The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-07.
Mallarmé, Stéphane
(stfän´ mälärm´) (KEY) , 184298, French poet. Mallarmés great importance is as the chief forebear of the symbolists; many poets and other writers of the mid-1880s drew inspiration at the Tuesday evening gatherings where Mallarmé expounded his theories. He held that the poet should express the ideas of a transcendental world, that poetry should evoke thoughts through suggestion rather than description, and that it should approach the abstraction of music. Mallarmés language defies traditional syntax and is frequently so obscure that it must be read with commentary. His best-known poems are Hérodiade (1869), LAprès-Midi dun faune (1876; The Afternoon of a Faun), which inspired a composition by Debussy, and Un Coup de dés jamais nabolira le hasard (1897; A Throw of the Dice Will Never Eliminate Chance). Editions of Mallarmés poetry were published in 1887 and 1899, and a selection of prose, Divagations, in 1897. Mallarmé earned his living by teaching English. The influence of his poetry was particularly felt by Valéry.
See selected letters, ed. and tr. by R. Lloyd (1988); biography by A. France (1967); studies by T. A. Williams (1970), D. H. Morris (1977), M. Bowie (1982), L. W. Marvick (1986), and G. Robb (1996).