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Robert Escarpit, born on 24 April 1918 in Saint-Macaire (Gironde, France) - 19 November 2000 in Langon (Gironde), was a French academic, writer and journalist. He is most known to the public for his satiric articles in newspapers such as Le Monde in which he wrote around twenty columns per month from 1949 to 1979.[1]


Life



Youth


Escarpit spent his childhood and adolescence in Gironde. At the age of eighteen (1936), he chose to study English, more by necessity and interest as he wanted to continue his studies. He finished his associate, graduate, and postgraduate studies ending with a "Doctor of Literature" degree. He worked as a high-school teacher in Arcachon ( Gironde ) from 1943 to 1945. As a specialist in English literature, he is the author of some fifty books between fiction and sociological essays and novels .


Journalist


Escarpit became known for his satirical short stories in Le Monde and as a literary critic for many magazines, columnist of Le Matin in 1983, then Sud-Ouest.


Professor and sociologist


After World War II, he was Secretary General and Director of the French Institute of Latin America in Mexico. Later he was assistant professor of English and professor of comparative literature at the Faculty of Arts of Bordeaux (1951-1970), and founder of the Sociology Center of Literature which opened in 1960 (later Institute of Literature and Art of Mass Techniques) .

Escarpit served as the scientific director of the "International Dictionary of Literary Terms" Project (DITL V.2), ongoing project funded by the International Comparative Literature Association continued from 1988 by Jean-Marie Grassin.[2]


Communication science


In his own words: "To measure the stakes of writing, one must understand what reading is, how to receive the text message. This is a strictly scientific approach." He published articles in the journal of the University of Belgrade, Filološki pregled, in 1963. His book The sociology of literature (French: La sociologie de la littérature) published in French in 1958, was translated into 23 languages.

In 1965, he wrote, at the request of UNESCO, The Revolution of the book (French: La révolution du livre). The book, translated into 20 languages, analyzes the phenomenon of the mass-market paperback book and the consequences of the arrival in the world of inexpensive books. He found that the book-problem must be studied as a problem of communication through writing. So, immersed in literature of "communicology", he became one of the first scholars to introduce and promote in France the science of communication.


Career and recognition of CIS


In 1960, he founded the "Centre for Sociology of Literary Facts" which became in 1965 the "Institute of Literature and Art Mass Techniques", and in 1978 "Science Lab for Information and Communication" (French: Laboratoire des Sciences de L’information et de la Communication). This center would be recognized as the engine of the "School of Bordeaux," a leader in this discipline.

In 1967, he was commissioned to create the "School of Bordeaux", which focused on social and socio-cultural entertainment, being the director of it from 1970 to 1975.

In 1972, in co-operation with other writers, researchers, and academics, including Jean Meyriat and Roland Barthes, he created a pressure group whose aim is to obtain academic recognition for Information and Communication Sciences.

This leads to the creation of an Information Science and Communication Committee, which became the French Society of Information Science and Communication (SFSIC).

Escarpit became president of the University of Bordeau, and Professor of Information Sciences and Communication between 1975 and 1978.


His research and his theory of information science and communication


In 1976, he was a pioneer, at least in France, coming out with the "General Theory of Information Sciences and Communication". This study, which presents an overview of information science and communication for today remains an essential book for anyone interested in this field of science. It affirms the need to account for both phenomena of the information, so the documentation in general and those relating to communication.

As he himself says: "For me, the information is the content of the communication, and the communication is the vehicle of information".[3]


Political commitment


Robert Escarpit was an activist in the SFIO (Section française de l'Internationale ouvrière) at the time of the Popular Front. Engaged in the French Resistance, he participated in 1945 in the fighting of the Médoc with the Carnot Brigrade. He was the editor of the Le Canard enchaîné during the Algerian war of independence. Follower of the French Communist Party (PCF), Robert Escarpit eventually became member of the Aquitaine Regional Council (1986-1992) and councilor on the PCF lists.

Escarpit was the co-founder of the "Franco-Albanian Friendship Society", director of Albanie (Albania) newspaper, and supported Communism in Albania. In March 1990, he published in the daily Le Monde' his vision for the future of back then communist countries in relation to Perestroika. Comparing the communist parties to useful churches to hear a different voice, but victims of their bureaucratic functioning and device preservation strategies, he quoted Ramiz Alia, successor of Enver Hoxha at the head of the Albanian Labor Party in September 1989 which reaffirmed that "...The debate and confrontation of ideas, solutions, alternatives, practices are quite normal".[4]


Writer


Escarpit received in 1960 the "Peinture fraîche" prize. He has published several novels, including the Young Man and Night (Jeune Homme et la nuit) (1980), and A beautiful day to die (Un si beau jour pour mourir) (1992).

In 1964, he published one of his most famous novels, the Littératron. Littératron followed after the 1968 government changes, and it makes fun of politicians and businessmen.

In the 1980s, he wrote children's books which he illustrated himself, included in the series Rouletabosse. He then wrote the trilogy of Travels of Azembat, seaman of Biscay (French: Voyages d'Azembat, marin de Gascogne).

In 1953, and with the agreement of Jean Bruel, founding director of the Bateau Mouche of Paris, Robert Escarpit wrote a biography of the fictional Jean-Sébastien Mouche, where he is both the collaborator of Georges-Eugène Haussmann, the inventor of riverboats, and the creator of a police inspectorate specialized in intelligence, the "cookies". A reception in honor of the centenary of Jean-Sébastien Mouche saw even the presence of a minister.


Quotations


*Secularism is the universal availability of human heritage, it is the law that every man is master of his property and that its property is wherever there are men.


Publications



Bibliography



References


  1. Nicole, Robine (2001), Hommage à Robert Escarpit, Talence: Presses universitaires de Bordeaux, ISBN 2-911185-06-4
  2. DITL www.ditl.info
  3. Jean Devèze et Anne-Marie Laulan, Interview de Robert Escarpit en 1992, publié par la SFSIC
  4. Voir son article dans le Monde du 14 mars 1990, curieusement titré: "Pour un élu communiste non membre du Parti communiste les événements de l'Europe de l'Est posent quelques questions qu'il faut essayer d'envisager avec sang-froid."
  5. www.cndp.fr

На других языках


- [en] Robert Escarpit

[ru] Эскарпи, Робер

Робе́р Эскарпи́ (фр. Robert Escarpit, 24 апреля 1918 (1918-04-24), Сен-Макер, Жиронда — 19 ноября 2000, Лангон, Жиронда) — французский социолог, писатель, журналист.



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