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Jacques Prevel

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jacques Marie Prevel (July 27, 1915 in Bolbec – May 27, 1951 in Sainte-Feyre) was a French poet. His real first name was Jacques, but he added 'Marie' not to be mistaken with Jacques Prévert, whose surname is pronounced in a very similar way. During the German occupation he lived in the famous Parisiene district Saint-Germain-des-Près.

Among his friends were the members of the Le Grand Jeu movement, René Daumal and Roger Gilbert-Lecomte, and also Antonin Artaud. Prevel considered Artaud his master, but Artaud admired Prevel's writings as well - he wrote about him (often "more portraying himself" [1]) and dictated his visions to him. Prevel also supplied Artaud with laudanum and opium. Prevel died of tuberculosis in the Sainte-Peyre hospital in the arms of his second love Jany.[citation needed]

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Transcription

Bibliography

Poetry

"It will be essential to work until the end of times, to find again the Gesture and the Word.".[1]

  • Poèmes mortels (1945); Mortal poems
  • Poèmes pour toute mémoire (1947); Poems for all the memory
  • De colère et de haine (1950); From rage and hatred
  • En dérive vers l’absolu (1952); On the crossroad to the absolute, posthumously

Diary

  • En compagnie d'Antonin Artaud (1974); In the company of Antonin Artaud, posthumously

References

  1. ^ a b Slavík, Ivan, Rozklenout srázné, p. 86; Olomouc 1993

External links

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This page was last edited on 5 November 2023, at 19:28
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