects of the human environment and upon the seamy side of human nature.<ref>Émile Zola, ''Les Œuvres complètes'', vol. 34, Paris: 1928, ''[[Thérèse Raquin]]'', preface to 2nd edition, p. xiv.</ref>

The optimist is that other face of the scientific experimenter, the man with an unshakable belief in human progress.{{Citation needed|date=October 2016}} Zola bases his optimism on ''innéité'' and on the supposed capacity of the human race to make progress in a moral sense. ''Innéité'' is defined by Zola as that process in which "''se confondent les caractères physiques et moraux des parents, sans que rien d'eux semble s'y retrouver''";<ref>Émile Zola, ''Les Œuvres complètes'', vol. 22, Paris: 1928, ''[[Le Docteur Pascal]]'', p. 38.</ref> it is the term used in biology to describe the process whereby the moral and temperamental dispositions of some individuals are unaffected by the hereditary transmission of genetic characteristics. Jean Macquart and Pascal Rougon are two instances of individuals liberated from the blemishes of their ancestors by the operation of the process of ''innéité''.{{Citation needed|date=October 2016}}

==In popular culture==
* ''[[The Life of Emile Zola]]'' (1937) is a well-received film biography, starring [[Paul Muni]], which devotes significant footage to Zola's involvement in exonerating Dreyfus. The film won the [[Academy Award for Best Picture|Academy Award for Outstanding Production]].
* Zola is known to have been an inspiration to [[Christopher Hitchens]] as found in his book ''[[Letters to a Young Contrarian]]'' (2001).<ref>Hitchens, Christopher (2001). Letters to a young contrarian. Basic Books. p. xiii. {{ISBN|9780465030323}}.</ref>
* The 2012 [[BBC]] TV series ''[[The Paradise (TV series)|The Paradise]]'' is based on Zola's 1883 novel ''[[Au Bonheur des Dames]]''.<ref>{{cite web |title=Stellar cast announced for Bill Gallagher's glittering new BBC One drama series The Paradise |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/latestnews/2012/the-paradise.html |work=BBC Media Centre |publisher=BBC|access-date=26 September 2012 |date=17 May 2012}}</ref>
* ''[[Cézanne and I|Cézanne et Moi]]'' (2016) is a French film, directed by [[Danièle Thompson]], that explores the friendship between Zola and the [[Post-Impressionism|Post-Impressionist]] painter [[Paul Cézanne]].<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/29/movies/cezanne-et-moi-review.html |title=Review: In 'Cézanne et Moi,' Zola and the Artist Are Pals. However ... |first=Stephen |last=Holden|author-link=Stephen Holden |newspaper=[[The New York Times]] |page=C8 |date=29 March 2017}}</ref>


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==


===French language===
*La Confession de Claude (1865)
{{Div col|colwidth=20em}}
*''Therese Raquin'' ([[1867]])
* ''La Confession de Claude'' (1865)
*Madeleine Férat (1868)
* ''[[Les Mystères de Marseille]]'' (1867)
*Le Roman Experimental (1880)
* ''[[Thérèse Raquin]]'' (1867)
* ''[[Madeleine Férat]]'' (1868)
* ''Nouveaux Contes à Ninon'' (1874)
* ''Le Roman Experimental'' (1880)
* ''Jacques Damour et autres nouvelles'' (1880)
* ''L'Attaque du moulin'' (1877), short story included in ''[[Les Soirées de Médan]]''
* ''[[L'Inondation]]'' (''The Flood'') novella (1880)
* {{Lang|fr|[[Les Rougon-Macquart]]}}
** {{Lang|fr|[[La Fortune des Rougon]]}} (1871)
** ''[[La Curée]]'' (1871–72)
** ''[[Le Ventre de Paris]]'' (1873)
** ''[[La Conquête de Plassans]]'' (1874)
** ''[[La Faute de l'Abbé Mouret]]'' (1875)
** ''[[Son Excellence Eugène Rougon]]'' (1876)
** ''[[L'Assommoir]]'' (1877)
** ''[[Une page d'amour]]'' (1878)
** ''[[Nana (novel)|Nana]]'' (1880)
** ''[[Pot-Bouille]]'' (1882)
** ''[[Au Bonheur des Dames]]'' (1883)
** ''[[La joie de vivre]]'' (1884)
** ''[[Germinal (novel)|Germinal]]'' (1885)
** ''[[L'Œuvre]]'' (1886)
** ''[[La Terre]]'' (1887)
** ''[[Le Rêve (novel)|Le Rêve]]'' (1888)
** ''[[La Bête humaine]]'' (1890)
** ''[[L'Argent]]'' (1891)
** ''[[La Débâcle]]'' (1892)
** ''[[Le Docteur Pascal]]'' (1893)
* ''Les Trois Villes''
** ''Lourdes'' (1894)
** ''Rome'' (1896)
** ''Paris'' (1898)
* ''Les Quatre Évangiles''
** ''Fécondité'' (1899)
** ''Travail'' (1901)
** ''Vérité'' (1903, published posthumously)
** ''Justice'' (unfinished)
{{div col end}}

===Works translated into English===
'''''The 3 Cities'''''
# ''Lourdes'' (1894)
# ''Rome'' (1896)
# ''Paris'' (1898)

'''''The 4 Gospels'''''
# ''Fruitfulness'' (1900)
# ''Work'' (1901)
# ''Truth'' (1903)
# ''Justice'' (Unfinished)

'''Standalones'''
*''The Mysteries of Marseilles'' (1895)
* ''The Fête at Coqueville'' (1907)

====Modern Translations====
* ''[[Thérèse Raquin]]'' (1995, 2013)
* ''[[L'Inondation|The Flood]]'' (2013)


