Claire Etcherelli

Claire Etcherelli (born 1934) is a French novelist. She won the Prix Femina for her 1967 debut novel, Elise, or the Real Life, which was also adapted into a 1970 film. Her main characters are women and the plots take place in real-life cities such as Paris. She was influenced by Honoré de Balzac.

Claire Etcherelli
Born1934 (age 8687)
Bordeaux, France
LanguageFrench
NationalityFrance
GenreNovel
SubjectWorking-class women
Notable worksElise ou la vraie vie (Elise, or the Real Life)
Notable awardsPrix Femina, 1967
Children2

Early life

Claire Etcherelli was born in 1934 in Bordeaux.[1] Her family was poor and her father died during World War II; her education was subsequently financed by the government and she earned a Baccalauréat qualification.[1] Before turning to writing, Etcherelli was employed in many types of workplaces, including a car assembly plant, a ball-bearing manufacturer, and a tourist agency. In 1975 she began working as editorial secretary for the journal Les Temps modernes.[1]

Works

Etcherelli published her first novel, Elise ou la vraie vie (Elise, or the Real Life), in 1967.[1] It was turned down by five publishers before being accepted by Éditions Denoël.[1] The novel is based around the relationship of an Algerian automobile worker and a white French woman in the 1950s. It also deals with the issues that those of less privilege face such as poverty, exploitation, and social marginalization.[2] Literary critic Liz Heron said of the novel, "Etcherelli's novel is significant because it describes the tensions and contradictions that make Paris life real for Elise, Etcherelli's heroine".[3]

Etcherelli won the Prix Femina in 1967 for this novel.[4] The novel gained a cult following during the 1960s and 1970s.[2] In 1970, it was adapted into a film directed by Michel Drach.[2][3]

Etcherelli's second novel, A Propos de Clémence (About Clémence) (1971), is about "the difficulty of knowing oneself and the impossibility of knowing another person".[5] Her third novel, Un Arbre voyageur (A Travelling Tree) (1978), focuses on two women who attempt to start an unconventional family that has no patriarch. The family was to be based on trust, solidarity, and women's leadership.[2] Etcherelli said the novel "gave her the most pleasure to write".[1] A review of the book in An Encyclopedia of Continental Women Writers, Volume 1 says that it "offers us a beautiful, penetrating account of the lives of ordinary, though shrewdly intelligent and inconspicuously sensitive women of France's late sixties and early seventies". Etcherelli later wrote a 1982 compilation of poetic texts, titled Delirante (Delirious Woman).[1]

Writing style

Etcherelli's main characters are women from a working-class background.[2] She cites Honoré de Balzac as a major influence on her work.[6] Cities and places that exist within those cities are frequently used in her work, with the cities creating a metaphor for the aspects of life.[6]

Personal life

Etcherelli is the mother of two sons.[1]

Bibliography

  • Elise ou la vraie vie (Elise, or the Real Life, 1967)
  • A Propos de Clémence (About Clémence, 1971)
  • Un Arbre voyageur (A Travelling Tree, 1978)
  • Delirante (Delirious Woman, 1982)

Footnotes

  1. Wilson, Katharina M.; Wilson, M. (1991). An Encyclopedia of Continental Women Writers. Taylor & Francis. pp. 390–391. ISBN 978-0-8240-8547-6.
  2. Sartori, Eva Martin (1999). The Feminist Encyclopedia of French Literature. Greenwood Press. p. 189. ISBN 0-313-296510.
  3. Brook, Chris; Mooney, Gerry; Pile, Steve (1 February 2006). Unruly Cities?: Order/Disorder. Routledge. p. 8. ISBN 978-1-134-63626-6.
  4. "Claire Etcherelli Laureate Prize Femina In 1967". Granger Historical Picture Archive. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  5. Etcherelli, Claire (12 August 2005). Elise ou la Vraie Vie. Routledge. p. 12. ISBN 978-1-134-96484-0.
  6. Poole, Sara (1 June 1994). "Street-signs: The City as Context and as Code in the Novels of Claire Etcherelli". Studies in 20th Century Literature. 18 (2). doi:10.4148/2334-4415.1349. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
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