- Myanmar flood death toll climbs to 293: state media
- Israel army says West Bank air strike kills 4 militants
- LIV golfers get green light for US Ryder Cup team, PGA Championship
- US accuses social media giants of 'vast surveillance'
- Ten Hag to bed Hojlund, Mount in carefully when they return for Man Utd
- Breaking bad as McIlroy endures 'weird' day
- EU chief announces $11 bn for nations hit by 'heartbreaking' floods
- Spanish PM, Palestinian leader urge Mideast de-escalation
- New study reinforces theory Covid emerged at Chinese market
- World Bank boosts climate financing by 10 percent
- Bagnaia eyeing summit on home ground in 100th MotoGP
- 'Something was wrong', defendant in French mass rape tells court
- Hezbollah chief admits 'unprecedented' blow in device blasts
- Sales of US existing homes slip slightly in August
- Fear, panic haunt Lebanese after devices explode
- Labuschagne sparks Australia fightback in England ODI opener
- S.Africa's HIV research power couple says fight goes on
- Why is Israel focusing on border with Lebanon?
- Mpox vaccines administered in Rwanda, first in Africa
- US Fed rate cut is 'very positive sign' for economy: Yellen
- Unknown Mozart string trio discovered in Germany
- 'Are we five-year-olds?' F1 drivers won't mind their language
- Brazil judge orders X to reimpose block or face hefty fine
- Munich to rename stadium street after Beckenbauer
- Champions Italy to face Argentina in Davis Cup Final 8
- The winding, fitful path to weight loss drug Ozempic
- Italians defeat American Magic to reach Louis Vuitton Cup final
- Norris has 'nothing to lose' as he hunts Verstappen in Singapore
- Kyiv 'outraged' at Swiss showing of Russian war film
- French city renames Abbe Pierre square after abuse claims
- Footballer charged after huge cannabis seizure at UK airport
- Vatican recognises Medjugorje shrine, but not Virgin's messages
- Israel bombs Hezbollah strongholds in Lebanon after wave of deadly blasts
- Bank of England freezes rate after jumbo US cut
- Playing Nadal is 'kind of a nightmare', says Alcaraz
- Portugal tackles last of deadly northern forest fires
- Ton-up Ashwin lifts India to 339-6 against Bangladesh
- Departing NATO chief warns US against 'isolationism'
- Coming winter 'sternest test yet' for Ukraine energy grid
- Evacuations as tail of Storm Boris floods northeast Italy
- Lebanon's Hezbollah reeling after second wave of deadly blasts
- Taiwan recognises same-sex marriages between Chinese, Taiwanese
- Stock markets rally after jumbo US rate cut
- Gabon's ousted leader Bongo says renouncing politics for good
- Lebanon device blasts: what we know about deadly attacks
- Equity markets rally after jumbo US rate cut
- Late Harrods owner Al-Fayed accused of rape: BBC
- Hong Kong man sentenced 14 months for wearing 'seditious' T-shirt
- Lebanon's Hezbollah in disarray after second wave of deadly blasts
- Equity markets, yen rally after jumbo US rate cut
CMSC | -0.06% | 25.04 | $ | |
BCC | 4.69% | 143.802 | $ | |
JRI | -0.3% | 13.4 | $ | |
RIO | 3.36% | 65.1 | $ | |
BCE | -0.94% | 35.28 | $ | |
GSK | -1.28% | 41.895 | $ | |
SCS | -6.17% | 13.29 | $ | |
RBGPF | 5.79% | 60.5 | $ | |
RYCEF | 5.76% | 6.95 | $ | |
AZN | 0.73% | 79.16 | $ | |
CMSD | 0.16% | 25.02 | $ | |
BTI | -0.7% | 37.615 | $ | |
RELX | 1.69% | 48.185 | $ | |
VOD | -1.49% | 10.08 | $ | |
NGG | -1.6% | 68.95 | $ | |
BP | 1.53% | 32.935 | $ |
Nobel winner Ernaux: godmother of French grit lit
Hugely popular for her deceptively simple novels drawing on personal experience of class and gender, the Nobel Literature Prize winner Annie Ernaux is a kind of French working-class Marcel Proust.
Over some 20 books -- many of which have been school texts in France for decades -- she has unsparingly examined one of the country's great taboos -- class -- often through the prism of her own life.
In so doing she has become a trailblazer for a whole generation of French writers from tough and immigrant backgrounds.
Virginie Despentes of "Vernon Subutex" fame has hailed her as a key influence and Edouard Louis, whose first novel about growing up gay and in poverty in northern France was translated into more than 20 languages, said he had been "deeply affected by the power and beauty" of Ernaux's work.
Her books are the grit in the French literary oyster, offering an alternative, as she puts it, to the "unconditional admiration for the pretty phrase."
They have also made it to the screen, with "Happening", adapted from her own semi-autobiographical work about having an illegal abortion, nominated for a BAFTA award this year.
- My story, your story -
Outside France, recognition for her work has only come in recent years, notably after the English translation of her key 2008 work, "The Years", which was nominated for the prestigious Man Booker International Prize in 2019.
In it Ernaux used family photos as well as scraps of popular culture to recall her life and explore the impact of bigger historical events.
Personal experiences are the source for all Ernaux's work and she is the pioneer of France's "autofiction" genre, which gives narrative form to real-life experience.
"When I write I do not have the impression of looking inside me, I look inside a memory," she once said.
- Fame and shame -
Ernaux, who was born on September 1, 1940 in Yvetot in Normandy, and grew up above a little cafe-shop run by her parents, calls herself a "class defector".
She has explored this in many of her books and in doing so has offered a literary lifeline to young writers also emerging from humble backgrounds.
Climbing the social ladder also left its mark and she has been candid about the guilt and shame in what she felt was an act of betrayal against her parents and their way of life.
"Writing is the thing I can do best... as a defector, a political act and as a gift," said Ernaux, who left home for university when she was 18.
- Feminist model -
Ernaux is a feminist model to many -- independent and outspoken and someone who has come through some pretty harrowing experiences.
Her first novel "Cleaned Out" in 1974 was a cool-eyed but harrowing account of an abortion she went through in her youth and that she had kept secret from her family.
She married in her mid-twenties and had two boys, but got divorced in 1984 and raised her sons alone, keeping on with her writing and teaching in the Paris suburb of Cergy-Pontoise, where she still lives.
Ernaux said her decision to keep a day job was due to her fear of losing everything -- a worry rooted in the working-class struggles of her youth -- and also the desire to keep her writing free from financial obligations.
"If I made writing my only job I would be forced to want my books to sell", and this "material necessity" would rub off on the work, however unconsciously, "it stains it".
In recent years Ernaux has been a strong voice supporting the #MeToo movement, which was longer to take off in France with the likes of actress Catherine Deneuve initially defending male "gallantry" and men's right to hit on women.
"I was so ashamed for Deneuve," Ernaux said, describing her comments as "the reflection of a group of privileged women."
"In France we hear so much about our culture of seduction, but it's not seduction, it's male domination."
D.Sawyer--AMWN