*'''[[Les Rougon-Macquart]]'''
'''[[Les Rougon-Macquart|The Rougon-Macquart]]''' (1993–2021)
**''[[La Fortune des Rougon]]'' (1871)
#[[La Fortune des Rougon|The Fortune of the Rougons]] (2012)
#[[Son Excellence Eugène Rougon|His Excellency Eugène Rougon]] (2018)
**''[[La Curée]]'' (1871-2)
**''[[Le Ventre de Paris]]'' (1873)
#[[La Curée|The Kill]] (2004)
#[[L'Argent|Money]] (2016)
**''[[La Conquête de Plassans]]'' (1874)
**''[[La Faute de l'Abbé Mouret]]'' (1875)
#[[Le Rêve (novel)|The Dream]] (2018)
#''[[La Conquête de Plassans|The Conquest of Plassans]]'' (2014)
**''[[Son Excellence Eugène Rougon]]'' (1876)
#[[Pot-Bouille|Pot Luck]] (1999)
**''[[L'Assommoir]]'' (1877)
#[[Au Bonheur des Dames|The Ladies Paradise/The Ladies' Delight]] (1995, 2001)
**''[[Une Page d'amour]]''(1878)
#[[La Faute de l'Abbé Mouret|The Sin of Abbé Mouret]] (2017)
**''[[Nana]]'' (1880)
#[[Une page d'amour|A Love Story]] (2017)
**''[[Pot-Bouille]]'' (1882)
#[[Le Ventre de Paris|The Belly of Paris]] (2007)
**''[[Au Bonheur des Dames]]'' (1883)
**''[[La Joie de vivre]]'' (1884)
#''[[La joie de vivre|The Bright Side of Life]]'' (2018)
**''[[Germinal]]'' (1885)
#''[[L'Assommoir|The Drinking Den]]'' (2000, 2021)
**''[[L'Oeuvre]]'' ([[1886]])
#''[[L'Œuvre|The Masterpiece]]'' (1993)
**''[[La Terre]]'' (1887)
#''[[La Bête humaine|The Beast Within]]'' (1999)
**''[[Le Rêve]]'' (1888)
#''[[Germinal (novel)|Germinal]]'' (2004)
**''[[La Bête Humaine]]'' (1890)
#''[[Nana (novel)|Nana]]'' (2020)
**''[[L'Argent]]'' (1891)
#''[[La Terre|The Earth]]'' (2016)
**''[[La Débâcle]]'' (1892)
#''[[La Débâcle|The Debacle]]'' (2000)
**''[[Le Docteur Pascal]]'' (1893)
#''[[Le Docteur Pascal|Doctor Pascal]]'' (2020)


==See also==
*'''[[Les Trois Villes]]'''
{{Portal|Biography}}
**''[[Lourdes]]'' (1894)
*[[List of unsolved deaths]]
**''[[Rome]]'' (1896)
**''[[Paris]]'' (1898)


==References==
*'''[[Les Quatres Evangiles]]'''
{{Reflist}}
**''[[Fécondité]]'' (1899)
**''[[Travail]]'' (1901)
**''[[Vérité]]'' (1903, published posthumously)
**''[[Justice]]'' (unfinished)


==Further reading==
'''Motion Picture:''' ''The Life of Emile Zola'', directed by William Dieterle:
* {{cite book |last=Borie |first=Jean |title=Zola et les mythes: ou, de la nausée au salut |publisher=[[Éditions du Seuil]] |location=Paris |series=Pierres vives |year=1971 |oclc=299742040 |language=fr}}
*1937 Academy Awards: Best Picture, Best Supporting Actor (Schildkraut), Best Screenplay;
* {{cite book |last=Brown |first=Frederick |title=Zola: A Life |publisher=[[Farrar, Straus and Giroux]] |location=New York City |year=1995 |isbn=978-0-374-29742-8 |oclc=31044880}}
*1937 Academy Awards Nominations: Best Actor (Muni), Best Director (Dieterle), Best Interior Decoration, Best Sound, Best Story, Best Original Score.
* {{cite book |last=Ellis |first=Havelock|author-link=Havelock Ellis |title=Affirmations |publisher=Walter Scott |location=London |chapter=Zola |year=1898 |pages=131–157 |url=http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?seq=173&view=image&size=100&id=uc2.ark:/13960/t9q242r53&u=1&num=131}}
*Featured Actors: [[Paul Muni]], [[Gale Sondergaard]], [[Joseph Schildkraut]], [[Gloria Holden]].
* Harrow, Susan (2010). ''Zola, the Body Modern: Pressures and Prospects of Representation.'' Legenda: London. {{ISBN|9781906540760}}. OCLC 9781906540760
*{{cite book |last=Hemmings |first=F.W.J. |title=Émile Zola |publisher=[[Clarendon Press]] |location=[[Oxford]] |year=1966 |oclc=3383139}}
* King, Graham (1978). ''Garden of Zola: Emile Zola and his Novels for English Readers''. London: Barrie & Jenkins.
* {{cite book |last=Lukács |first=György|author-link=György Lukács |others=Foreword by Roy Pascal|translator-last=Bonee|translator-first=Edith |title=Studies in European Realism: A Sociological Survey of the Writings of Balzac, Stendhal, Zola, Tolstoy, Gorki and Others |publisher=Hillway Publishing |location=London |year=1950 |oclc=2463154}}
* {{cite book |last=Mitterand |first=Henri |title=Zola et le naturalisme|trans-title=Zola and Naturalism |publisher=[[Presses Universitaires de France]] |location=Paris |series=Que sais-je? |year=1986 |isbn=978-2-13-039642-0 |oclc=15289843 |language=fr}}
* {{cite book |last=Mitterand |first=Henri |title=Zola |publisher=[[Fayard]] |location=Paris |year=1999 |isbn=978-2-213-60083-3 |oclc=659987814 |language=fr}}
* {{cite book |last=Newton |first=Joy |title=Cahiers naturalistes |chapter=Émile Zola: impressionniste |volume=33 |year=1967 |pages=39–52 |language=fr}}
* {{cite book |last=Newton |first=Joy |title=Cahiers naturalistes |year=1967 |volume=34 |pages=124–38 |language=fr}}
* [[Joanna Richardson|Richardson, Joanna]] (1978). ''Zola''. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
* [[Michael Rosen|Rosen, Michael]] (2017). ''The Disappearance of Émile Zola: Love, Literature and the Dreyfus Case''. London: Faber & Faber. {{ISBN|978-0-57131-201-6}}.
* {{cite book |last=Wilson |first=Angus|author-link=Angus Wilson |title=Émile Zola: An Introductory Study of His Novels |publisher=[[Secker and Warburg]] |location=London |year=1952 |oclc=818448}}
* {{cite book |last=Warembourg |first=Nicolas|author-link=Nicolas Warembourg |title=Lire, voir, entendre – un avocat pour Zola, pour Dreyfus, contre la terre entière |publisher=Louis Audibert |location=Paris |year=2008 |pages=153 |language=fr}}


