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He used literature to "smuggle" philosophy french literary star Michel Tunier gone

Michel Tunier, who was bent on "smuggling" philosophy with literature, is dead. The late French literary master did not publish his debut novel Friday until the age of 43, and three years later won the Goncourt Prize for "Memory of the Left Hand", before which his dream was to become a professor of philosophy.

Michel Tunier is considered a representative figure of the second half of the 20th century in French literature. He died at home on 18 January at the age of 91. French President François Hollande issued a mourning statement praising him as a "giant" and a "great writer.".

Wang Xiaobo once commented that after reading michel Tunier's works, he realized that foreign novels have developed so much in the decades that we have been closed off.

Tunier's writings are often warm and pulsating, but in their bones they are as cold as a scalpel, and it may be his philosophical traits that come into play in Friday's exploration of the relationship between man and others and the world, and the revelation of the collective fate of mankind in Alder King.

It is no wonder that he can become the representative of the new allegorical school- the fable itself is full of philosophical speculation, he is just expressing it in a different way.

Tournier rewrote Defoe's widely circulated old work Robinson Crusoe, injecting it with deep philosophical depth, and won the Académie de France prize in one fell swoop.

In 2004, he launched a short collection of stories, Telling Stories, which specifically used donations to combat AIDS in South Africa. In addition, Tunier's "Memory of the Left Hand" was adapted by the german director Shrandorf into the film "Apocalypse in the Troubled World".

Service

Domestically published

● 《King Maki》

Shanghai Translation Publishing House

● "Love Midnight Meal"

People's Literature Publishing House

● "Friday: Spiritual Hell in the Pacific"

(Qianjiang Evening News)

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