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Although the novel, V oyages el avantures de ] aques Masse, caused
some- thing of a stir during the first half of the eighteenth
century, its author, Simon Tyssot de Patot (1655-1738), remained
largely unknown in his lifetime, and it is only in this century
that he has been recognized as one of the countless soldiers in the
vast army of philosophes that assaulted the bastions of religious,
political and sodallife in Europe of the late seven- 1 teenth and
early eighteenth centuries. Tyssot was a Huguenot who lived most of
his life in Holland where he pursued a career as professor of
mathematics in the sodal and cultural 1 Tyssot and his work seem to
have been first brought to the attention of modem writers by the
German critics during their investigation of the type of desert
island or robinsonade literature that preceded and followed Defoe's
Robinson Crusoe. The earliest reference I have found occurs in A.
Kippenberg, Robinson in Deutschland bis zur Insel Felsenburg
(1713-43), Hanover, 1892, pp. 66-67. Tyssot's name and work appear
to have been first linked with the development of socialism in A.
Lichtenberger, Le Socialisme au XVIIIe siecle, Paris, 1895, p. 44.
Tyssot's Voyages et avantures de ]aques Masse was discussed for its
literary merits in A. LeBreton, Le Roman au dix- huitieme siecle,
Paris, 1898. LeBreton did not know that Tyssot was the author.
A volume of correspondence of Madame de Graffigny, 18th-century
French writer, dating from 20th August 1752 to 30 December 1753.
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