== External Links ==
==External links==
{{Sister project links|s=Author:Émile Zola|v=no|b=no|n=no|wikt=no}}
*"[http://www.law.uga.edu/academics/profiles/dwilkes_more/his9_jaccuse.html J&acute;accuse ...!] Emile Zola, Alfred Dreyfus, and the greatest newspaper article in history", by Donald E. Wilkes Jr. from ''Flagpole Magazine''
* {{StandardEbooks|Standard Ebooks URL=https://standardebooks.org/ebooks/emile-zola}}
* [http://www.francealacarte.org.uk/education/enseigner/ressources/alevel/litterature/zola/arbre.html Family tree of the Rougon-Macquart families]
* {{Gutenberg author|id=528}}
* {{FadedPage|id=Zola, Émile|name=Émile Zola|author=yes}}
* {{Internet Archive author|sname=Émile Zola}}
* [https://norman.hrc.utexas.edu/fasearch/findingAid.cfm?eadID=00984 Émile Zola Collection] at the [[Harry Ransom Center]]
* {{Librivox author|id=1233}}
* {{OL author}}
* [http://www.notreprovence.fr/en_writer_zola-emile.php Life of Émile Zola on NotreProvence.fr] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171225220226/http://www.notreprovence.fr/en_writer_zola-emile.php |date=25 December 2017 }} {{in lang|en}}
* [http://www.intratext.com/Catalogo/Autori/AUT851.HTM Émile Zola at InterText Digital Library] {{in lang|fr}}
* [http://www.livres-et-ebooks.fr/auteur/%C3%89mile_Zola-804/ Émile Zola at Livres & Ebooks] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160504053945/http://www.livres-et-ebooks.fr/auteur/%C3%89mile_Zola-804/ |date=4 May 2016 }} {{in lang|fr}}
* [http://expositions.bnf.fr/zola Émile Zola exhibition] at the [[Bibliothèque nationale de France]]
* [http://lorgues.free.fr/zola1.html Lorgues, Plassans] {{in lang|fr}}
* [http://www.litteratureaudio.com/livres-audio-gratuits-mp3/tag/emile-zola/ Livres audio gratuits pour Émile Zola] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101231004120/http://www.litteratureaudio.com/livres-audio-gratuits-mp3/tag/emile-zola |date=31 December 2010 }} {{in lang|fr}}
* {{cite web |url=http://www.well.com/user/jax/literature/Rougon-Macquart.html |title=The Rougon-Macquart Novels of Emile Zola (for English-speaking Readers) |first=Jack J. |last=Woehr |year=2004|access-date=28 January 2011}}
* [https://archive.org/search.php?query=subject:%22Zola,+Emile,+1840-1902%22 Works about Émile Zola] at the [[Internet Archive]]
* [http://www.theeuropeanlibrary.org/tel4/newspapers/search?query=%22emile%20zola%22 References to Émile Zola in historic European newspapers]
* [http://www.shapell.org/manuscript/emile-zola-dreyfus-affair Emile Zola Writes a Letter to Alfred Dreyfus at the Height of the Dreyfus Affair]


{{Émile Zola}}
[[Category:Novelists|Zola, Emile]]
{{Thérèse Raquin}}
[[Category:Dreyfus affair|Zola, Emile]]
{{Authority control}}
[[Category:French writers|Zola, Emile]]


{{DEFAULTSORT:Zola, Emile}}
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[[fr:Émile Zola]]
[[Category:1840 births]]
[[Category:1902 deaths]]
[[he:&#1488;&#1502;&#1497;&#1500; &#1494;&#1493;&#1500;&#1488;]]
[[Category:Naturalized citizens of France]]
[[nl:Émile Zola]]
[[Category:19th-century French dramatists and playwrights]]
[[ja:&#12456;&#12511;&#12540;&#12523;&#12539;&#12478;&#12521;]]
[[Category:19th-century French journalists]]
[[fi:Émile Zola]]
[[Category:19th-century French male writers]]
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[[Category:19th-century French novelists]]
[[Category:20th-century French male writers]]
[[Category:20th-century French novelists]]
[[Category:Accidental deaths in France]]
[[Category:Burials at Montmartre Cemetery]]
[[Category:Burials at the Panthéon, Paris]]
[[Category:Deaths from carbon monoxide poisoning]]
[[Category:Dreyfusards]]
[[Category:French male novelists]]
[[Category:French male journalists]]
[[Category:French people of Italian descent]]
[[Category:French people of Greek descent]]
[[Category:French psychological fiction writers]]
[[Category:Lycée Saint-Louis alumni]]
[[Category:People from Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur]]
[[Category:People of Venetian descent]]
[[Category:Unsolved deaths in France]]
[[Category:Writers from Paris]]

Latest revision as of 04:30, 13 June 2024

Émile Zola
Self-portrait, 1902
Self-portrait, 1902
BornÉmile Édouard Charles Antoine Zola
(1840-04-02)2 April 1840
Paris, France
Died29 September 1902(1902-09-29) (aged 62)
Paris, France
Resting placePanthéon, Paris
OccupationNovelist, journalist, playwright, poet
NationalityFrench
Genres
Literary movementNaturalism
Notable worksLes Rougon-Macquart, Thérèse Raquin, Madeleine Férat
SpouseÉléonore-Alexandrine Meley
Parents
Signature

Émile Édouard Charles Antoine Zola (/ˈzlə/,[1][2] also US: /zˈlɑː/,[3][4] French: [emil zɔla]; 2 April 1840 – 29 September 1902)[5] was a French novelist, journalist, playwright, the best-known practitioner of the literary school of naturalism, and an important contributor to the development of theatrical naturalism.[6] He was a major figure in the political liberalization of France and in the exoneration of the falsely accused and convicted army officer Alfred Dreyfus, which is encapsulated in his renowned newspaper opinion headlined J'Accuse…!  Zola was nominated for the first and second Nobel Prize in Literature in 1901 and 1902.[7][8]

Early life[edit]

Zola was born in Paris in 1840 to François Zola (originally Francesco Zolla) and Émilie Aubert. His father was an Italian engineer with some Greek ancestry,[9] who was born in Venice in 1795, and engineered the Zola Dam in Aix-en-Provence; his mother was French.[10] The family moved to Aix-en-Provence in the southeast when Émile was three years old. In 1845, five-year-old Zola was sexually molested by an older boy.[11] Two years later, in 1847, his father died, leaving his mother on a meager pension. In 1852, Zola entered the Collège Bourbon as a boarding student. He would later complain about poor nutrition and bullying in school.[12]

In 1858, the Zolas moved to Paris, where Émile's childhood friend Paul Cézanne soon joined him. Zola started to write in the Romantic style. His widowed mother had planned a law career for Émile, but he failed his baccalauréat examination twice.[13][14]

Before his breakthrough as a writer, Zola worked for minimal pay as a clerk in a shipping firm and then in the sales department for the publisher Hachette.[14] He also wrote literary and art reviews for newspapers. As a political journalist, Zola did not hide his dislike of Napoleon III, who had successfully run for the office of president under the constitution of the French Second Republic, only to use this position as a springboard for the coup d'état that made him emperor.

Later life[edit]

In 1862 Zola was naturalized as a French citizen.[citation needed] In 1865, he met Éléonore-Alexandrine Meley, who called herself Gabrielle, a seamstress, who became his mistress.[13] They married on 31 May 1870.[15] Together they cared for Zola's mother.[14] She stayed with him all his life and was instrumental in promoting his work. The marriage remained childless. Alexandrine Zola had had a child before she met Zola that she had given up, because she had been unable to take care of it. When she confessed this to Zola after their marriage, they went looking for the girl, but she had died a short time after birth.

