Julien Green
Éric Jourdan, Académie française, François Mauriac, Georges Pompidou
978-613-9-50457-2
6139504570
76
2012-02-01
34.00 €
eng
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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Julien Green (September 6, 1900 – August 13, 1998), was an American writer, who authored several novels, including Léviathan and Each in His Own Darkness. He wrote primarily in French. Julian Hartridge 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".) The youngest of eight children born to Protestant parents. He had a very puritanical and overprotective upbringing, his mother being extremely sexually repressive (later Green would grow into an anguished and egodistonic homosexual). Green became a Roman Catholic in 1916, two years after his mother's death.
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