Thierry Maulnier
Thierry Maulnier was a French journalist, essayist, dramatist, and literary critic who was born in Alès and died in Marnes-la-Coquette. He was married to theatre director Marcelle Tassencourt.
Early years
A graduate of the École Normale Supérieure in the same class as Roger Vailland, Robert Brasillach, and Maurice Bardèche. Maulnier became active in the integralist student wing of Action Française, and published in Charles Maurras' newspaper. He made a career in journalism and took part in the movement of the Non-conformists of the 1930s, inspired by the personalist generation of young intellectuals who shared some of the ideals of the Action Française, holding right-wing beliefs as an answer to a "crisis of civilization" and materialism. He also campaigned against democracy and capitalism, advocating a union of the right and left to overthrow the two. Thierry Maulnier associated with youth periodicals such as Réaction, La Revue du Siècle, and La Revue française; he also wrote his first volume, La crise est dans l'homme.In 1934, he authored, with Jean-Pierre Maxence, the manifesto Demain la France. Maxence and Maulnier also founded the weekly L'Insurgé in 1936 lasting only a few months, the magazine circulated nationalist tenets, reviewed in Maulnier's 1938 essay Au-delà du nationalisme. At the same time, he joined Jean de Fabrègues in the creation of a more analytical paper, Combat, one which would be published until France's defeat in World War II.
World War II and after
A regular contributor to L'Action française since 1938, Maulnier continued to publish after Nazi Germany's occupation of France ; he also started writing for Le Figaro. He ceased writing for the paper after the start of Operation Torch in 1942, and remained a journalist for Le Figaro from 1945 until his death.With the beginning of the Fourth Republic, Maulnier no longer engaged in politics. He wrote plays and essays, but also commented on social themes.
In 1964, he was elected to the Académie française in place of the deceased Henry Bordeaux. In 1986 he was awarded the Prix mondial Cino Del Duca.
Works
La crise est dans l'homme Nietzsche Racine Miracle de la Monarchie Mythes socialistes Au-delà du nationalisme Introduction à la poésie française La France, la guerre et la paix Violence et conscience Langages Jeanne et ses juges Le Sexe et le néant, directed by Marcelle Tassencourt, Théâtre de l'Athénée Cette Grèce où nous sommes nés La Défaite d'hannibal, followed by La ville au fond de la mer, Gallimard Dialogue inattendu, with Jean Elleinstein, Flammarion;Theatre
- 1944: Antigone by Robert Garnier, Théâtre Charles de Rochefort, Théâtre du Vieux-Colombier