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Jean Cayrol

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Jean Cayrol(French:[kɛʁɔl];6 June 1911 – 10 February 2005) was a Frenchpoet,publisher, and member of theAcadémie Goncourtborn inBordeaux.He is perhaps best known for writing the narration inAlain Resnais's 1955 documentary film,Night and Fog.He was a major contributor to the subversive, philosophical French publicationTel Quel.

In 1941, during theNazi occupation of France,Cayrol joined theFrench Resistance,but he was subsequently betrayed, arrested, and sent to theGusen concentration campin 1943. He was one of the youngest French inmates at that camp, and consequently was made to do some of the hardest work along with the construction of roads and railways. When Cayrol wanted to die by refusing any further food, his life was saved byJohann Gruber,the "Saint of Gusen." Gruber gave Cayrol some "Gruber soup" in the washroom of barrack No. 20, and intervened for Cayrol to get him transferred to an easier job. Cayrol thereafter worked at the final inspection ofSteyr-Daimler-Puchat KL Gusen I (the "Georgenmuehle" command), where he was able to write literature during breaks.

Between February 1944 and April 1945, Cayrol created a large volume of poetry at Gusen I. One of his poems from this era is the text for "Chant d'Espoir", which was set to music by a fellow Gusen I inmate,Remy Gillis,in 1944.Alerte aux ombres 1944–1945,a collection of Cayrol's Gusen texts, was published in 1997.[1]

The figure ofLazarusappears many times in Cayrol's work. Having escaped death himself, Cayrol was fascinated and inspired by the story of Lazarus who died, whom Jesus returned to life after being dead.[2]

Cayrol founded and edited for ten years (1956–66) the reviewEcrire,published byÉditions du Seuil,who had recruited him as an editorial adviser in 1949.[3]

He retired to Bordeaux, where he died at the age of 93.

References

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  1. ^Cayrol, Jean.Alerte aux ombres 1944-1945.Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1997.ISBN2-02-030930-0
  2. ^Blom, Philipp."Jean Cayrol (obituary)."Guardian Unlimited,April 27, 2005. Retrieved January 15, 2007.
  3. ^Marie-Laure Basuyaux, "Jean Cayrol et la collection Ecrire: de l'écriture blanche à l'écriture verte", Fabula.