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Jean Duvignaud
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Jean Duvignaud (22 February 1921 – 17 February 2007) was a French novelist, sociologist and anthropologist. He was born in La Rochelle, Charente-Maritime, on February 22, 1921.
Duvignaud was a secondary school teacher first at Abbeville, then at Étampes (1947–1956), where he taught Georges Perec. After submitting his doctoral thesis, he taught at the University of Tours. In 1972, he founded the magazine Cause commune with Perec and Paul Virilio. For a time he was in a relationship with Clara Malraux, the ex-wife of novelist André Malraux.[1]
He died (aged 85) in La Rochelle on February 17, 2007.
Bibliography
[edit]- L'Acteur, esquisse d'une sociologie du comédien, Paris, Gallimard, 1965. Rééd. L'Archipel, 1995
- Durkheim, sa vie, son œuvre, Paris, PUF, 1965
- Visites d'Atelier Marta Pan, Cimaise, N.87, Juin Spetembre 1968
- Sociologie du théâtre, Paris, PUF, 1965. Rééd. Quadrige, 1999
- Georges Gurvitch, symbolisme social et sociologie dynamique, Paris, Seghers, 1969
- Anthologie des sociologues français contemporains, Paris, PUF, 1970
- Spectacle et société, Paris, Denoël, 1970
- Introduction à la sociologie, Paris, Gallimard, 1971
- Sociologie de l'art, Paris, PUF, 1972
- L'Anomie, hérésie et subversion, Paris, Anthropos, 1973
- Le Langage perdu, essai sur la différence anthropologique, Paris, PUF, 1973
- Fêtes et civilisations, Paris, Weber, 1974
- Le Théâtre contemporain, culture et contre-culture, Paris, Larousse, 1974
- Le Ça perché, Paris, Stock, 1976
- Le Don du rien, essai d'anthropologie de la fête, Paris, Plon, 1977
- Le Jeu du jeu, Paris, Balland, 1980
- L' Or de la République, Paris, Gallimard, 1984
- Le Propre de l'homme, histoires du comique et de la dérision, Paris, Hachette, 1985
- La Solidarité, liens de sang et liens de raison, Paris, Fayard, 1986
- Chebika, étude sociologique, Paris, Gallimard, 1978. Rééd. Paris, Plon, 1990
- La Genèse des passions dans la vie sociale, Paris, PUF, 1990
- Dis l'Empereur, qu'as-tu fait de l'oiseau ?, Arles, Actes Sud, 1991
- Fêtes et civilisations; suivi de La fête aujourd'hui, Arles, Actes Sud, 1991
- Perec ou La cicatrice, Arles, Actes Sud, 1993
- Le singe patriote. Talma, un portrait imaginaire (novel), Arles, Actes Sud, 1993
- L'oubli ou La chute des corps, Arles, Actes Sud, 1995
- Le pandémonium du présent, idées sages, idées folles, Paris, Plon, 1998
- Le prix des choses sans prix, Arles, Actes Sud, 2001
- Les octos, béant aux choses futures, Arles, Actes Sud, 2003
- Le sous-texte, Arles, Actes Sud, 2005
- La ruse de vivre, état des lieux, Arles, Actes Sud, 2006
References
[edit]- ^ Robert Solé (21 January 2010). ""Clara Malraux", de Dominique Bona : Clara Malraux, l'inséparée". Le Monde - Livres (in French). Retrieved 12 April 2018.
External links
[edit]Jean Duvignaud
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Jean Duvignaud is a French sociologist, anthropologist, novelist, playwright, and theater critic known for his interdisciplinary explorations of culture, collective imagination, social anomie, theater, and festivals, blending rigorous sociological analysis with literary and ethnographic insight.[1][2]
Born on February 22, 1921, in La Rochelle, Duvignaud left his preparatory studies at Lycée Henri-IV during World War II to evade compulsory labor service, went into hiding in southern France, and participated in the Resistance. After the war, he published early novels including Le Sommeil de juillet (1947), Quand le soleil se tait (1949), and Le Piège (1951), while beginning a distinguished career as a theater critic and co-founding the influential review Théâtre populaire with Roland Barthes in 1953, which supported emerging postwar theater movements. He also directed the "Les grands dramaturges" collection and contributed criticism to publications such as Nouvelle Revue Française, Lettres nouvelles, L’Express, and L’Observateur.[1][2]
Influenced by sociologist Georges Gurvitch, Duvignaud pursued academic sociology, earning his state doctorate with Sociologie du théâtre (published 1965, later revised as Les Ombres collectives) and holding teaching positions at the University of Tunis (from 1960), the University of Tours-Orléans, and Paris VII (from 1980), where he directed institutes and laboratories focused on the sociology of art, knowledge, and the imaginary. His ethnographic fieldwork in Tunisia produced the seminal Chebika (1968), a study of social change in a southern oasis village later adapted into the film Les Remparts d’argile, while works such as Fêtes et civilisations (1973) examined festivity as a space of social rupture and potential. He co-founded heterodox journals including Arguments with Edgar Morin and Kostas Axelos, and Cause commune with Georges Perec (his former student) and Paul Virilio, and later presided over the Maison des cultures du monde while directing L’Internationale de l’imaginaire. Duvignaud died in La Rochelle on February 17, 2007.[1][2]