In 1888, he was given a camera, but he only began to use it in 1895 and attained a near professional level of expertise.[16] Also in 1888, Alexandrine hired Jeanne Rozerot, a 21-year-old seamstress who was to live with them in their home in Médan.[17] The 48-year-old Zola fell in love with Jeanne and fathered two children with her: Denise in 1889 and Jacques in 1891.[18] After Jeanne left Médan for Paris, Zola continued to support and visit her and their children. In November 1891 Alexandrine discovered the affair, which brought the marriage to the brink of divorce.[citation needed] The discord was partially healed, which allowed Zola to take an increasingly active role in the lives of the children. After Zola's death, the children were given his name as their lawful surname.[19]

Career[edit]

Zola early in his career

During his early years, Zola wrote numerous short stories and essays, four plays, and three novels. Among his early books was Contes à Ninon, published in 1864.[9] With the publication of his sordid autobiographical novel La Confession de Claude (1865) attracting police attention, Hachette fired Zola. His novel Les Mystères de Marseille appeared as a serial in 1867. He was also an aggressive critic, his articles on literature and art appearing in Villemessant's journal L'Événement.[9] After his first major novel, Thérèse Raquin (1867), Zola started the series called Les Rougon-Macquart.

In Paris, Zola maintained his friendship with Cézanne, who painted a portrait of him with another friend from Aix-en-Provence, writer Paul Alexis, entitled Paul Alexis Reading to Zola.

Literary output[edit]

Paul Cézanne, Paul Alexis Reading to Émile Zola, 1869–1870, São Paulo Museum of Art

More than half of Zola's novels were part of the twenty-volume Les Rougon-Macquart cycle, which details the history of a single family under the reign of Napoléon III. Unlike Balzac, who in the midst of his literary career resynthesized his work into La Comédie Humaine, Zola from the start, at the age of 28, had thought of the complete layout of the series.[citation needed] Set in France's Second Empire, in the context of Baron Haussmann's changing Paris, the series traces the environmental and hereditary influences of violence, alcohol, and prostitution which became more prevalent during the second wave of the Industrial Revolution. The series examines two branches of the family—the respectable (that is, legitimate) Rougons and the disreputable (illegitimate) Macquarts—over five generations.

In the preface to the first novel of the series, Zola states, "I want to explain how a family, a small group of regular people, behaves in society, while expanding through the birth of ten, twenty individuals, who seem at first glance profoundly dissimilar, but who are shown through analysis to be intimately linked to one another. Heredity has its own laws, just like gravity. I will attempt to find and to follow, by resolving the double question of temperaments and environments, the thread that leads mathematically from one man to another."[20]

Although Zola and Cézanne were friends from childhood, they experienced a falling out later in life over Zola's fictionalised depiction of Cézanne and the Bohemian life of painters in Zola's novel L'Œuvre (The Masterpiece, 1886).

Captioned "French Realism", caricature of Zola in the London magazine Vanity Fair, 1880

From 1877, with the publication of L'Assommoir, Émile Zola became wealthy; he was better paid than Victor Hugo, for example.[21] Because L'Assommoir was such a success, Zola was able to renegotiate his contract with his publisher Georges Charpentier to receive more than 14% royalties and the exclusive rights to serial publication in the press.[22] Subsequently, sales of L'Assommoir were even exceeded by those of Nana (1880) and La Débâcle (1892).[9] He became a figurehead among the literary bourgeoisie and organised cultural dinners with Guy de Maupassant, Joris-Karl Huysmans, and other writers at his luxurious villa (worth 300,000 francs)[23] in Médan, near Paris, after 1880. Despite being nominated several times, Zola was never elected to the Académie française.[9]

Zola's output also included novels on population (Fécondité) and work (Travail), a number of plays, and several volumes of criticism. He wrote every day for around 30 years, and took as his motto Nulla dies sine linea ("not a day without a line").

The self-proclaimed leader of French naturalism, Zola's works inspired operas such as those of Gustave Charpentier, notably Louise in the 1890s. His works were inspired by the concept of heredity and milieu (Claude Bernard and Hippolyte Taine)[24] and by the realism of Balzac and Flaubert.[25] He also provided the libretto for several operas by Alfred Bruneau, including Messidor (1897) and L'Ouragan (1901); several of Bruneau's other operas are adapted from Zola's writing. These provided a French alternative to Italian verismo.[26]

He is considered to be a significant influence on those writers that are credited with the creation of the so-called new journalism: Wolfe, Capote, Thompson, Mailer, Didion, Talese and others. Tom Wolfe wrote that his goal in writing fiction was to document contemporary society in the tradition of John Steinbeck, Charles Dickens, and Émile Zola.[citation needed]

Dreyfus affair[edit]

Front page cover of the newspaper L'Aurore for Thursday 13 January 1898, with the open letter J'Accuse…!, written by Émile Zola about the Dreyfus affair. The headline reads "I Accuse...! Letter to the President of the Republic"—Paris Museum of Jewish Art and History

Captain Alfred Dreyfus was a French-Jewish artillery officer in the French army. In September 1894, French intelligence discovered someone had been passing military secrets to the German Embassy. Senior officers began to suspect Dreyfus, though there was no direct evidence of any wrongdoing. Dreyfus was court-martialed, convicted of treason, and sent to Devil's Island in French Guiana.

Lt. Col. Georges Picquart came across evidence that implicated another officer, Ferdinand Walsin Esterhazy, and informed his superiors. Rather than move to clear Dreyfus, the decision was made to protect Esterhazy and ensure the original verdict was not overturned. Major Hubert-Joseph Henry forged documents that made it seem as if Dreyfus were guilty, while Picquart was reassigned to duty in Africa. However, Picquart's findings were communicated by his lawyer to the Senator Auguste Scheurer-Kestner, who took up the case, at first discreetly and then increasingly publicly. Meanwhile, further evidence was brought forward by Dreyfus's family and Esterhazy's estranged family and creditors. Under pressure, the general staff arranged for a closed court-martial to be held on 10–11 January 1898, at which Esterhazy was tried in camera and acquitted. Picquart was detained on charges of violation of professional secrecy.[citation needed]

In response Zola risked his career and more, and on 13 January 1898 published J'Accuse…![27] on the front page of the Paris daily L'Aurore. The newspaper was run by Ernest Vaughan and Georges Clemenceau, who decided that the controversial story would be in the form of an open letter to the president, Félix Faure. Zola's J'Accuse...! accused the highest levels of the French Army of obstruction of justice and antisemitism by having wrongfully convicted Alfred Dreyfus to life imprisonment on Devil's Island. Zola's intention was that he be prosecuted for libel so that the new evidence in support of Dreyfus would be made public.[28]

The case, known as the Dreyfus affair, deeply divided France between the reactionary army and Catholic Church on one hand, and the more liberal commercial society on the other. The ramifications continued for many years; on the 100th anniversary of Zola's article, France's Catholic daily paper, La Croix, apologised for its antisemitic editorials during the Dreyfus affair.[29] As Zola was a leading French thinker and public figure, his letter formed a major turning point in the affair.[citation needed]

Portrait of Zola by Nadar, 3 March 1898

Zola was brought to trial for criminal libel on 7 February 1898, and was convicted on 23 February and removed from the Legion of Honour. The first judgment was overturned in April on a technicality, but a new suit was pressed against Zola, which opened on 18 July. At his lawyer's advice, Zola fled to England rather than wait for the end of the trial (at which he was again convicted). Without even having had the time to pack a few clothes, he arrived at Victoria Station on 19 July, the start of a brief and unhappy residence in the UK.

