Bernard Pingaud
Born12 October 1923
Paris, France
Died25 February 2020(2020-02-25) (aged 96)
Uzès, France
OccupationsPolitician, writer
Political party
Socialist Party

Bernard Pingaud (French: [bɛʁnaʁ pɛ̃ɡo]; 12 October 1923 – 25 February 2020) was a French politician and writer.[1]

Education and career

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Pingaud studied at the Lycée Pasteur in Neuilly-sur-Seine and the Lycée Henri IV in Paris. In 1943, he enrolled at the École normale supérieure, and then became the debate secretary for the French National Assembly until 1974. He published his first novel in 1943, titled Mon beau navire.

During the Algerian War, Pingaud was one of the people who signed the Manifesto of the 121. In 1968, he founded the Union des écrivains with Jean-Pierre Faye and Michel Butor. After leading the union until 1973, Pingaud led the group Secrétariat à l'Action Culturelle of the Socialist Party until 1979.

In 1981, Jack Lang appointed him as president of the Commission de réflexion sur la politique du livre et de la lecture. In 1982, he published the Pingaud-Barreau report.

From 1983 to 1987, Pingaud served as a cultural adviser for the Embassy of France in Cairo. From 1990 to 1993, he was president of the Maison des écrivains et de la littérature in Paris. He was one of the primary writers for the magazine L'Arc.

Personal life and death

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Pingaud lived in Collias from 1997 until his death.[2] He was the father of Denis Pingaud.[3]

Bernard Pingaud died on 25 February 2020 at the age of 96.[4]

Works

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Novels and stories

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  • Mon beau navire (1946)
  • L’Amour triste (1950)
  • Le Prisonnier (1958)
  • La Scène primitive (1965)
  • La Voix de son maître (1973)
  • L’Imparfait (1973)
  • Adieu Kafka (1989)
  • Bartoldi le comédien (1996)
  • Tu n’es plus là (1998)
  • Au nom du frère (2002)
  • L’Andante inconnu (2003)
  • Mon roman et moi (2003)
  • L’Horloge de verre (2011)
  • Vous (2015)

Essays

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  • Hollande (1954)
  • Mme de la Fayette (1959)
  • Tonia Cariffa (1961)
  • Inventaire (1965)
  • Entretiens (1966)
  • Comme un chemin en automne, Inventaire II (1979)
  • Le livre à son prix (1983)
  • L’Expérience romanesque (1983)
  • Les infortunes de la raison (1992)
  • Les Anneaux du manège. Écriture et littérature (1992)
  • Écrire (2000)
  • La Bonne Aventure (2007)
  • Une tâche sans fin (1940-2008) (2009)
  • L’Occupation des oisifs (2013)

References

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  1. ^ "Bernard Pingaud, à l'extrême de sa " tâche sans fin "". Diacritik (in French). 27 February 2020.
  2. ^ "Septimanie n°3 - Décembre 2004". laRégion.fr (in French). 5 December 2014. Archived from the original on 11 July 2015.
  3. ^ "Denis Pingaud". Les Echos (in French). 18 June 2008.
  4. ^ "L'écrivain Bernard Pingaud est mort". Le Monde (in French). 27 February 2020.

📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

André Frénaud

been published regularly by Gallimard, along with interviews with Bernard Pingaud on his poetry and poetic creation in general. He was one of the signatories

Dionys Mascolo

Jean-Michel Place, Paris 1993, ISBN 2-85893-190-9. With Jean-Paul Sartre and Bernard Pingaud: Du rôle de l'intellectuel dans le mouvement révolutionnaire. Losfeld

André Gorz

l'Université) provoked the resignations of Jean-Bertrand Pontalis and Bernard Pingaud. Gorz also criticised a Maoist tendency that had been in the journal

Deaths in February 2020

(1970–1976, 1993–1995) and ambassador to the Netherlands (1976–1980). Bernard Pingaud, 96, French writer. Peter Pritchard, 76, English turtle zoologist.

Brice Parain

sur blanc, Gallimard, 1962 Joseph, Gallimard, 1964 Entretiens avec Bernard Pingaud, Gallimard, 1966 France, marchande d’églises, Gallimard, 1966 Petite

17th-century French literature

edition of Madame de Lafayette's La Princesse de Clèves edited by Bernard Pingaud (Paris: Folio, 2000. ISBN 978-2-07-041443-7). Valincourt's criticism

Manifesto of the 121

Marcel Péju André Pieyre de Mandiargues, writer Édouard Pignon, painter Bernard Pingaud Maurice Pons, writer Jean-Bertrand Pontalis, philosopher and psychoanalyst

1923 in France

September – Edouard Boubat, photographer (died 1999) 12 October – Bernard Pingaud, writer (died 2020) 30 October – Anne Beaumanoir, neurophysiologist