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Edith Thomas : a passion for resistance / Dorothy Kaufmann.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Ithaca : Cornell University Press, ©2004.Description: 1 online resource (x, 240 pages) : illustrationsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781501727368
  • 1501727362
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Edith Thomas.DDC classification:
  • 843/.912 23
LOC classification:
  • PQ2639.H56 Z735 2004
Other classification:
  • 18.25
Online resources:
Contents:
A daughter of the republic -- Illness and phantom lovers -- "To rediscover a reason to live" -- Fellow traveling and its discontents -- Diary of resistance, diary of collaboration -- Writing underground -- Uses of the past -- The Liberation of Paris and the end of the war -- Story of two women: Edith Thomas and Dominique Aury -- Feminine humanism versus existentialism -- The compromised witness: leaving the Communist Party -- The compromised witness: The quarrel with Jean Paulhan -- From novels to women's histories -- Wartime truths: La question and Algeria; Rossel -- Endings.
Summary: Édith Thomas (1909-1970), a remarkable French woman of letters, was deeply involved in the traumatic upheavals of her time: most crucially the resistance to Nazi occupation and the collaborationist Vichy regime, but also the Spanish Civil War and the Algerian War. During the occupation, she played an essential role in the struggle to counteract Nazi and Pétainist propaganda. She was the only woman in the Paris network of Resistance writers; they held their clandestine meetings in her left-bank apartment.Dorothy Kaufmann's powerful and moving book is based in large part on previously unavailable material that Édith Thomas, a historian, novelist, and journalist, chose not to publish during her lifetime. A particularly fascinating chapter in Thomas's life was her intimate relationship with Dominique Aury, who wrote Story of O as "Pauline Réage." The astonishing documents made available to Kaufmann by Aury include Thomas's eight notebooks of diaries, which she kept from 1931 to 1963; her fictional diary of a collaborator, written during the first year of the occupation; and her political memoir, to which she gave the disturbing title Le Témoin compromis (The Compromised Witness).Édith Thomas: A Passion for Resistance sheds light on the historical dimensions of Thomas's life and work and on the autobiographical complexity of her writing, which everywhere illustrates her personal courage. Kaufmann follows Édith Thomas's itinerary as it intersects with that of well-known contemporaries-in particular Simone de Beauvoir, Jean-Paul Sartre, Albert Camus, Louis Aragon, Jean Paulhan, and, of course, Dominique Aury.
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Electronic-Books Electronic-Books OPJGU Sonepat- Campus E-Books EBSCO Available

Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed July 23, 2018)

Includes bibliographical references and index.

A daughter of the republic -- Illness and phantom lovers -- "To rediscover a reason to live" -- Fellow traveling and its discontents -- Diary of resistance, diary of collaboration -- Writing underground -- Uses of the past -- The Liberation of Paris and the end of the war -- Story of two women: Edith Thomas and Dominique Aury -- Feminine humanism versus existentialism -- The compromised witness: leaving the Communist Party -- The compromised witness: The quarrel with Jean Paulhan -- From novels to women's histories -- Wartime truths: La question and Algeria; Rossel -- Endings.

Édith Thomas (1909-1970), a remarkable French woman of letters, was deeply involved in the traumatic upheavals of her time: most crucially the resistance to Nazi occupation and the collaborationist Vichy regime, but also the Spanish Civil War and the Algerian War. During the occupation, she played an essential role in the struggle to counteract Nazi and Pétainist propaganda. She was the only woman in the Paris network of Resistance writers; they held their clandestine meetings in her left-bank apartment.Dorothy Kaufmann's powerful and moving book is based in large part on previously unavailable material that Édith Thomas, a historian, novelist, and journalist, chose not to publish during her lifetime. A particularly fascinating chapter in Thomas's life was her intimate relationship with Dominique Aury, who wrote Story of O as "Pauline Réage." The astonishing documents made available to Kaufmann by Aury include Thomas's eight notebooks of diaries, which she kept from 1931 to 1963; her fictional diary of a collaborator, written during the first year of the occupation; and her political memoir, to which she gave the disturbing title Le Témoin compromis (The Compromised Witness).Édith Thomas: A Passion for Resistance sheds light on the historical dimensions of Thomas's life and work and on the autobiographical complexity of her writing, which everywhere illustrates her personal courage. Kaufmann follows Édith Thomas's itinerary as it intersects with that of well-known contemporaries-in particular Simone de Beauvoir, Jean-Paul Sartre, Albert Camus, Louis Aragon, Jean Paulhan, and, of course, Dominique Aury.

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