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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Victor_Hugo_001_9765.jpg]]
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3Victor Marie Hugo (26 February 1802 – 22 May 1885) is one of the titans of UsefulNotes/{{Fr|ance}}ench [[FrenchLiterature literature]], as well a prominent [[UsefulNotes/FrenchPoliticalSystem politician]] and activist of the 19th century.
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5He is most well known for his seminal [[TheEpic epic]] novels ''Literature/LesMiserables'' and ''Literature/TheHunchbackOfNotreDame'', which are among the most well known of French literature worldwide, though he was also an accomplished playwright and poet, as his body of work can tell.
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7He witnessed all the revolutionary turmoils UsefulNotes/{{France}} went through in the 19th century, which fuelled his sympathy for the common folk (most famously showcased in ''Les Misérables'') and hatred of autocracy. Initially a conservative royalist (his mother had been a devoted if secret supporter of the Bourbons during the [[UsefulNotes/TheFrenchRevolution First Republic]] and [[UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte First Empire]]), he grew more radical over time. He served in several legislative or constitutional bodies, starting under the July Monarchy, in which [[UsefulNotes/LEtatCestMoi King Louis-Philippe]] created him Viscount Hugo, which came with the right to sit in the upper house; he was a consistently conservative-liberal voice in the Chamber of Peers.
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9After the [[UsefulNotes/RevolutionsOf1848 Revolution of 1848]], he was elected as a conservative to the National Assembly under the Second Republic, though he found himself quickly moving left, and ended up being among those delegates who denounced Napoleon III's 1851 move to establish the Second Empire. Loud in his loathing of that new imperial regime, he was exiled to UsefulNotes/{{the Channel Islands}} (two years in UsefulNotes/{{Jersey}}, then he was expelled after insulting UsefulNotes/QueenVictoria and moved to UsefulNotes/{{Guernsey}} for fourteen more years). He returned after the UsefulNotes/FrancoPrussianWar ended the Second Empire, and sat first in the National Assembly and then in the Senate of the Third Republic until his death.
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11Hugo's most famous political causes included the reduction of poverty and advocacy for better education for the masses, as well as advocacy for the abolition of death penalty (which eventually happened in France just a little under a century after his passing). He was also an advocate for MediaNotes/{{copyright}} and successfully lobbied for the Berne Convention (still today, the main treaty governing copyright internationally) as founder and honorary president of the ''Association Littéraire et Artistique Internationale''.
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13!!Works by Victor Hugo with their own trope pages include:
14[[index]]
15* ''Literature/TheHunchbackOfNotreDame''
16* ''Theatre/TheKingAmusesHimself''
17* ''Literature/TheLastDayOfACondemnedMan''
18* ''Literature/TheManWhoLaughs''
19* ''Literature/LesMiserables''
20* ''Literature/NinetyThree''
21* ''Theatre/RuyBlas''
22[[/index]]
23
24!!Adaptations of his works include:
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26* See [[DerivativeWorks/TheHunchbackOfNotreDame here]] for the adaptations of ''Literature/TheHunchbackOfNotreDame''.
27* See [[DerivativeWorks/LesMiserables here]] for the adaptations of ''Literature/LesMiserables''.
28* ''Theatre/{{Rigoletto}}'' (1851 opera, based off ''The King Amuses Himself'')
29* ''The Man Who Laughs'' (1928 and 2012 films)
30* ''Film/DelusionsOfGrandeur'' (1971 film, based off ''Ruy Blas'')
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32!!Other works by Victor Hugo provide examples of:
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34* AuthorTract:
35** He showcased his fight for the abolition of death penalty in some of his works such as ''The Last Day of a Condemned Man'' and ''Claude Gueux''.
36** ''Les Châtiments'' is a huge TakeThat against French emperor Napoleon III, whom he despised along with his regime, constantly comparing him negatively to [[UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte his famous uncle]] (whose legend Hugo contributed to propagate).
37* {{Cain}}: The poem "La Conscience" (1853, part of the ''La Legende des siecles collection'') tells of Cain and his family fleeing from God's wrath.
38* ErmineCapeEffect: The play ''Ruy Blas'' was criticized for having the Queen in full regalia when she confessed her love to the eponymous character. Since it was a climax, he got away by invoking the RuleOfCool.
39* GiantEyeOfDoom: In the poem "The Conscience", [[CainAndAbel Cain]] is followed everywhere by an eye.
40* HistoricalDomainCharacter: ''Lucrezia Borgia'', and many others.
41* [[invoked]]InMemoriam: His 1856 poems anthology ''The Contemplations'' is dedicated to his daughter Léopoldine, who tragically drowned at the age of 19.
42* TheMusical: ''The King amuses Himself'' served as the basis of Music/GiuseppeVerdi's opera ''Theatre/{{Rigoletto}}''.
43* NastyParty: ''Lucrezia Borgia''.
44* OlderThanRadio: In his his ''preface to Cromwell'' (a [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin preface to one of his early plays]], about UsefulNotes/OliverCromwell), Hugo, by then 25 years of age, showed himself as an excellent troper. In 53 pages, he described a lot of tropes in literature and theatre to be found during his time, and all the way back to Creator/{{Homer}}.
45* SlidingScaleOfIdealismVsCynicism: More on the cynical end especially in atmosphere in tone, even if there are kind and sympathetic characters.

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