Goncourt, Edmond
Louis Antoine Huot de, Jules Alfred Huot de
Goncourt, Edmond Louis Antoine Huot de , 1822–96,
and Jules Alfred Huot de Goncourt. , 1830–70, French authors. Brothers, they
were known, for their close association in art and literature, as “les deux
Goncourt.” They began as artists, touring France in 1849 and keeping notes
that were soon to turn them toward literature. They became art critics and
historians of art, unsuccessful dramatists, promoters of Japanese art, and,
in collaboration, the authors of a number of well-known novels of the naturalist
school, including Soeur Philomène (1861), Renée Mauperin (1864,
tr. 1887), Germinie Lacerteux (1864), Mme Gervaisais (1869),
and a study, The Woman of the Eighteenth Century (1862, tr. 1927).
In 1851 the brothers began the Journal des Goncourt (9 vol., 1887–96;
tr. of selections by Lewis Galantière, 1937), an immensely successful publication
devoted to an intimate account of Parisian society for 40 years. They affected
an elaborate and contorted style, employed telegraphic brevity on occasion,
and often selected subjects of sensational value. Their work paved the way
for both naturalism and impressionism. After Jules's death Edmond wrote
the novels La Fille Élisa (1877, tr. Elisa, 1959),
Les Frères Zemganno (1879), and Chérie (1884). In his will
Edmond provided for the founding of the Goncourt Academy (officially recognized
1903), which makes an annual award, the Goncourt Prize, for fiction.