Sneha Girap (Editor)

Jacques Chardonne

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Jacques Chardonne

Movies
  
Sentimental Destinies

Role
  
Writer

Nominations
  
Prix Goncourt

Jacques Chardonne wwwalbinmichelfrmultimediaArticleImage2000
Died
  
May 29, 1968, La Frette-sur-Seine, France

Books
  
Propos comme ça, Les Destinees sentimentales

Awards
  
Grand Prix du roman de l'Academie francaise

Similar People
  
Roger Nimier, Philippe Jaccottet, Olivier Assayas, Jacques Fieschi, Charles Berling

Jacques chardonne romanesques


Jacques Chardonne (born Jacques Boutelleau in Barbezieux-Saint-Hilaire, Charente on January 2, 1884; died in La Frette-sur-Seine on May 29, 1968) is the pseudonym of French writer Jacques Boutelleau. He was a member of the so-called Groupe de Barbezieux.

Contents

Jacques Chardonne 808883jpg

Early life and career

Jacques Chardonne Chardonne c39est plus que Chardonne ZONE CRITIQUE

Raised Protestant, his American Quaker mother was an heiress to the Haviland porcelain dynasty and his father was French. His brother-in-law was of the Delamain cognac dynasty. This informed his trilogy Les Destinees Sentimentales. He was a leader of the Hussards and held in high regard for the award-winning Claire.

World War II

Jacques Chardonne MorandChardonne aprs eux le dluge

He supported collaboration with the Vichy and in 1940 produced "Private Chronicle 1940", which favored the submission of Europe to Adolf Hitler. He was a member of the Groupe Collaboration, an initiative that encouraged close cultural ties between France and Germany. After World War II he was denounced for Nazi collaboration and spent time in prison. In an article titled "Jacques Chardonne et Mein Kampf" the 'Frenchness' of his writing was also questioned.

Death and rehabilitation

Jacques Chardonne PLAIDOYER POUR UN LIBRAL CHARENTAIS JACQUES CHARDONNE

He died in 1968 after efforts to restore his image. By the 1980s anti-totalitarian journalists like Raymond Aron began to reappraise collaborationist authors like Chardonne. In 1986 his award-winning Claire was made into a TV film and in 2001 Olivier Assayas adapted Les Destinees Sentimentales to film.

Awards

  • 1932 Grand Prix du roman de l'Academie francaise, with Claire (Grasset)

  • Jacques Chardonne Jacques Chardonne et les ngociants des Chartrons
    Jacques Chardonne GROGNARDS ET HUSSARDS Disjecta membra

    References

    Jacques Chardonne Wikipedia