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Definitions

feuilleton

[foi-i-tn, fœyuh-tawn] / ˈfɔɪ ɪ tn, fœyəˈtɔ̃ /


Example Sentences

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Before Roth found success as a novelist, he established himself as one of Europe’s leading writers of the feuilleton, a form that originated as a “talk of the town” newspaper supplement in 19th-century France.

From Washington Post • Jan. 5, 2023

In 1969, Perec told his editor Maurice Nadeau that he was planning an adventure novel which was to appear serially, feuilleton style, as the stories of Jules Verne had.

From The New Yorker • Jul. 16, 2019

“It’s a system that eats everything, that devours everything,” he said of the feuilleton aesthetic, a leading modern manifestation of which is the television soap opera.

From New York Times • Jul. 29, 2011

In 1987 Faber brought out a startling feuilleton entitled A Special Relationship.

From The Guardian • Apr. 16, 2010

On the other hand, the feuilleton, or daily, weekly, and monthly instalment of fiction or criticism, has been one of its chief characteristics.

From A Short History of French Literature by Saintsbury, George