Le Clézio, Jean-Marie Gustave

Le Clézio, Jean-Marie Gustave

▪ French author
born April 13, 1940, Nice, France

      French author known for his richly poetic language and his ability to write across cultural divides. He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2008.

      Le Clézio grew up in a small village outside Nice. As a child he spent a year in Nigeria, an experience that informed his later work. In 1964 he earned a master's degree at the University of Aix-en-Provence, and he went on to receive a doctorate from the University of Perpignan.

      Le Clézio's debut novel, Le Procés-verbal (1963; “The Interrogation”), follows the meandering attempts of an introspective young man to escape the responsibilities of the human condition. It was an immediate success. He continued to write prolifically and gained even greater recognition with the release of Désert (1980), considered to be his breakthrough novel. Désert examines the effects of French colonialism on a female member of the nomadic Saharan Tuareg tribe; it was awarded the Grand Prix Paul Morand by the Académie Française.

      Le Clézio's works also include essays, criticism, children's literature, and memoirs. His later works include Onitsha (1991), a semiautobiographical tale influenced by his childhood year in Nigeria, and Ballaciner (2007), a memoir of the artist as a moviegoer.

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Universalium. 2010.

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