Zola visited historic locations including a Church of England service at Westminster Abbey.[30] After initially staying at the Grosvenor Hotel, Victoria, Zola went to the Oatlands Park Hotel in Weybridge and shortly afterwards rented a house locally called Penn where he was joined by his family for the summer. At the end of August, they moved to another house in Addlestone called Summerfield. In early October the family moved to London and then his wife and children went back to France so the children could resume their schooling. Thereafter Zola lived alone in the Queen's Hotel, Norwood.[31] He stayed in Upper Norwood from October 1898 to June 1899.[32]

In France, the furious divisions over the Dreyfus affair continued. The fact of Major Henry's forgery was discovered and admitted to in August 1898, and the Government referred Dreyfus's original court-martial to the Supreme Court for review the following month, over the objections of the General Staff. Eight months later, on 3 June 1899, the Supreme Court annulled the original verdict and ordered a new military court-martial. The same month Zola returned from his exile in England. Still the anti-Dreyfusards would not give up, and on 9 September 1899 Dreyfus was again convicted.

Dreyfus applied for a retrial, but the government countered by offering Dreyfus a pardon (rather than exoneration), which would allow him to go free, provided that he admit to being guilty. Although he was clearly not guilty, he chose to accept the pardon. Later the same month, despite Zola's condemnation, an amnesty bill was passed, covering "all criminal acts or misdemeanours related to the Dreyfus affair or that have been included in a prosecution for one of these acts", indemnifying Zola and Picquart, but also all those who had concocted evidence against Dreyfus. Dreyfus was finally completely exonerated by the Supreme Court in 1906.[33]

Zola said of the affair, "The truth is on the march, and nothing shall stop it."[27] Zola's 1898 article is widely viewed in France as the most prominent manifestation of the new power of the intellectuals (writers, artists, academicians) in shaping public opinion, the media and the state.[34]

The Manifesto of the Five[edit]

On August 18, 1887, the French daily newspaper Le Figaro published "The Manifesto of the Five" shortly after La Terre was released. The signatories included Paul Bonnetain, J. H. Rosny, Lucien Descaves, Paul Margueritte and Gustave Guiches, who strongly disapproved of the lack of balance of both morals and aesthetics throughout the book's depiction of the revolution. The manifesto accused Zola of having "lowered the standard of Naturalism, of catering to large sales by deliberate obscenities, of being a morbid and impotent hypochondriac, incapable of taking a sane and healthy view of mankind. They freely referred to Zola's physiological weaknesses and expressed the utmost horror at the crudeness of La Terre."[35]

Death[edit]

Zola on his deathbed

Zola died on 29 September 1902 of carbon monoxide poisoning caused by an improperly ventilated chimney.[36] His funeral on 5 October was attended by thousands. Alfred Dreyfus initially had promised not to attend the funeral, but was given permission by Zola's widow and attended.[37][38] At the time of his death Zola had just completed a novel, Vérité, about the Dreyfus trial. A sequel, Justice, had been planned, but was not completed.

Gravestone of Émile Zola at cimetière Montmartre; his remains are now interred in the Panthéon.

His enemies were blamed for his death because of previous attempts on his life, but nothing could be proven at the time. Expressions of sympathy arrived from everywhere in France; for a week the vestibule of his house was crowded with notable writers, scientists, artists, and politicians who came to inscribe their names in the registers.[39] On the other hand, Zola's enemies used the opportunity to celebrate in malicious glee.[40] Writing in L'Intransigeant, Henri Rochefort claimed Zola had committed suicide, having discovered Dreyfus to be guilty.

Zola was initially buried in the Cimetière de Montmartre in Paris, but on 4 June 1908, just five years and nine months after his death, his remains were relocated to the Panthéon, where he shares a crypt with Victor Hugo and Alexandre Dumas.[41] The ceremony was disrupted by an assassination attempt on Alfred Dreyfus by Louis Grégori [fr], a disgruntled journalist and admirer of Édouard Drumont, in which Dreyfus was wounded in the arm by the gunshot. Grégori was acquitted by the Parisian court which accepted his defense that he had not meant to kill Dreyfus, meaning merely to graze him.

Graves of Alexandre Dumas, Victor Hugo and Émile Zola at the Panthéon in Paris

A 1953 investigation by journalist Jean Bedel published in the newspaper Libération under the headline "Was Zola assassinated?" raised the idea that Zola's death might have been a murder rather than an accident.[42] It is based on the revelation by Norman pharmacist Pierre Hacquin, who was told by chimney-sweep Henri Buronfosse that he intentionally blocked the chimney of Zola's apartment in Paris.[42] Literary historian Alain Pagès believes that is likely true[43] and Zola's great-granddaughters, Brigitte Émile-Zola and Martine Le Blond-Zola, corroborate this explanation of Zola's poisoning by carbon monoxide. As reported in L'Orient-Le Jour, Brigitte Émile-Zola recounts that her grandfather Jacques Émile-Zola, son of Émile Zola, told her at the age of eight that, in 1952, a man came to his house to give him information about his father's death. The man had been with a dying friend, who had confessed to taking money to plug Emile Zola's chimney.[44]

Scope of the Rougon-Macquart series[edit]

Zola's Rougon-Macquart novels are a panoramic account of the Second French Empire. They tell the story of a family approximately between the years 1851 and 1871. These twenty novels contain over 300 characters, who descend from the two family lines of the Rougons and Macquarts. In Zola's words, which are the subtitle of the Rougon-Macquart series, they are "L'Histoire naturelle et sociale d'une famille sous le Second Empire" ("The natural and social history of a family under the Second Empire").[45][46]

Most of the Rougon-Macquart novels were written during the French Third Republic. To an extent, attitudes and value judgments may have been superimposed on that picture with the wisdom of hindsight. Some critics classify Zola's work, and naturalism more broadly, as a particular strain of decadent literature, which emphasized the fallen, corrupted state of modern civilization.[47] Nowhere is the doom-laden image of the Second Empire so clearly seen as in Nana, which culminates in echoes of the Franco-Prussian War (and hence by implication of the French defeat).[48] Even in novels dealing with earlier periods of Napoleon III's reign the picture of the Second Empire is sometimes overlaid with the imagery of catastrophe.[citation needed]

