Édith Thomas: A Passion for Resistance

Édith Thomas: A Passion for Resistance

by Dorothy Kaufmann
Édith Thomas: A Passion for Resistance

Édith Thomas: A Passion for Resistance

by Dorothy Kaufmann

eBook

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Overview

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.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501727368
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 07/05/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 256
File size: 27 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Dorothy Kaufmann is Professor Emerita of French at Clark University. She is the author of The Theatre of Jean-Paul Sartre and the editor of a French critical edition of writings by Edith Thomas, which appears in two volumes, Pages de Journal (1939-1944) and Le Témoin compromis.

What People are Saying About This

Terry Castle

Édith Thomas—novelist, diarist, feminist, and Resistance journalist par excellence—deserves to be included with Simone de Beauvoir, Marguerite Duras, Elsa Triolet, and Simone Weil in the pantheon of essential twentieth-century French women writers. As Dorothy Kaufmann's suave new biography reveals, Thomas's contributions to French intellectual life in the war years were numerous and extraordinary, and her insights into French society—both during and after occupation—were courageous, unflinching, and intransigent.

Hilary Mantel

I was impressed and enlightened by Dorothy Kaufmann's book. It is a strikingly well-written and thoughtful account of an ardent spirit, a Frenchwoman whose passion for freedom was perhaps sharpened by the painful constraints placed on her by her own ill-health. She is an intellectual heroine who has stood in the shadow of Simone de Beauvoir and Simone Weil. This book sheds a light on her very individual path through the minefields of sex, politics, and sexual politics and opens up for us some of the secrets of an uncompromising heart.

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