Pascal Pia
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Pascal Pia | |
---|---|
Born | Pierre Durand 15 August 1903 |
Died | 27 September 1979 | (aged 76)
Pascal Pia (15 August 1903, Paris - 27 September 1979, Paris), born Pierre Durand, was a French writer, journalist, illustrator and scholar. He also used the pseudonyms Pascal Rose, Pascal Fely and others.
Childhood and Adolescence
[edit]After the death of his father in 1915 during World War I, Pia's mother had to work by herself. Pia decided to move away at the age of 14 and begin a new life in Paris.[1]
Later works
[edit]In 1922 he published the erotic work Les Princesses de Cythère. His La Muse en rut, a collection of erotic poems, appeared in 1928. He also illustrated erotic works, such as the Songs of Bilitis. In 1938 he founded the leftist journal Alger républicain in Algiers (which was part of the French colony of Algeria at the time). The journal was forbidden in 1939. During World War II Pia participated in the French Resistance (in the group "Combat") and in 1944 he became chief editor of the clandestine resistance journal Combat, using the pseudonym Pontault. He said "We will try to make a reasonable newspaper. And as the world is absurd, it will fail."
Albert Camus worked as a journalist at the Alger républicain and later also at Combat. Pia and Camus became friends, and Camus dedicated his 1942 essay The Myth of Sisyphus to Pia. A collection of their correspondence was published in 2000. Pascal Pia was also a good friend of André Malraux.
Pia was a member ("Satrape") of the Collège de 'pataphysique. He often expressed absurdist and nihilistic sentiments. At the end of his life, he claimed the "right to nothingness", prohibiting others from writing about him after his death.
Selected books written or edited by Pascal Pia
[edit]- Les Princesses de Cythere: Chronique Libertine de l'Histoire (Jean Fort, 1922)
- La Muse en rut et autres poèmes (1928)
- Baudelaire par lui-même (1952)
- Apollinaire par lui-même (1954)
- Baudelaire (Biography translated by Patrick Gregory, Grove Press, 1961)
- Les livres de l'Enfer: bibliographie critique des ouvrages érotiques dans leurs différentes éditions du XVIe siècle à nos jours (1978) [The Books of the "Enfer:" Critical Bibliography of Erotic Works in their Different Editions from the Sixteenth Century to the Present].
- Poemes et textes retrouvés (1982)
- Correspondance avec Albert Camus (2000)
Books and articles about Pascal Pia
[edit]- Pascal Pia by Jean José Marchand, Paris 1981
- Pascal Pia, ou, Le droit au néant by Roger Grenier, Paris 1989
- Pascal Pia, ou, L'homme libre (1903–1979), by Michaël Guittard, dissertation Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, 1999
- Bibliophilie: Pascal Pia, le clandestin by J -B Baronian, MAGAZINE LITTERAIRE, no. 375, (1999)
References
[edit]- ^ "Pascal Pia Exhibit | W.T. Bandy Center | Jean and Alexander Heard Libraries | Vanderbilt University". 19 April 2022. Archived from the original on 19 April 2022. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
External links
[edit]- Catalogue of books edited or written by Pascal Pia
- Pascal Pia, by Michaël Guittard. (in French)