Renée Dunan
Renée Dunan was a French writer, critic and poet. She wrote under a number of pseudonyms.
Biography
Little is known about Dunan, as she left no memoirs, and her correspondence, though far from rare, is scattered. She was born in Avignon in 1892 into a family of industrialists, and died in 1936. After studying with the nuns and before becoming a journalist, she worked in offices and traveled extensively.Dunan was a feminist and anarchist, as well as being a naturist and pacifist. A member of the Dadaists, she was in contact with André Breton, Philippe Soupault, Louis Aragon, Paul Éluard and Francis Picabia. She wrote around fifty books in a short space of time, most of which were published between 1922 and 1934. The genres of her novels are varied: erotica, adventure, historical, detective, psychological, esoteric, fantasy, science fiction and prehistoric tales. She published short stories in magazines such as Les Œuvres libres and contributed to at least two issues of L'Endehors, Émile Armand's individualist anarchist journal. In 1928, Le nudisme, revendication révolutionnaire and, in 1933, Le nudisme et la moralité. She wrote an essay on the writer René Boylesve, contributed to Le Crapouillot, and to the monthly periodical Le Sourire.
Dunan published her work under numerous pseudonyms, including Louise Dormienne, M. de Steinthal, Chiquita, Ethel Mac Singh, Luce Borromée, Laure Héron, Ky, A.-R. Layssa, Esther Sybra, Georges Damian, Léa Saint-Didier, William Stafford. Other pseudonyms attributed to her have not been reliably confirmed but include Marcelle La Pompe, Jean Spaddy, Renée Camera, and Paul Vorgs.
Fabrice Mundzik has suggested that Georges Dunan may have impersonated Renée Dunan in the late 1930s.
The Bibliothèque de l'Arsenal and the Bibliothèque Marguerite Durand in Paris hold fonds on Renée and Georges Dunan.