
.
.Julien
GREEN
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Author :
Carl Van Vechten, in Public domaine |
Julian Hartridge Green,
or Julien Green (September 6, 1900 – August 13, 1998), was
a French born American author of several novels including
Léviathan and Each in His Own Darkness. He
wrote primarily in French, but was not a French citizen.
Biography
Julien Green was born to American parents in Paris,
a descendant on his mother's side of a Confederate Senator,
Julian Hartridge (1829–1879), who later served as a Democratic
Representative from Georgia to the US Congress, and who was Julien
Green's namesake. (Green was christened "Julian", the spelling was
changed by his French publisher in the 1920s to "Julien.")
Born into a Protestant family, he converted to Catholicism in
1916. The next year, at the age of 16, he volunteered his services
as an ambulanceman in the American Field Service. When his age was
discovered his enlistment was annulled. He immediately signed up
with an ambulance unit of the American Red Cross, and when that
six-month term of service ended in 1918, he enlisted in the French
Army, in which he served as a second lieutenant of artillery until
1919. He was educated at the University of Virginia in the United
States from 1919-22. His career as one of the major figures of
French literature in the 20th century started soon after his
return from the United States. In July 1940, after France's
defeat, he went back to America. In 1942, he was mobilized and
sent to New York to work at the United States Office of War
Information. From there, for almost a year, five times a week, he
would address France as part of the radio broadcasts of Voice of
America, working inter alia with André Breton and Yul Brynner.
Green went back to France right after the end of World War II. A
devout Catholic, most of his books focused on the ideas of faith
and religion as well as hypocrisy. Several of his books dealt with
the southern United States, and he strongly identified with the
fate of the Confederacy, characterizing himself throughout his
life as a "Sudiste." He inherited this version of patriotism from
his mother, who came from a distinguished southern family. Some
years before Julien's birth, when Julien's father was offered a
choice of posts (with his bank) in either Germany or France,
Julien's mother urged the choice of France on the grounds that the
French were "also a proud people, recently defeated in war, and we
shall understand one another." (The reference was to France's 1871
defeat in the Franco-Prussian War).
In France, both during his life and today, Julien Green's fame
rests principally not on his novels, but on his journals,
published in ten volumes, and spanning the years 1926-1976. These
avidly-read and well-known volumes provide a chronicle of his
literary and religious life, and a unique window on the artistic
and literary scene in Paris over a span of half a century. Green's
style, austere and employing to great effect the "passé simple", a
literary tense nearly abandoned by many of his French
contemporaries, found favor with the Académie française, a fact
mentioned in his election to that august body. Green resigned from
the Académie shortly before his death, citing his American
heritage and loyalties.
While Green wrote primarily in the French language, he also
wrote in English, being entirely bilingual. He translated some of
his own works from French to English (sometimes with the help of
his sister, Anne). A collection of some of his translations is
published in Le langage et son double, with a side-by-side
French-English format, facilitating direct comparison. Despite his
being bilingual, Green's texts remain largely unknown in the
English-speaking world.
Thus far three of his books have been turned into films:
Léviathan (1962), for which he wrote the screenplay, is the
most famous. Adrienne Mesurat (1953), and La Dame de
pique (1965) were also adapted to film.
He died in Paris and was buried in the parish church of
Klagenfurt,
Austria. Apparently, Green was greatly moved by a statue of
the Virgin Mary during a visit there in 1990. Subsequently, he
expressed a desire to be buried in one of the church's chapels.
Julien Green adopted gay fiction writer,
Éric Jourdan, as his son. According to Jourdan, Green decided
to move to a house belonging to
Caterina Sforza in Forlì, Italy,
in 1994. However, Green did not move to this house because his
health was failing.
Green was the first non-French national to be elected to the
Académie française. Fittingly, he succeeded
François Mauriac, taking chair number 22 on the 3rd of June,
1971. It was commonly believed he had dual citizenship, but in
fact, although born in Paris and writing almost exclusively in the
French language, he had never become a French citizen.
President
Georges Pompidou offered him French citizenship in 1972
following Green's election to the Académie, but - faithful
to the patriotic, "sudiste" spirit his mother inspired in him -
Green refused it.
He revealed in his fiction and non-fiction that he was
homosexual. However, he was capable of writing about women and
heterosexuality as exemplified in his surrealist novel Minuit
(Midnight) that explores the sexual awakening of an adolescent
young girl.
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