Poster by Léon Choubrac advertising the publication of Zola's novel Germinal in Gil Blas, 25 November 1884

In the Rougon-Macquart novels, provincial life can seem to be overshadowed by Zola's preoccupation with the capital.[citation needed] However, the following novels (see the individual titles in the Livre de poche series) scarcely touch on life in Paris: La Terre (peasant life in Beauce), Le Rêve (an unnamed cathedral city), Germinal (collieries in the northeast of France), La Joie de vivre (the Atlantic coast), and the four novels set in and around Plassans (modelled on his childhood home, Aix-en-Provence), (La Fortune des Rougon, La Conquête de Plassans, La Faute de l'Abbé Mouret and Le Docteur Pascal).[citation needed] La Débâcle, the military novel, is set for the most part in country districts of eastern France; its dénouement takes place in the capital during the civil war leading to the suppression of the Paris Commune. Though Paris has its role in La Bête humaine the most striking incidents (notably the train crash) take place elsewhere. Even the Paris-centred novels tend to set some scenes outside, if not very far from, the capital. In the political novel Son Excellence Eugène Rougon, the eponymous minister's interventions on behalf of his so-called friends, have their consequences elsewhere, and the reader is witness to some of them. Even Nana, one of Zola's characters most strongly associated with Paris, makes a brief and typically disastrous trip to the country.[49]

Quasi-scientific purpose[edit]

In Le Roman expérimental and Les Romanciers naturalistes, Zola expounded the purposes of the "naturalist" novel. The experimental novel was to serve as a vehicle for scientific experiment, analogous to the experiments conducted by Claude Bernard and expounded by him in Introduction à la médecine expérimentale. Claude Bernard's experiments were in the field of clinical physiology, those of the Naturalist writers (Zola being their leader) would be in the realm of psychology influenced by the natural environment.[13] Balzac, Zola claimed, had already investigated the psychology of lechery in an experimental manner, in the figure of Hector Hulot in La Cousine Bette.[citation needed] Essential to Zola's concept of the experimental novel was dispassionate observation of the world, with all that it involved by way of meticulous documentation. To him, each novel should be based upon a dossier.[citation needed] With this aim, he visited the colliery of Anzin in northern France, in February 1884 when a strike was on; he visited La Beauce (for La Terre), Sedan, Ardennes (for La Débâcle) and travelled on the railway line between Paris and Le Havre (when researching La Bête humaine).[50]

Characterisation[edit]

Édouard Manet, Portrait of Émile Zola, 1868, Musée d'Orsay

Zola strongly claimed that Naturalist literature is an experimental analysis of human psychology.[citation needed] Considering this claim, many critics, such as György Lukács,[51] find Zola strangely poor at creating lifelike and memorable characters in the manner of Honoré de Balzac or Charles Dickens, despite his ability to evoke powerful crowd scenes. It was important to Zola that no character should appear larger than life;[52] but the criticism that his characters are "cardboard" is substantially more damaging. Zola, by refusing to make any of his characters larger than life (if that is what he has indeed done), did not inhibit himself from also achieving verisimilitude.

Although Zola found it scientifically and artistically unjustifiable to create larger-than-life characters, his work presents some larger-than-life symbols which, like the mine Le Voreux in Germinal,[citation needed] take on the nature of a surrogate human life. The mine, the still in L'Assommoir and the locomotive La Lison in La Bête humaine impress the reader with the vivid reality of human beings.[citation needed] The great natural processes of seedtime and harvest, death and renewal in La Terre are instinct with a vitality which is not human but is the elemental energy of life.[53] Human life is raised to the level of the mythical as the hammerblows of Titans are seemingly heard underground at Le Voreux, or as in La Faute de l'Abbé Mouret, the walled park of Le Paradou encloses a re-enactment—and restatement—of the Book of Genesis.[citation needed]

Zola's optimism[edit]

Luc Barbut-Davray, Portrait of Zola, oil on canvas, 1899

In Zola there is the theorist and the writer, the poet, the scientist and the optimist – features that are basically joined in his own confession of positivism;[citation needed] later in his life, when he saw his own position turning into an anachronism, he would still style himself with irony and sadness over the lost cause as "an old and rugged Positivist".[54][55]

The poet is the artist in words whose writing, as in the racecourse scene in Nana or in the descriptions of the laundry in L'Assommoir or in many passages of La Faute de l'Abbé Mouret, Le Ventre de Paris and La Curée, vies with the colourful impressionistic techniques of Claude Monet and Pierre-Auguste Renoir. The scientist is a believer in some measure of scientific determinism – not that this, despite his own words "devoid of free will" ("dépourvus de libre arbitre"),[56] need always amount to a philosophical denial of free will. The creator of "la littérature putride", a term of abuse invented by an early critic of Thérèse Raquin (a novel which predates Les Rougon-Macquart series), emphasizes the squalid aspects of the human environment and upon the seamy side of human nature.[57]

The optimist is that other face of the scientific experimenter, the man with an unshakable belief in human progress.[citation needed] Zola bases his optimism on innéité and on the supposed capacity of the human race to make progress in a moral sense. Innéité is defined by Zola as that process in which "se confondent les caractères physiques et moraux des parents, sans que rien d'eux semble s'y retrouver";[58] it is the term used in biology to describe the process whereby the moral and temperamental dispositions of some individuals are unaffected by the hereditary transmission of genetic characteristics. Jean Macquart and Pascal Rougon are two instances of individuals liberated from the blemishes of their ancestors by the operation of the process of innéité.[citation needed]

In popular culture[edit]

Bibliography[edit]

French language[edit]

Works translated into English[edit]

The 3 Cities

  1. Lourdes (1894)
  2. Rome (1896)
  3. Paris (1898)

The 4 Gospels

  1. Fruitfulness (1900)
  2. Work (1901)
  3. Truth (1903)
  4. Justice (Unfinished)

Standalones

  • The Mysteries of Marseilles (1895)
  • The Fête at Coqueville (1907)

Modern Translations[edit]

The Rougon-Macquart (1993–2021)

  1. The Fortune of the Rougons (2012)
  2. His Excellency Eugène Rougon (2018)
  3. The Kill (2004)
  4. Money (2016)
  5. The Dream (2018)
  6. The Conquest of Plassans (2014)
  7. Pot Luck (1999)
  8. The Ladies Paradise/The Ladies' Delight (1995, 2001)
  9. The Sin of Abbé Mouret (2017)
  10. A Love Story (2017)
  11. The Belly of Paris (2007)
  12. The Bright Side of Life (2018)
  13. The Drinking Den (2000, 2021)
  14. The Masterpiece (1993)
  15. The Beast Within (1999)
  16. Germinal (2004)
  17. Nana (2020)
  18. The Earth (2016)
  19. The Debacle (2000)
  20. Doctor Pascal (2020)

