Jean Amrouche Explained

Jean Amrouche
Birth Date:7 February 1906
Birth Place:Ighil Ali, Petite Kabylie
Death Place:Paris, France
Mother:Fadhma Aït Mansour
Relatives:Taos Amrouche (sister)

Jean el Mouhouv Amrouche (7 February 1906 in Ighil Ali, Algeria – 16 April 1962 in Paris, France) was an Algerian francophone writer, poet and journalist.[1]

Biography

Jean el Mouhouv Amrouche was born February 7, 1906, in Ighil Ali, in the valley of Soumman, in petite Kabylie to a Kabyle Roman Catholic family.[2] Amrouche emigrated with his family to Tunisia while still young. Jean had his secondary education at Alaoui college and then left for the Ecole Normale Superieure de Saint-Cloud. He intends to become a teacher. The poet Armand Guibert made him known in Tunisia by publishing his two collections of poems, Cendres (poems 1928–1934) in 1934 and Étoile secrète in 1937. He wrote at that time (poems, literary criticism) in Tunisian journals and gave lectures at the Cercle de l'Essor in Tunis. For several years with his friend Armand Guibert, he visited many countries in Europe. In 1943, he joined the Ministry of Information in Algiers, then the Radiodiffusion Française.[3]

He was the older brother of fellow writer Taos Amrouche. Both were the children of Fadhma Aït Mansour, author of History of My Life. He was Catholic.[4]

He died on 16 April 1962 at his home in Paris; he is buried in Sargé-sur-Braye in Loir-et-Cher.

Selected works

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Gikandi , Simon . Simon Gikandi

    . Simon Gikandi. Encyclopedia of African Literature. Taylor & Francis. 2003. 978-1-134-58223-5. 2018-11-24. 29–31.

  2. Web site: Jean Amrouche. 13 April 2023 . Britannica.
  3. Encyclopedia: 1986. Amrouche. Encyclopédie berbère. Edisud. Déjeux. Jean. Aix-en-Provence. 4. 4. 608–613. 10.4000/encyclopedieberbere.2485. Déjeux. Jean. Pantuček. S.. free.
  4. Book: C. Naylor, Phillip. Historical Dictionary of Algeria. 2015. 9780810879195. 172. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.