SCUDRY, MADELEINE DE


Meaning of SCUDRY, MADELEINE DE in English

born , 1607, Le Havre, Fr. died June 2, 1701, Paris French novelist and social figure whose romans clef were immensely popular in the 17th century. De Scudry was the younger sister of the dramatist Georges de Scudry. Madeleine de Scudry moved to Paris to join her brother after the death of her uncle, who had cared for her after she and her brother had been orphaned. Clever and bright, she soon made her mark on the literary circle of the Htel de Rambouillet; by the late 1640s, she had replaced Madame de Rambouillet as the leading literary hostess in Paris and had established her own salon, known as the Socit du Samedi (the Saturday Club). Her first novel, Ibrahim ou l'illustre bassa (1642; Ibrahim or the Illustrious Bassa), was published in four volumes. Her later works were even longer; both Artamne ou le grand Cyrus (164953; Artamenes or the Grand Cyrus) and Cllie, histoire romaine (165460; Clelia) were published in 10 volumes. Contemporary readers, accustomed to such long novels, appreciated De Scudry's works both for their bulk and for the glimpses they provided into the lives of important society figures of the day. These individuals were thinly disguised as Persian, Greek, and Roman warriors and maidens; De Scudry herself appears in Artamne as Sappho, a name by which she was known to her friends. Other of her works include Almahide, ou l'es- clave reine (166063; Almahide, or the Slave Queen), Mathilde d'Aguilar, histoire espagnole (1667; Mathilda of Aguilar, a Spanish Tale), and La Promenade de Versailles, ou l'histoire de Clanire (1669; The Versailles Promenade, or the Tale of Celanire). Most of the novels were published anonymously or under the name of her brother Georges. They included long passages devoted to conversations on such topics as the education of women; these were excerpted and published separately. Although her novels were exceptionally popular and were lauded by such notables as Madame de Svign, they also met with some criticism. The poet and critic Nicolas Boileau, for instance, satirized them harshly.

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