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Zola". Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.
  2. ^ "Zola, Émile". Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press.[dead link]
  3. ^ "Zola". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (5th ed.). HarperCollins. Retrieved 22 August 2019.
  4. ^ "Zola". Collins English Dictionary. HarperCollins. Retrieved 22 August 2019.
  5. ^ "Emile Zola Biography (Writer)". infoplease. Retrieved 15 July 2011.
  6. ^ Mitterand, Henri (2002). Zola et le naturalisme. Paris, France: Presses universitaires de France. p. 23. ISBN 978-2130525103.
  7. ^ "Nomination Database – Literature – 1901". Nobel Foundation. Retrieved 7 February 2014.
  8. ^ "Nomination Database – Literature – 1902". Nobel Foundation. Retrieved 7 February 2014.
  9. ^ a b c d e Marzials, Frank Thomas (1911). "Zola, Émile Édouard Charles Antoine" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 1001.
  10. ^ Sacquin, Michèle; Cabannes, Viviane (2002). Zola et autour d'une oeuvre : Au bonheur des dames. Bibliothèque nationale de France. ISBN 9782717722161.
  11. ^ Brown, Frederick (1995). Zola: A Life. Farrar Straus Giroux. p. 23. ISBN 0374297428. «It is described in a report filed by the Marseille police on April 3, 1845: "We conducted to the Palace of Justice a person named Mustapha, twelve years old, a native of Algiers and a domestic in the service of Monsieur Zola, civil engineer, number 4, rue de l'Arbre, who committed indecent assault [attentat à la pudeur] on the young Émile Zola, five years old."»
  12. ^ Brown, Frederick (1995). Zola: A Life. Farrar Straus Giroux. p. 21 and 23. ISBN 0374297428. "During the six years I remained there, I was hungry." (page 21) and «"Let us remember how it was at secondary school. Vices had fertile ground, so that one lived in true Roman putrescence. Any cloistered association of people who belong to the same sex is morally reprehensible," he wrote in 1870, and the Goncourts report him lamenting on one occasion that "I had a perverted youth in wretched provincial school. Yes, a rotten childhood!"» (page 23)
  13. ^ a b c Larousse, Émile Zola
  14. ^ a b c Berg, William J. (24 September 2020). "Émile Zola | French author". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
  15. ^ Brown, Frederick (1995). Zola: A Life. Farrar Straus Giroux. p. 195. ISBN 0374297428.
  16. ^ August, Marilyn (14 December 2000). "IN LATER YEARS, ZOLA SAW WORLD THROUGH A CAMERA". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. F-8 – via ProQuest.
  17. ^ Brown, Frederick (1995). Zola: A Life. Farrar Straus Giroux. pp. 614, 615. ISBN 0374297428.
  18. ^ Brown, Frederick (1995). Zola: A Life. Farrar Straus Giroux. pp. 646–648. ISBN 0374297428.
  19. ^ Brown, Frederick (1995). Zola: A Life. Farrar Straus Giroux. p. 802. ISBN 0374297428.
  20. ^ Zola, Émile (1981). La Fortune des Rougon. Paris, France: Gallimard. p. 27.
  21. ^ Zola, Émile (2005). The Three Cities Trilogy Complete: Lourdes, Rome and Paris. Library of Alexandria. ISBN 978-1-4655-2672-4.
  22. ^ Martyn, Lyons (2011). Books : a living history. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum. p. 143. ISBN 9781606060834. OCLC 707023033.
  23. ^ "Literary gossip". The Week: A Canadian Journal of Politics, Literature, Science and Arts. 1 (4): 61. 27 December 1883. Retrieved 23 April 2013.
  24. ^ Zola, Émile (1902), Le Roman expérimental, Paris : Charpentier, pp. 1–53, retrieved 7 January 2021
  25. ^ Mitterand, Henri (1986). Zola et le naturalisme. Presses universitaires de France.
  26. ^ Richard Langham Smith (2001). "Zola, Emile". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0.
  27. ^ a b J'accuse letter at French wikisource
  28. ^ "Correspondence Between Emile Zola and Imprisoned Alfred Dreyfus". Shapell Manuscript Foundation. Archived from the original on 7 July 2012. Retrieved 29 January 2012.
  29. ^ "World News Briefs; French Paper Apologizes For Slurs on Dreyfus". The New York Times. Reuters. 13 January 1998. Retrieved 25 March 2018.
  30. ^ Vizetelly, Ernest Alfred (1904). "Émile Zola, Novelist and Reformer: An Account of His Life & Work".
  31. ^ "Zola in Exile in Weybridge" (PDF). Weybridge Society Newsletter. Weybridge Society. Spring 2019. p. 24. Retrieved 13 February 2023 – via weybridgesociety.org.uk.
  32. ^ Watt, Peter (21 September 2017). "Zola's bicycle women" (blog). The Great Wen. Retrieved 13 February 2023.
  33. ^ Bridger, David; Wolk, Samuel (1 January 1976). The New Jewish Encyclopedia. Behrman House, Inc. p. 111. ISBN 978-0874411201.
  34. ^ Swardson, Anne (14 January 1998). "The Dreyfus Affair's Living History". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 7 September 2022. Retrieved 7 September 2022. Because of Zola's article, ... the intellectual class was accorded the status it still holds as molder of public opinion.
  35. ^ Boyd, Ernest (19 August 2013). "From the Stacks: "Realism in France"". The New Republic. ISSN 0028-6583. Retrieved 25 November 2020.
  36. ^ "The Strange Death of Emile Zola". History Today Volume 52. 9 September 2002. Retrieved 21 February 2017.
  37. ^ "Thousands March at Funeral of Émile Zola: Municipal Guards Line the Route to Preserve Order". The New York Times. 6 October 1902.
  38. ^ "From the archives The tragic death of M. Zola", 30 September 1902". The Guardian. 29 June 2002.
  39. ^ Vizetelly, Ernest Alfred (1904). Émile Zola, Novelist and Reformer: An Account of His Life & Work. John Lane, the Bodley Head. p. 511.
  40. ^ "Full text of 'Emile Zola Novelist And Reformer An Account Of His Life And Work'". Retrieved 7 February 2014.
  41. ^ "Paris Monuments Panthéon-Close up picture of the interior of the crypt of Victor Hugo (left) Alexandre Dumas (middle) Emile Zola (right)". ParisPhotoGallery. Archived from the original on 19 April 2012. Retrieved 30 January 2012.
  42. ^ a b Mounier-Kuhn, Angélique (8 August 2014). "L'asphyxie d'Émile Zola". Le Temps (in French). pp. 8–9. Hacquin, je vais vous dire comment Zola est mort. [...] Zola a été asphyxié volontairement. C'est nous qui avons bouché la cheminée de son appartement. [Hacquin, I'm going to tell you how Zola died. [...] Zola was asphyxiated on purpose. It was us who blocked the chimney of his apartment. ]
  43. ^ Pagès, Alain (2019). L'affaire Dreyfus : vérités et légendes. Paris: Perrin. ISBN 978-2262074944.
  44. ^ Andréa, Alain E. (10 September 2019). "Émile Zola : ses arrière-petites-filles accusent..." L'Orient-Le Jour. Retrieved 6 September 2022. Brigitte Émile-Zola abonde dans le sens de M. Pagès. 'Je l'ai appris à 8 ans chez mon grand-père, le docteur Jacques Émile-Zola, fils d'Émile Zola, qui m'a élevée. En 1952, un homme s'est présenté chez mon grand-père pour lui donner une information sur la mort de son père. Il a raconté qu'il avait assisté un ami dans ses derniers instants. Celui-ci s'était confessé à lui en lui expliquant que, lorsqu'il était ouvrier sur un immeuble situé près de celui où habitait Zola, il avait été contacté par les antidreyfusards lui demandant de boucher la cheminée de la chambre de l'écrivain. Il avait été payé pour exécuter ce méfait. Donc Zola a bien été assassiné. Mon grand-père a transmis cette histoire à tous ses amis zoliens et j'ai fait de même toute ma vie.'  [Brigitte Émile-Zola agrees with Mr. Pagès. "I learned about it at the age of 8 from my grandfather, Dr. Jacques Émile-Zola, son of Émile Zola, who raised me. In 1952, a man came to my grandfather's house to give him information about his father's death. He said that he had been present with a friend in his last moments. The friend confessed to him that when he was working on a building near the one where Zola lived, he was contacted by the antidreyfusards, who asked him to plug the chimney of the writer's room. He was paid to carry out the misdeed. So Zola was indeed murdered. My grandfather passed on this story to all his Zola friends and I have done the same all my life."]
  45. ^ Cummins, Anthony (5 December 2015). "How Émile Zola made novels out of gutter voices and ultra-violence". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 3 November 2016.
  46. ^ "Rougon-Macquart cycle: Work by Zola". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Retrieved 3 November 2016.
  47. ^ Bernheimer, Charles (1999). "Unknowing Decadence". In Constable, Liz (ed.). Perennial Decay: On the Aesthetics and Politics of Decadence. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 50–64.
  48. ^ Nelson, Brian (15 February 2007). The Cambridge Companion to Zola. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781139827270.
  49. ^ Zola, Émile (2003). Nana. Paris, France: Livre de poche. ISBN 978-2253003656.
  50. ^ Garnett, A. F. (1 January 2005). Steel Wheels: The Evolution of the Railways and how They Stimulated and Excited Engineers, Architects, Artists, Writers, Musicians and Travellers. Cannwood. ISBN 9780955025709.
  51. ^ György Lukács, Studies in European Realism. A Sociological Survey of the Writings of Balzac, Stendhal, Zola, Tolstoy, Gorki and Others, London: 1950, pp. 91–95.
  52. ^ Émile Zola, Les Romanciers naturalistes, Paris: 1903, pp. 126–129.
  53. ^ Letter from Émile Zola to Jules Lemaître, 14 March 1885.
  54. ^ "Émile Zola to France's Young Generation (1893) – Positivism". 14 November 2012. Retrieved 31 May 2022.
  55. ^ See Émile Zola's speech at the annual banquet of the Students' Association at the Hotel Moderne in Paris, 20 May 1893, published in English by The New York Times on 11 June 1893 at http://www.positivists.org.
  56. ^ Émile Zola, Les Œuvres complètes, vol. 34, Paris: 1928, Thérèse Raquin, preface to 2nd edition, p. viii.
  57. ^ Émile Zola, Les Œuvres complètes, vol. 34, Paris: 1928, Thérèse Raquin, preface to 2nd edition, p. xiv.
  58. ^ Émile Zola, Les Œuvres complètes, vol. 22, Paris: 1928, Le Docteur Pascal, p. 38.
  59. ^ Hitchens, Christopher (2001). Letters to a young contrarian. Basic Books. p. xiii. ISBN 9780465030323.
  60. ^ "Stellar cast announced for Bill Gallagher's glittering new BBC One drama series The Paradise". BBC Media Centre. BBC. 17 May 2012. Retrieved 26 September 2012.
  61. ^ Holden, Stephen (29 March 2017). "Review: In 'Cézanne et Moi,' Zola and the Artist Are Pals. However ..." The New York Times. p. C8.

