Jean-Richard Bloch (25 May 1884 – 15 March 1947) was a French critic, novelist and playwright.
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He was a member of the French Communist Party (PCF) and worked with Louis Aragon in the evening daily Ce soir.[1]
Bloch was born into a Jewish family.[1] His father was an engineer with the SNCF.
He became a professional writer in 1909, after having worked for two years in a high school as an aggregated teacher. By this time, he was already known as a left-leaning intellectual. In 1910 he launched L’Effort libre, a "review of revolutionary civilization".[2]
He joined the French Army in World War I and was injured three times on the battlefields of the Marne and in Verdun. After the war, he felt remorse for having joined the army. He also suffered from neurosis caused by the horrors of war and by the premature death of his youngest daughter, Solange. It was during this time that Bloch traveled to Africa on the advice of a friend. His logbook made during this maritime voyage was published in newspapers and magazines of the period and was later serialized into a three volume book set.[3]
In 1937, he was responsible for organising Naissance d'une cité, a "popular spectacle" performed on 19 October as part of the Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne.[4]
Brother-in-law of André Maurois.[1]
Media related to Jean-Richard Bloch at Wikimedia Commons
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