Biografía de irène némirovsky
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The Life of Irene Nemirovsky: 1903-1942 | Jewish Book Council
Originally published in French in 2007, Oliver Philipponnat and Patrick Lienhardt’s biography of Irène Némirovsky explores the author’s life from her childhood to her deportation to Auschwitz from Issyl’Eveque, France, in 1942. From her family’s flight from Russia, to her tenuous relationship with her mother, her literary training at the Sorbonne, and her husband’s frantic attempts to discover her whereabouts during the war, Philipponnat and Lienhardt examine the connection between Némirovsky’s personal life and her writing, as well as the more controversial aspects of her career, from her literary representation of Jews to her publication in journals such as Gringoire. The work is written in a literary style, and the authors drew on Némirovsky’s novels and short stories, her notebooks, and other archival sources that are housed at the Institut Mémoires de l’Edition Contemporaine, as well as interviews and reviews in their research. Unlike other recen
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Irene Nemirovsky
Chaleur du sang (Fire in the Blood, 2007 [English translation by Sandra Smith, 2007]).
Suite Française (French Suite, 2004. [English translation by Sandra Smith, 2006]).
Destinées et autres nouvelles (Destinies and other novellas, 2004).
Dimanche (nouvelles) (Sunday, novellas, 2000).
Les feux de l’automne (Autumn Fires, 1957).
Les biens de ce monde (Worldly Goods, 1947).
La vie de Tchekhov (Life of Chekhov, 1946).
Les chiens et le loup (The Dogs and the Wolf, 1940).
Deux (Two, 1939).
La proie (The Prey, 1938).
Jezabel (1936).
Le vin de solitude (The Wine of Solitude, 1935).
Films parlés (Talking Pictures, 1934).
Le pion sur l’echiquier (The Pawn on the Chessboard, 1934).
L’Affaire Courilof (The Courilof Affair, 1933).
Les mouches d’automne (The Autumn Flies, 1931).
Le bal (The Ball, 1930).
David Golder (1929).
L’Enfant géniat (The Child Genius, 1927).
Le Malentendu (The Misunderstood, 1926).
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Irène Némirovsky
On July 13, 1942, French gendarmes arrested Irène Némirovsky in southern Burgundy. She was deported to Auschwitz where she died on August 19. Who was this woman, author of more than a dozen popular novels and more than thirty short stories, whose posthumous novel, Suite Française, won France's prestigious Renaudot prize in 2004? Born in Russia to wealthy parents, Irène Némirovsky immigrated to Paris in 1919. Although she was Jewish, she consorted with authors and politicians on the extreme right, some of whom were openly anti-Semitic. She was sure that these friends would protect her from deportation after the Nazis invaded France. Instead, they abandoned her. Yet she never lost faith in France, even after she was refused French nationality. In this fascinating biography, Jonathan Weiss analyzes the discrepancy between Némirovsky's real and imagined identities, and explores a literary work that revisits in a unique way Jewish identity, exile, betrayal, and the solidarity of a persecuted people.
"In Némirovsky's search to reconcile nation
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