Édouard Dujardin

French writer
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Also known as: Édouard-Émile-Louis Dujardin
Quick Facts
In full:
Édouard-Émile-Louis Dujardin
Born:
Nov. 10, 1861, Saint-Gervais-la-Forêt, France
Died:
Oct. 31, 1949, Paris
Also Known As:
Édouard-Émile-Louis Dujardin
Notable Works:
“We’ll to the Woods No More”
Movement / Style:
Symbolism

Édouard Dujardin (born Nov. 10, 1861, Saint-Gervais-la-Forêt, France—died Oct. 31, 1949, Paris) was a French writer and journalist who is best known for his novel Les Lauriers sont coupés (1888; “The Laurels Are Cut Down”; We’ll to the Woods No More), which was the first work to employ the interior monologue from which James Joyce derived the stream-of-consciousness technique he used in Ulysses.

Dujardin was associated with the Symbolist movement from its beginning and published Symbolist verse and drama. He also founded several literary reviews, wrote criticism, and was noted as a lecturer and writer on primitive Judaism and Christianity.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.