Robert Antelme

Robert Antelme (5 January 1917, Sartène, Corse-du-Sud – 26 October 1990) was a French writer. During the Second World War he was involved in the French Resistance and deported.

In 1939 he married Marguerite Duras. Their child died at birth in 1942. In the same year, Duras met Dionys Mascolo, who became her lover.

Registration card of Robert Antelme as a prisoner at Buchenwald Nazi Concentration Camp

Antelme was arrested and deported on 1 July 1944.[1] He was at Buchenwald, then Gandersheim. After the end of the war François Mitterrand found Antelme in a terrible state while visiting the Dachau concentration camp and organised his return to Paris; Mitterrand later reported that he had almost not heard Antelme's soft-voiced call to him. Marguerite Duras looked after Antelme and wrote La Douleur about his return. She divorced him soon after he regained his health, but they remained friends.

Works

Antelme later wrote L'Espèce humaine (1947) depicting his experiences in the camps. The book related his experience of detention in concentration camps. Published in 1947, the book was more than just a memoir of the hardships of a concentration camp. It was a philosophical reflection on humanity.[2]

Political career

Antelme was a member of the French Communist Party. His political career did not last long as he resigned from the party upon learning of the existence of labor camps in the Soviet Union.[2]

Street in Paris named after Antelme.
Sign board of street named after Antelme.

Death

Paralyzed in 1983 by a stroke, he died on 26 October 1990 in the hospital of the Invalides in Paris.[2]

References

  1. "Transport parti de Compiègne le 17 août 1944 (I.265.)" (in French). Retrieved 31 July 2018.
  2. "Robert Antelme". Larousse. Retrieved 27 January 2014.

Bibliography

By Antelme
  • L'espèce humaine, Gallimard 1947, 1957, 1999
  • Penser la mort, Gallimard
On Robert Antelme
  • Marguerite Duras, La Douleur, POL, Paris, 1985.
  • Martin Crowley, Robert Antelme, l'humanité irréductible, Editions Léo Scheer, 2004
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