Feminist Review

, Volume 85, Issue 1, pp 8–20 | Cite as

Simone Téry (1897–1967): writing the history of the present in inter-war France

  • Angela Kershaw
Article
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Abstract

Simone Téry (1897–1967), French journalist and novelist, joined the French Communist Party in the mid-1930s after visiting the Soviet Union. She worked as a correspondent for L'Humanité, Vendredi and Regards; the latter post took her to Spain during the Civil War. The resulting texts, Front de la liberté: Espagne 1937–1938 (1938) and Où l'aube se lève (1945), form the basis of my analysis of Téry's desire to write the history of the present in inter-war France. These texts, a work of reportage and a novel respectively, illustrate the relationship between the poetic, or imaginative, and the historical, or factual, in historical fiction. This relationship is particularly relevant to the literary history of 1930s France, given the highly politicized nature of literary production in the period and the resulting debates over the nature and future of the realist novel. Téry's rejection of modernism in favour of socialist realism suggests a conversion, common in left-wing writers of the period, to the notion that the modernist text is incapable of ‘containing’ history. The essay raises the question of French women writers’ relationship to committed literature in the 1930s, and demonstrates that women were active in this domain.

Keywords

literature and politics women's writing Simone Téry inter-war France Spanish civil war socialist realism modernism commitment reportage genre 

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© Feminist Review Ltd 2007

Authors and Affiliations

  • Angela Kershaw

There are no affiliations available

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