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Édith Thomas (1909–1970)

Auteur de The Women Incendiaries

Édith Thomas est Edith Thomas (1). Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Edith Thomas, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

7+ oeuvres 96 utilisateurs 0 critiques

Œuvres de Édith Thomas

Oeuvres associées

Cardinal de Retz. Mémoires – La Conjuration du comte Jean-Louis de Fiesque – Pamphlets (La Pléiade) (1939) — Directeur de publication, quelques éditions3 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Thomas, Édith
Date de naissance
1909-01-23
Date de décès
1970-12-07
Sexe
female
Nationalité
France
Lieu de naissance
Montrouge, France
Lieu du décès
Paris, France
Lieux de résidence
Paris, France
Études
École Nationale des Chartes
Professions
journalist
novelist
historian
French resistance fighter
archivist
biographer
Relations
Aury, Dominique (lover)
Organisations
French Resistance
Archives National de France
French Communist Party
Courte biographie
Written by Imprinted Aug 5th, 2013:

Édith Thomas was born in Montrouge, south of Paris, and graduated from the École Nationale des Chartes in 1931. In 1933, her first novel, La mort de Marie (Mary's Death), won the Prix du Premier Roman. A few years later, she quit her job to become a journalist at Ce Soir, a left-wing newspaper close to the Popular Front government. She also contributed to various magazines, for which she covered the Spanish Civil War from the Loyalist side. During World War II, she joined the French Resistance and was the only woman in the organization's Paris network of writers; she wrote a series of clandestine articles and poems that played a key role in countering Nazi and Vichy propaganda. She also joined the French Communist Party in 1942, but left in 1949. After the war, she was appointed a curator at the Archives National in Paris. She became a pioneer of women's history in France, writing books and articles about significant female figures such as Joan of Arc, Pauline Roland, Louise Michel, and George Sand. She was a voluble critic of the French war in Algeria. Among her friends and colleagues were Simone de Beauvoir, Jean-Paul Sartre, Albert Camus, Louis Aragon, and Jean Paulhan. Édith Thomas had an intimate relationship with Anne Desclos (pen name Dominique Aury), who wrote The Story of O under the pseudonym Pauline Réage. Le témoin compromis (The Compromised Witness), Édith Thomas's political memoir, was published in 1952. Dorothy Kaufmann wrote her biography, Édith Thomas, A Passion for Resistance (2004).

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Statistiques

Œuvres
7
Aussi par
1
Membres
96
Popularité
#196,089
Évaluation
4.2
ISBN
13
Langues
2

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