Feuilleton

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https://term.museum-digital.de/md-de/tag/41405

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A feuilleton (French pronunciation: ​[fœjtɔ̃]; a diminutive of French: feuillet, the leaf of a book) was originally a kind of supplement attached to the political portion of French newspapers, consisting chiefly of non-political news and gossip, literature and art criticism, a chronicle of the latest fashions, and epigrams, charades and other literary trifles. The term feuilleton was invented by the editors of the French Journal des débats; Julien Louis Geoffroy and Bertin the Elder, in 1800. The feuilleton has been described as a "talk of the town", and a contemporary English-language example of the form is the "Talk of the Town" section of The New Yorker. In English newspapers, the term instead came to refer to an installment of a serial story printed in one part of a newspaper.
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  • Georg von Langsdorff an W. C. Röntgen (08.01.1896)

    Georg von Langsdorff an W. C. Röntgen (08.01.1896)

    Brief des ehemaligen...

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    Image: Deutsches Röntgen-Museum - CC BY-NC-SA

  • Zeitung

    Zeitung

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    Image: Kulturstiftung Sachsen-Anhalt - Public Domain Mark

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