Bernanos, Georges

Bernanos, Georges
born Feb. 20, 1888, Paris, France
died July 5, 1948, Neuilly-sur-Seine

French novelist and polemical writer.

One of the most original and independent Roman Catholic writers of his time and a man of humour and humanity, he abhorred materialism and compromise with evil. His masterpiece, The Diary of a Country Priest (1936), is the story of a young priest's war against sin. Dialogues of the Carmelites (1949), a screenplay about 16 nuns martyred during the French Revolution, was the basis for an opera by Francis Poulenc (1957).

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▪ French author

born Feb. 20, 1888, Paris
died July 5, 1948, Neuilly-sur-Seine, Fr.
 novelist and polemical writer whose masterpiece, The Diary of a Country Priest, established him as one of the most original and independent Roman Catholic writers of his time.

      Bernanos began life as a Royalist journalist and later worked as an inspector for an insurance company. Like his predecessor, the French Catholic writer Léon Bloy, Bernanos was a visionary for whom the supernatural world was never far away. He was also a man of humour and humanity who abhorred materialism and compromise with evil. His vehement sincerity is seen in his political pamphlets La Grande Peur des bien-pensants, a polemic on the materialism of the middle classes (1931; “The Great Fear of Right-Thinking People”), and Les Grands Cimetières sous la lune (1938; A Diary of My Times, 1938), a fierce attack on Fascist excesses during the Spanish Civil War and on the church dignitaries who supported them.

      As a novelist he made his theme the struggle between the forces of good and evil for the soul of man, a conflict particularly exemplified in his studies of priests. His characters, representing extremes of human behaviour from saintliness to utter depravity, are powerfully imagined and realistically drawn.

      Bernanos' first novel was Sous le soleil de Satan (1926; The Star of Satan, 1939; Under the Sun of Satan, 1949), partly based on the experiences of the Curé d'Ars. In 1936 Bernanos published Journal d'un curé de campagne (The Diary of a Country Priest, 1937), a story of a young priest's war against sin. It was made into a motion picture by the French director Robert Bresson in 1951. Other notable works were La Joie (1929; Joy, 1946), Nouvelle Histoire de Mouchette (1937; Mouchette, 1966), and Monsieur Ouine (1943; The Open Mind, 1945).

      Political events troubled Bernanos increasingly. In July 1938 he went into self-imposed exile with his wife and six children and began an unsuccessful farming venture in Brazil. He felt acutely what he regarded as the moral degradation of the Munich Agreement (“Scandale de la vérité,” 1939; “Scandal of the Truth”). In June 1940 he gave his support to his former classmate Gen. Charles de Gaulle. His broadcast messages and his Lettre aux Anglais (1942; Plea for Liberty, 1944) influenced his compatriots during World War II. A return to France in 1945 brought disillusionment with his country's lack of spiritual renewal, and he lived thereafter in Tunis until he returned to France suffering from his final illness. Shortly before his death Bernanos completed Dialogue des Carmélites, a film script dealing with 16 nuns martyred during the French Revolution. An opera by Francis Poulenc was based on this work.

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  • Bernanos, Georges — (1888 1948)    writer    Born in Neuilly sur seine, Georges Bernanos began his career in journalism as a militant supporter of the action française and soon undertook a strong critique of politics, vehemently denouncing the moral bankruptcy of… …   France. A reference guide from Renaissance to the Present

  • Bernanos, Georges — ► (1888 1948) Escritor francés, uno de los mayores representantes del catolicismo comprometido desde el plano literario. El éxito de Bajo el sol de Satán (1926) le permitió dedicarse a la literatura. En sus obras siguientes, La impostura (1927) y …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Bernanos — Bernanos, Georges …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Georges Bernanos — Nom de naissance Louis Émile Clément Georges Bernanos Activités écrivain Naissance 20 février 1888 Paris Décès 5 juillet 1948 Neuilly sur Seine Langue d écriture …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Bernanos — Georges Bernanos Pour les articles homonymes, voir Bernanos (homonymie). Georges Bernanos, né le 20 février 1888 à Paris et mort le 5 juillet 1948 (60 ans) à Neuilly sur Seine, est un écrivain français. Il est enterré au… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Bernanos — Georges Bernanos (* 20. Februar 1888 in Paris; † 5. Juli 1948 in Neuilly sur Seine) war ein französischer Schriftsteller. In einzelnen deutschen Ausgaben lautet die Schreibweise des Vornamen auch „Georg“. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Leben 2 Stil 3… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Georges Bernandos — Georges Bernanos (* 20. Februar 1888 in Paris; † 5. Juli 1948 in Neuilly sur Seine) war ein französischer Schriftsteller. In einzelnen deutschen Ausgaben lautet die Schreibweise des Vornamen auch „Georg“. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Leben 2 Stil 3… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Georges Bernanos — (* 20. Februar 1888 in Paris; † 5. Juli 1948 in Neuilly sur Seine) war ein französischer Schriftsteller. In einzelnen deutschen Ausgaben lautet die Schreibweise des Vornamens auch „Georg“. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Leben 2 Stil 3 …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Georges Bernanos — (París, 20 de febrero de 1888 Neuilly sur Seine, 5 de julio de 1948) fue un novelista, ensayista y dramaturgo francés. En su primera novela, Bajo el sol de Satanás, ya están patentes sus preocupaciones religiosas. Bernanos ahonda en la psicología …   Wikipedia Español

  • Bernanos — Bernanos,   Georges, französischer Schriftsteller, * Paris 20. 2. 1888, ✝ Neuilly sur Seine 5. 7. 1948; war bis 1919 Mitglied der Action française und gehört literarisch zu den Hauptvertretern des Renouveau catholique. Im Mittelpunkt seiner… …   Universal-Lexikon

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