Benjamin Crémieux
Benjamin Crémieux was a French author, critic and literary historian.
Early life
Crémieux was born to a Jewish family in Narbonne, France in 1888. His family had long ties in the region, having 'settled in France as early as the 14th century'.:452Military service
He fought in World War I during his obligatory military service in the French Army and was severely wounded during battle.:452 After the war he focused on studying Italian literature and history.:452Career
Crémieux contributed to a variety of literary magazines and journals, including La Gazette du Franc,:270 and the influential literary journal Nouvelle Revue Française. He started writing for the NRF in 1920 and Jean Paulhan invited him to be a member of the journal's editorial committee as early as 1926.:22In 1928 he defended his doctoral thesis Essai Sur l'évolution littéraire de l'Italie de 1870 á nos jours at the Sorbonne, which was published later that year.:41 He published one of his most important texts in 1931, Inquiétude et Reconstruction, which provided a survey of French literature since the turn of the century.:139
He also served in a variety of service roles. He was 'chief of the Italian bureau of the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs':41 and the permanent secretary of the French section of the PEN Club.:139
In 1940, Crémieux joined the French underground and became a leader of the Maquis.