Jules Vallès (1832–1885), French writer and revolutionary, is most famous for his trilogy of autobiographical novels: L’Enfant (The Child), Le Bachelier (The Graduate), and L’Insurgé (The Insurgent).
Through Vallès’s alter ego,
Jacques Vingtras, the books describe the writer’s difficult childhood as
the abused son of a schoolteacher, his rejection of his classical
education and growing admiration for the peasant class, and finally his
bohemian life in Paris as a militant journalist and pamphleteer. Vallès
grew up in the provinces and came to Paris to study as a young man.
Forced by his family to return home, he soon rebelled against his
socially ambitious father and returned to the capital. There Vallès
associated with other young radicals and published articles in various
left-wing newspapers under a series of pseudonyms, which nevertheless
failed to protect him from government persecution. Vallès led protests
against the repressive policies of Napoleon III and played a significant
role in the Paris Commune of 1871; his newspaper, Le Cri du Peuple (The Cry of the People),
became the mouthpiece of the revolt. After the defeat of the Commune,
Vallès was
exiled for nine years, which he spent mostly in London, writing articles
and composing his autobiographical trilogy. Upon his return to Paris,
he resurrected Le Cri and spent the last five years of his life working furiously on articles, pamphlets, and the last book of his trilogy.
Source: http://www.nybooks.com/books/authors/jules-valles/
Books
The Child
Vallès’s book is one of the funniest books in French literature, a triumph of insubordinate comedy over the forces of order and the self-appointed defenders of decency.Source: http://www.nybooks.com/books/authors/jules-valles/
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