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Roussan Camille

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Nationality
  
Haitian

Name
  
Roussan Camille

Role
  
Poet


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Born
  
August 27, 1912

Occupation
  
poet, journalist and diplomat

Known for
  
Assaut a la Nuit (1940)

Died
  
December 7, 1961, Port-au-Prince, Haiti

Nedje (Roussan Camille)


Roussan Camille (27 August 1912 – 7 December 1961) was a Haitian poet, journalist, and diplomat.

Contents

Biography

Born in Jacmel, he was educated at the Christian Brothers' School, the Lycée Pinchinat of Jacmel and the Tippenhauer College in Port-au-Prince. Under Charles Moravia's directorship, he began a career as a journalist, publishing articles, poems and the column "Bel aujourd'hui" under his pen-name Nassour El Limac, in Haiti-Journal, Temps-Revue and L'Action nationale. He became director of Haiti-Journal after Moravia's death in 1938.

Camille entered public service, and was appointed to several diplomatic functions, including secretary of the Haitian legation to Paris and Haitian vice-consul in New York City, and then returned home to become secretary general in the ministry of health.

His best known work is Assaut à la Nuit (Port-au-Prince: Impr. de l'Etat, 1940). He was awarded the Dumarsais Estimé poetry prize for his collection Multiple Présence (Quebec: Editions Naaman, 1978).

Awards

  • 1961 Price Dumarsais Estimé.
  • 2004 Henri Deschamps Literary Award (posthumous).
  • References

    Roussan Camille Wikipedia