Cause célèbre

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Template:Short description Template:Other uses Template:Italic title Template:Use dmy dates Template:Excessive examples

Tom Mooney and Angelo Herndon Template:Circa 1937. Both men became causes célèbres for the American Left in the first half of the 20th century.

A Template:Lang (Template:IPAc-en Template:Respell,<ref name="Collins">Template:Cite web</ref> Template:IPA; pl. causes célèbres, pronounced like the singular) is an issue or incident arousing widespread controversy, outside campaigning, and heated public debate.<ref>Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref> The term is sometimes used positively for celebrated legal cases for their precedent value (each locus classicus or "case-in-point") and more often negatively for infamous ones, whether for scale, outrage, scandal, or conspiracy theories.<ref>Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref> The term is a French phrase in common usage in English. Since it has been fully adopted into English and is included unitalicized in English dictionaries,<ref name="AmHerit">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="Collins" /><ref name="RandHouse">Random House Kernerman Webster’s College Dictionary. S.v. "cause célèbre." Retrieved November 30, 2018 from https://www.thefreedictionary.com/cause+c%c3%a9l%c3%a8bre</ref> it is not normally italicized despite its French origin.

It has been noted that the public attention given to a particular case or event can obscure the facts rather than clarify them. As John Humffreys Parry states, "The true story of many a cause célèbre is never made manifest in the evidence given or in the advocates' orations, but might be recovered from these old papers when the dust of ages has rendered them immune from scandal".<ref>John Humffreys Parry, "Whistler v. Ruskin: An Attorney's Story of a Famous Trial", in The Living Age (January–March 1921), Vol. 308, p. 346.</ref>

Etymology

In French, one of the meanings of Template:Lang is a legal case, and Template:Lang means "famous". The phrase originated with the 37-volume Template:Lang, published in 1763, which was a collection of reports of well-known French court decisions from the 17th and 18th centuries.

While English speakers had used the phrase for many years, it came into much more common usage after the 1894 conviction of Alfred Dreyfus for espionage during the cementing of a period of deep cultural ties with a political tie between England and France, the Entente Cordiale. Both attracted worldwide interest and the period of closeness or rapprochement officially broadened the English language.

Examples

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Fictional examples

See also

References

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