Gabriel Faure (writer)
Template:Short description Template:Distinguish Template:Infobox person Gabriel Faure (Template:IPA; 15 May 1877 – 5 August 1962) was a French poet, novelist and essayist. He was the author of many books about Italy. He won five prizes from the Académie française, including the Grand Prix de Littérature for the entirety of his work.
Early life
Gabriel Faure was born on 15 May 1877 in Tournon-sur-Rhône, in the department of Ardèche, France,<ref name="bnfgabrielfaure">Template:Cite web</ref> where his father held the dual positions of lawyer and mayor. Although he owed his love of literature to his grandfather, who introduced him to Latin and Romantic poets, it was at the Tournon high school that bears his name that a literature teacher, Joseph Parnin, revealed to him beauty, art, and poetry. His law studies, begun in Lyon and completed in Paris, led to his doctorate in 1900, but his travels in Italy, and Florence in particular, determined his literary future.<ref>Joseph Conrazier, Gabriel Faure, Etude critique suivie d'opinions et d'une bibliographie, Paris: Editions des Horizons de France, 1933.</ref>
Career
Faure was the author of many poems, novels and essays.<ref name="bnfgabrielfaure"/> An Italophile, he wrote many books about Italy, including Venice, Ventimiglia and Rome. In 1929, he edited an illustrated anthology, Le Visage de l'Italie, prefaced by Benito Mussolini.<ref name="worldcatlevisagedelitalie">Template:Cite book</ref> A review in The Journal of Roman Studies noted that "the Introduction bv the Duce makes clear, what comes now and again to the surface in the text itself, that the book is not concerned only with the beauties of Italian scenery and the wonders of Italian architecture, but also with the great political past—and present—of Italy. Nevertheless, there is little to disturb those who prefer to keep their politics and their aesthetic appreciations apart."<ref name="reviewedhm">Template:Cite journal</ref>
He wrote some of his works in Italy, and stayed several times in Breganze as the guest of Marie Jsoard Savardo at Villa Savardo.<ref>AA.VV., Da Marano al Mondo, Schio, 2006</ref> Extant are some postcards he sent in 1924 and 1928 from Breganze to France.<ref>AA.VV., Saluti Da Breganze, cartoline, ed. Leoni, Fara Vic., 2020</ref>
In 1926, Faure founded the Comité France-Italie, intended to enhance and celebrate French-Italian cultural relations. The group was reorganized in 1929 by the pro-Fascist French writer Jean Rivain, and gained popularity and prestige in the early 1930s under the leadership of Pierre de Nolhac.<ref name="poupaultjeanne">Template:Cite journal</ref>
Faure also wrote several books about French authors including François-René de Chateaubriand, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Stendhal, Paul Valéry and Louis Le Cardonnel. He co-authored a book about Napoleon with Marcel Deléon.
Prizes from the Académie française
Faure won five prizes from the Académie française:
- Prix Montyon for Heures d'Ombrie, 1908
- Prix Jules Davaine for Sur la vie Emilia, 1911
- Prix Marcelin Guérin for Paysages littéraires, 1918
- Prix Alfred Née, 1930
- Grand Prix de Littérature for the entirety of his work in 1941<ref name="academiegabriel">Template:Cite web</ref>
Death and legacy
Faure died on 5 August 1962.<ref name="bnfgabrielfaure"/> In 1967, the Lycée Gabriel Faure in Tournon-sur-Rhône was named in his honor.<ref name="lycee">Template:Cite web</ref> In 2013, his name was given to a street in Saint-Pierre-de-Manneville in Seine-Maritime.
Works
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In English translation
Works by Gabriel Faure translated into English include Wanderings in Italy (1919), Pilgrimages in Italy (1920), The Banks of the Rhône from Lyons to Arles (1922), The Gardens of Rome (1924), The Italian Lakes: Maggiore, Como, Orta, Varese, Lugano, Iseo, Garda (1925), The Land of St. Francis of Assisi: Assisi and Perugia (1925), The Dolomites (1925), Rome (1926), and Sicily (1932).<ref>These books are available online at Hathitrust.org.</ref>