Lucie Faure, née Meyer (6 July 1908 – 25 September 1977) was a French woman of letters, novelist and literary review director.
Lucie Faure | |
---|---|
Born | 6 July 1908 Paris |
Died | 25 September 1977 | (aged 69)
Occupation | Writer |
Early life
editThe daughter of a merchant of fabrics of Alsatian origin, she was the niece, on the maternal side, of Julien Cain, who was administrator general of the Bibliothèque nationale de France from 1930 to 1964.
In 1931, she married Edgar Faure, then a young lawyer.
Second World War
editA refugee with her husband and daughter in Tunisia in the autumn of 1942 and then in Algiers, after the American landing of 8 November, she was attached to the French Committee of National Liberation and organised the Institute of Slavic Studies at the University of Algiers.
It is also in Algiers that she created in 1943 with the writer Robert Aron the magazine La Nef , which would be the first to be published in Paris the day after the Libération of France and of which she assured the direction until her death. Numerous issues of La Nef were milestones, such as those devoted to contemporary political and social problems (the Algerian war, police, Americans, psychoanalysis, prostitution, women, Justice, advertising, opinion polls, freedoms etc.).
Politics
editClose to the milieu of the Paris intellectual left during the era of decolonization of North Africa, she assisted and advised her husband in his various political functions, generally defending positions more advanced than his own by avoiding placing herself on the front of the political scene. However, she accepted to succeed him in 1970 as mayor of Port-Lesney, in Jura.
Woman of letters
editThe author of a Journal d'un voyage en Chine which drew attention (1958), she began a career as a novelist from the 1960s. Her eight novels (to which were added seven short stories in a posthumous work) reflect less her great familiarity with political circles than "her intimate curiosity about things of the heart" (B. Poirot-Delpech). The psychological complexity of the subjects tackled, such as delirious jealousy, suicide, parricide or ill-assumed homosexuality, was "compensated by an extreme concern for clarity and a kind of optimistic candor". A member of the jury of the Prix Medici since 1971, she exercised a great influence in the literary world of Paris.[1]
Death and legacy
editShe died in her property of Boissise-la-Bertrand (Seine-et-Marne). She is buried at Passy Cemetery in Paris.
She held the rank of commandeur of the Légion d'honneur.
Bibliography
edit- 1958: Journal d'un voyage en Chine, Éditions Julliard
- 1961: Les Passions indécises, novel, Julliard
- 1963: Les Filles du Calvaire, novel, Julliard
- 1965: Variations sur l'imposture, short stories, Éditions Gallimard
- 1968: L'Autre personne, novel, Julliard (Prix Sainte-Beuve)
- 1970: Le Malheur fou, novel, Julliard
- 1972: Les Bons enfants, Tallandier [2]
- 1974: Mardi à l’aube, Tallandier
- 1976: Un crime si juste, Éditions Grasset
- 1978: Les Destins ambigus, Grasset
References
edit- ^ "Lucie Faure, 69, French Editor, Was Wife of Assembly President". The New York Times. 1977-09-27. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-05-18.
- ^ Lucie Faure " Les Bons enfants" | INA (in French), retrieved 2023-05-18
- Le Monde, 27 septembre 1977 (articles by B. Poirot-Delpech and P. Viansson-Ponté)
External links
edit- Lucie Faure on Encyclopédia Universalis
- La Nef on association Edgar Faure
- Lucie Faure on Radioscopie (15 October 1970)
- Lucie Faure Les Bons enfants on Ina.fr (28 July 1972)