Further reading[edit]

  • Borie, Jean (1971). Zola et les mythes: ou, de la nausée au salut. Pierres vives (in French). Paris: Éditions du Seuil. OCLC 299742040.
  • Brown, Frederick (1995). Zola: A Life. New York City: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-0-374-29742-8. OCLC 31044880.
  • Ellis, Havelock (1898). "Zola". Affirmations. London: Walter Scott. pp. 131–157.
  • Harrow, Susan (2010). Zola, the Body Modern: Pressures and Prospects of Representation. Legenda: London. ISBN 9781906540760. OCLC 9781906540760
  • Hemmings, F.W.J. (1966). Émile Zola. Oxford: Clarendon Press. OCLC 3383139.
  • King, Graham (1978). Garden of Zola: Emile Zola and his Novels for English Readers. London: Barrie & Jenkins.
  • Lukács, György (1950). Studies in European Realism: A Sociological Survey of the Writings of Balzac, Stendhal, Zola, Tolstoy, Gorki and Others. Translated by Bonee, Edith. Foreword by Roy Pascal. London: Hillway Publishing. OCLC 2463154.
  • Mitterand, Henri (1986). Zola et le naturalisme [Zola and Naturalism]. Que sais-je? (in French). Paris: Presses Universitaires de France. ISBN 978-2-13-039642-0. OCLC 15289843.
  • Mitterand, Henri (1999). Zola (in French). Paris: Fayard. ISBN 978-2-213-60083-3. OCLC 659987814.
  • Newton, Joy (1967). "Émile Zola: impressionniste". Cahiers naturalistes (in French). Vol. 33. pp. 39–52.
  • Newton, Joy (1967). Cahiers naturalistes (in French). Vol. 34. pp. 124–38.
  • Richardson, Joanna (1978). Zola. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
  • Rosen, Michael (2017). The Disappearance of Émile Zola: Love, Literature and the Dreyfus Case. London: Faber & Faber. ISBN 978-0-57131-201-6.
  • Wilson, Angus (1952). Émile Zola: An Introductory Study of His Novels. London: Secker and Warburg. OCLC 818448.
  • Warembourg, Nicolas (2008). Lire, voir, entendre – un avocat pour Zola, pour Dreyfus, contre la terre entière (in French). Paris: Louis Audibert. p. 153.

External links[edit]

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