Collection Blanche

The Collection Blanche is the great collection of French literature of the éditions Gallimard.

Albert Camus' 1942 philosophical novel L'Étranger

It appeared in 1911, and at the beginning was nourished by the publications of La Nouvelle Revue française, the brand "Librairie Gallimard" appeared only after July 1919.[1] Since its creation, "La Blanche", which takes its name from the cream color of its cover, has published 6500 titles, of which 3800 are still available today.

In addition to the "NRF" logo originally designed by Jean Schlumberger, the graphic charter of this collection - a black border surrounding two red edges - is inspired by the éditions de La Phalange, with its first title, L'Otage by Paul Claudel, published 26 May 1911.[1] For a time, the first printer of this collection was Verbeke, director of "The St. Catherine Press Ltd", based in Bruges.[1] The generic formats evolved very little over the years, which is a unique case in the history of French contemporary publishing, although the cream color changed to bright yellow filmed in the 1980s.

Champion of literary prizes,[2] from 1911 to 2016 the series has been awarded 33 prix Goncourt, 30 prix Femina, 17 prix Renaudot, 10 prix Médicis, 16 prix Interallié, 30 Grand prix du roman de l'Académie française and 4 prix du Livre Inter.[3]

References

  1. Henri Vignes et Pierre Boudrot, Bibliographie des éditions de La Nouvelle Revue française, Paris, Henri Vigne & Éditions des Cendres, 2011, ISBN 9782867421822, page 7-18.
  2. Littérature : les éditeurs qui raflent tous les prix, Maxime Vaudano, Le Monde.fr, 3 novembre 2014
  3. Collection Blanche, éditions Gallimard
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