Literary, philosophical and critical Correspondence
The literary, philosophical and critical Correspondance is a Périodique French and handwritten for submission to the cultivated aristocracy of the 18th century. These principal directors were Grimm, Raynal and Diderot. The publication is spread out of 1747 to 1793.
In 1759, one counts about fifteen subscribers of which none resides in France and among which one finds Catherine II of Russia, the duke of Saxony-Gotha, Louise-Ulrike, a sister of Frederic of Prussia, and the son of Louise-Ulrike, the future Gustave III of Sweden.
The extremely confidential and handwritten publication of this periodical enabled him to escape the censure. This advantage allowed inter alia Diderot freely writing the Salons in which he sometimes criticized very hard the artists.
Sources
Else Marie Bukdahl, (translated from Danish by Jean-Paul To mow), Diderot, art critic, I. Theory and partic in the Living rooms of Diderot , Rosenkilde and Bagger, Copenhagen, 1980, p. 11.
Bonds
A reprint of a printed edition is available completely on Gallica: literary, philosophical Correspondence and critical review on the original texts including/understanding the fragments removed in 1813 by the censure, the new parts preserved at the ducal library of Gotha and the Arsenal in Paris by Grimm, Diderot, Raynal, Meister, etc
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