Abel Bonnard

French writer, essayist, poet and politician
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroFrench writer, essayist, poet and politician
PlacesFrance
wasWriter Critic Essayist Poet Literary critic Journalist Novelist Politician
Work fieldJournalism Literature Politics
Gender
Male
Birth19 December 1883, Poitiers
Death31 May 1968Madrid (aged 84 years)
Family
Mother:Pauline Benielli
Father:Giuseppe Primoli
The details

Biography

Abel Bonnard (December 19, 1883 – May 31, 1968) was a French poet, novelist and politician.

Biography

Born in Poitiers, Vienne, his early education was in Marseilles with secondary studies at the Lycée Louis-le-Grand in Paris. A student of literature, he was a graduate of the École du Louvre and a member of the École française de Rome.

Politically, a follower of Charles Maurras, his views evolved towards fascism in the 1930s. Bonnard was one of the ministers of National Education under the Vichy regime (1942–44). The political satirist Jean Galtier-Boissière gave him the nickname "la Gestapette", a portmanteau of Gestapo and tapette, the latter French slang for a homosexual. The name, along with the homosexual inclinations it implied, became well known. He was a member of the committee of the Groupe Collaboration, an organisation that aimed to encourage closer cultural ties between France and her German occupiers.

Bonnard was one of only a few members expelled from the Académie française after World War II for collaboration with Germany. Bonnard was condemned in absentia to death during the épuration légale period for wartime activities. However, Francisco Franco granted him political asylum in Spain. In 1960, he returned to France to face retrial for his crimes. He received a symbolic sentence of 10 years banishment to be counted from 1945, but dissatisfied with the verdict of guilty, he chose to return to Spain where he lived out the remainder of his life.

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