Béatrix Beck (1914–2008)
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- Gebräuchlichste Namensform
- Beck, Béatrix
- Rechtmäßiger Name
- Beck, Béatrix
- Geburtstag
- 1914-07-30
- Todestag
- 2008-11-30
- Geschlecht
- female
- Nationalität
- France
Belgique (naissance) - Geburtsort
- Villars-sur-Ollon, Switzerland
- Sterbeort
- Saint-Clair-sur-Epte, France
- Wohnorte
- Paris, France
- Berufe
- Professeur
Secrétaire
Journaliste
novelist
short story writer
poet - Beziehungen
- Beck, Christian (père)
Gide, André (employeur)
Szapiro, Béatrice (granddaughter)
Szapiro, Bernadette (daughter) - Organisationen
- Prix Fémina (membre du jury)
- Preise und Auszeichnungen
- Prix Goncourt (1952)
Prix Prince Rainier de Monaco
Académie française
Grand Prix de Littérature de l'Académie française (1997) - Kurzbiographie
- Béatrix Beck was born in Villars-sur-Ollon, Switzerland, to Christian Beck, a Belgian writer of Latvian-Italian background, and his Irish wife Kathleen Spiers. Her father died when she was two years old. She grew up in France and after a long dispute with authorities, finally became a French citizen. She became a Communist activist as a law student in Paris. In 1936, she married Naum Szapiro, a Jew and fellow Communist. During World War II, he was arrested by the Vichy government and died in a concentration camp, leaving her with a small daughter, Bernadette. She took a series of odd jobs to earn a living, including posing as a model in an art school, and wrote in her spare time. In 1948, she published her first novel, the semi-autobiographical Barny. André Gide, a friend of her father's, hired her as his secretary and encouraged her to write about her own life experiences, such as her mother's suicide. She went on to create other autobiographical works such as Une mort irrégulière (An Irregular Death, 1950). She won the Prix Goncourt in 1952 for Léon Morin, prêtre (Léon Morin, Priest), which made her famous. It was later adapted into a film. She was able to buy an apartment in the same building as Jean-Paul Sartre, 42 rue Bonaparte, which was blown up by the militant group OAS in 1962. In 1966, she traveled to the USA, where she became a professor at the University of California at Berkeley, and the University of Virginia; and to Canada, where she taught at Laval University in Quebec, the University of Sherbrooke, and Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario. She returned to France in 1977, and gained new fame with La Décharge (The Discharge), which won the Prix du Livre Inter. In 2006, a play adapted from her work L'Épouvante, l'émerveillement (Terror, Wonder, 1977) was staged. During her career, she produced some 30 works, including 13 novels, plus short stories, poems, and radio plays. She served as a member of the jury for the Prix Fémina. Her daughter Bernadette Szapiro and her granddaughter Béatrice Szapiro also became writers.
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Il n'y a pas a proprement parler d'histoire mais une succession de portraits et de situations. On fera la connaissance de la demie-soeur de la narratrice au comportement imprévisible et aux opinions paradoxales, de l'oncle Armand qui est en prison depuis 40 ans pour homicide et des voisins bourgeois et paysans, etc.
Au centre du roman, Francine, tante de la narratrice issue d'une famille aisée et qui tente de survivre avec bien des difficultés en élevant des poulets. A travers ce personnage Béatrix Beck cherche à dénoncer l'attitude petite bourgeoise faite de compromissions et d'accomodements, totalement soumise aux conventions sociales et au qu'en-dira-t'on. tout en professant par ailleurs des convictions religieuses élevées.… (mehr)