📖 À propos Paulette
Paulette est le diminutif français de Paula (latin Paulus, 'petite, humble'), formé avec le suffixe -ette qui marque les diminutifs affectueux français ; en vogue en France et dans le monde francophone des années 1920 aux années 1950, il est porté de façon la plus mémorable par l’actrice Paulette Goddard (Les Temps Modernes de Chaplin) et par la pionniere intellectuelle noire Paulette Nardal, figure fondatrice du mouvement Négritude.
📍 Détails
- OrigineFrench
- Genre♀ Féminin
- SignificationVariant of Paula. Small, humble
🔀 Variantes et Prénoms Associés
⭐ Personnes Célèbres
- Paulette Goddard — American actress (1910–1990), one of the most glamorous and independently minded stars of Hollywood's Golden Age; starred alongside Charlie Chaplin in Modern Times (1936) and The Great Dictator (1940) — two of the most politically significant films ever made — and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for So Proudly We Hail! (1943); she was briefly married to Chaplin and later to novelist Erich Maria Remarque.
- Paulette Nardal — Martinican journalist, activist, and intellectual (1896–1985), the first Black woman to study at the Sorbonne (from 1920); co-founder of La Revue du monde noir (1931–1932), the bilingual literary journal that laid the intellectual groundwork for the Négritude movement; her salon in Clamart brought together Black intellectuals from Africa, the Caribbean, and America, and her essays on Black consciousness pre-dated and inspired the writings of Césaire and Senghor; finally recognised as a pioneering figure of Black feminism and Pan-African thought.
- Saint Paula of Rome — Roman noblewoman and Christian saint (347–404 AD), the original bearer of the Latin Paula from which Paulette is derived; a devoted follower of Saint Jerome, she founded monasteries in Bethlehem and was one of the most learned and spiritually influential women of early Christianity; her feast day is January 26 in the Catholic Church.
- Paulette in French culture — In French popular culture, Paulette carries the warm, slightly old-fashioned charm of classic mid-20th-century French feminine names — the same generation as Colette, Josette, and Claudette; it appears in French songs, films, and literature as an emblem of a certain era of French femininity: cheerful, unpretentious, and quietly resilient; the 2012 French film Paulette, about an elderly widow who accidentally becomes a cannabis dealer, brought the name renewed affectionate visibility.