Hélène Parmelin Explained
Hélène Parmelin (née Hélène Jungelson; 19 August 1915, in Nancy – 6 February 1998, in Paris) was a French novelist, journalist and art critic, best remembered for her novel La Montée du mur (1950) which was nominated for the Prix Fénéon in 1951. A prolific essayist and art historian, especially on the works of Pablo Picasso and her husband Édouard Pignon, her various writings are in the collections of the Institute for Contemporary Publishing Archives.[1] [2] [3] [4]
Notes and References
- News: L’Hôtellier . Anysia . PARMELIN Hélène [née JUNGELSON Hélène]. Pseu ]. 25 January 2024 . Maitron . Editions de l'Atelier . 4 July 2022 . fr.
- Verthuy . Maïr . The Changing Shapes of Trauma in the Fictional Writings of Hélène Parmelin (1915-1997) . Dalhousie French Studies . 2007 . 81 . 41–49 . 25 January 2024 . 0711-8813.
- Book: Schalk . David L. . War and the ivory tower: Algeria and Vietnam . 1991 . Oxford University Press . New York, NY . 978-0-19-506807-8 . 99.
- Web site: Пармелен // Краткая литературная энциклопедия. Т. 5. — 1968 (текст) . Soviet Encyclopedia . 25 January 2024 . ru.