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  1. Jul 14, 2020 · A borrowing from French, the phrase amour fou, literally mad love, denotes uncontrollable or obsessive passion or infatuation. It was introduced into English as a theme of drama, prose narrative and cinema. In French, the phrase occurs, for example, in Les Amours d’un interne (Paris: E. Dentu, 1881), by the French author Jules Claretie (1840 ...

  2. Water is an important image in Mood Indigo, similarly performing as a signifier of emotion and visibly reinforcing the dreamlike aesthetic of l’amour fou. Throughout the film, water is representative of life and death, as directly related to Chloé’s illness via the water lily in her lung.

  3. Aug 7, 2015 · Amour fou. Used in English since the early 1900s, an amour fou is an uncontrollable and obsessive passion for someone, and in particular one that is not reciprocated. It literally means “insane love.”

  4. Sep 16, 2019 · Ouest-France, 29/10/2020. Et cet amour fou, c'est celui qui reproduit justement les conditions de la détresse de l'enfant. Psychotropes, 2014, Catherine Audibert (Cairn.info) Mais, l'une et l'autre semblent ne faire qu'un dans un amour fou privé de réflexivité.

  5. Along with his role as leader of the surrealist movement he is the author of celebrated books such as Nadja and L'Amour fou. Those activities, combined with his critical and theoretical work on writing and the plastic arts, made André Breton a major figure in twentieth-century French art and literature.

  6. When it happens, human amour fou is given by nature, not by grace, just like the ability for mathematics ; whereas divine amour fou necessarily proceeds from grace. The incompatibility of habitual amour fou for two different persons at the same time is not a matter of choice, but a matter of fact ; it is a mere impossibility : so it is ...

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  8. The earliest known use of the noun amour fou is in the 1960s. OED's earliest evidence for amour fou is from 1961, in Sunday Light (San Antonio, Texas). amour fou is a borrowing from French. Etymons: French amour fou. See etymology.

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