Laurence Deonna Explained

Laurence Deonna (29 January 1937 – 2 August 2023) was a Swiss journalist, writer and photographer who in the late 1960s became a celebrated war reporter in the Middle-East.[1] In 1987, on the basis of her articles, books and photographs promoting international understanding and improvements to the status of women, she was awarded the UNESCO Prize for Peace Education.[2] Deonna published 12 widely translated books.[3]

Biography

Born on 29 January 1937 in Geneva, Laurence Deonna was the daughter of the economist and politician Raymond Deonna, who headed the board of the former Journal de Genève, and his wife Anne-Marie Vernet-Faesch.[4] [5] She left school before matriculating, attended art school in London and returned to Geneva to work in an art gallery. She was married for a short period between 1961 and 1963.[6]

In 1967, invited to report on the Six-Day War, she embarked on a long career as a journalist in the Middle-East, where she took a special interest in the lives of Arab women. Realizing that books offered a more lasting way than newspapers of covering countries in depth, she went on to publish many lengthy accounts of her trips abroad over the next 40 years. They were frequently illustrated with her photographs.[6]

Her works not only focussed on women but revealed her firm conviction that many of the world's problems could be solved if greater concern was devoted to achieving peace. As a result, in 1989 she was awarded the UNESCO Prize for Peace Education. In Switzerland, she was a strong proponent of the 1989 (unsuccessful) referendum to abolish the Swiss army. Her role as a feminist can be seen from the central place she gave to women in all her writings.[6]

Deonna died in Geneva on 2 August 2023, at the age of 86.[7]

Selected works

In English

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Laurence Deonna, reporter, photographe, membre d’honneur du Club Suisse de la Presse. Klvin Mag. 1 September 2017. 1 November 2019 . fr.
  2. Web site: 1987 UNESCO Prize for Peace Education. UNESCO. 1987. 1 November 2019.
  3. Web site: Les "Mémoires ébouriffées" de Laurence Deonna. Le Temps. 2 October 2014. 1 November 2019 . fr.
  4. Web site: photoCH . fotoCH . fr . 3 August 2023.
  5. Web site: Raymond Deona. Dictionnaire Historique de la Suisse. 23 August 2005. 2 November 2019 . fr.
  6. Book: Burns. Barbara. Charnley. Joy. Crossing Frontiers: Cultural Exchange and Conflict : Papers in Honor of Malcolm Pender. 2010. Rodopi. 90-420-2997-8. 150–.
  7. News: Laurence Deonna, la force de la colère . 2 August 2023 . Le Temps . 2 August 2023.