Edmond and Jules
Goncourt

in full
Edmond-Louis-Antoine Huot de Goncourt
and Jules-Alfred Huot de Goncourt
born
May 26, 1822, Nancy, France
died July 16, 1896, Champrosay
born December 17, 1830, Paris
died June 20, 1870, Auteuil
French brothers, writers and constant
collaborators who made significant
contributions to the development of the
naturalist novel and to the fields of
social history and art criticism. Above
all, they are remembered for their
perceptive, revealing Journal and for
Edmond’s legacy, the Académie Goncourt,
which annually awards the Prix Goncourt
to the author of an outstanding work of
French literature.
The
Goncourts’ widowed mother left them an
income that enabled the brothers to live
in modest comfort without working and
rescued Edmond from a treasury clerkship
that had driven him to suicidal despair.
The brothers immediately began to lead a
life doubly dominated by aesthetics and
self-indulgence. Amateur artists, they
first made a sketching tour of France,
Algeria, and Switzerland. Back home in
their Paris flat, they made a fetish of
orderly housekeeping, but their lives
were continually disordered by noises,
upset stomachs, insomnia, and
neurasthenia. Neither of them married.
All the mistresses appearing in the
Journal no doubt belonged to Jules,
whose fatal stroke presumably was
preceded by syphilis.
From
attempts at art the brothers turned to
plays and in 1851 published a novel, En
18, all without success. As journalists,
they were arrested in 1852, though later
acquitted, for an “outrage against
public morality,” which consisted of
quoting mildly erotic Renaissance verses
in one of their articles. The brothers
achieved more success with a series of
social histories, which they began
publishing in 1854. These drew on
private correspondence, newspaper
accounts, brochures, even dinner menus
and dress patterns to recreate the life
of specific periods in French history.
As art critics, the Goncourts’ most
notable achievement was L’Art du
dix-huitième siècle (1859–75; French
Eighteenth Century Painters), which
helped redeem the reputations of such
masters of that time as Antoine Watteau.
The
same meticulous documentation and
attention to detail went into the
Goncourts’ novels. The brothers covered
a vast range of social environments in
their novels: the world of journalism
and literature in Charles Demailly
(1860); that of medicine and the
hospital in Soeur Philomène (1861);
upper middle-class society in Renée
Mauperin (1864); and the artistic world
in Manette Salomon (1867). The
Goncourts’ frank presentation of upper
and lower social classes and their
clinical dissection of social relations
helped establish literary naturalism and
paved the way for such novelists as
Émile Zola and George Moore. The most
lasting of their novels, Germinie
Lacerteux (1864), was based on the
double life of their ugly, seemingly
impeccable servant, Rose, who stole
their money to pay for nocturnal orgies
and men’s attentions. It is one of the
first realistic French novels of
working-class life. Most of the other
novels, however, suffer from overly long
exposition and description, excessive
detail, and mannered, artificial
language. The Goncourts were also known
for the theoretical prefaces to their
novels; Edmond gathered a selection of
these writings for the collection
Préfaces et manifestes littéraires
(1888; “Prefaces and Literary
Manifestos”).
The
Goncourts began keeping their monumental
Journal in 1851, and Edmond continued it
for 26 more years from Jules’s death in
1870 until his own. The diary weaves
through every social stratum, from the
hovels where the brothers sought
atmosphere for Germinie Lacerteux to
dinners with great men of the day. Full
of critical judgments, scabrous
anecdotes, descriptive sketches,
literary gossip, and thumbnail
portraits, the complete Journal is at
once a revealing autobiography and a
monumental history of social and
literary life in 19th-century Paris.
The
Académie Goncourt, first conceived by
the brothers in 1867, was officially
constituted in 1903.