Louise Faure-Favier | |
Birth Name: | Jeanne Lucie Augustine Claudia Faure-Favier |
Birth Date: | 12 December 1870 |
Birth Place: | Firminy, France |
Occupation: | Writer, journalist and aviator |
Known For: | Setting aviation speed records, being the first French woman professional journalist |
Louise Faure-Favier (12 December 1870 - 5 March 1961) was a French writer and aviator. She is considered by some to be the first French woman to work as a professional journalist.[1] She also wrote the first French novel about civil aviation.
She was born Jeanne Lucie Augustine Claudia Faure-Favier in Firminy, 12 December 1870.[1]
Faure-Favier travelled on the first civil aviation flight in France. She developed the first official guides in France for aviation tourism. With, she set a speed record for a flight between Paris and Dakar in 1919. In 1930, it set a speed record for the round trip flight between Paris and Baghdad. She was a passenger on the first commercial night flight between Paris and London and wrote about it in the magazine L'Illustration. She took part in the first live radio broadcast from a plane flying over Paris.[1] [2]
She was also a pioneer in journalism, writing columns particularly in the field of aeronautics, such as the one on Le Bourget airport.[3] In Le Matin, she is a committed feminist as she wrote a column entitled "La vie féminine". She collaborates successively or simultaneously with numerous titles such as: le Matin; le Figaro; Paris-Midi; le Temps; L'Œuvre; le Journal; L'Éclair; la Revue Bleue; le Mercure de France; L'Aérophile; les Ailes; la Revue Palladéenne and La Nef.[4]
She elaborated the first official guides in France for air tourism, illustrated in part by her own aerial photographs[5] in the series of Guides de voyages aériens (Paris-Tunis, Paris-Lausanne, Paris-London).
Louise Faure-Favier is an author of various genres. She was a poet in Visages de la Seine, illustrated by Marie Laurencin, and Notre île Saint-Louis, where she lived at 45, quai de Bourdon. Her 1928 novel Blanche et Noir reflects her optimism about race relations in France and her belief in the civilizing influence of women. Faure-Favier also wrote the first French novel about civil aviation. In 1945, she published a memoir entitled Souvenirs about her friend Guillaume Apollinaire.[6]
Louise Faure-Favier was one of four women named Chevalier of the Legion of Honor in 1925 for Blanche et Noir. She received a prize from the Académie Française in 1942.
François Sureau of the Académie Française underlined the injustice of Louise Faure-Favier's oblivion in French culture and literature.[7]