Jean-Jacques Brochier


Jean-Jacques Brochier, the son of a physician, was a French journalist, and chief editor of Le Magazine Littéraire from 1968 to 2004.

Biography

As a student, he was actively engaged with the NLF and became a member of the Réseau Jeanson. On 24 November 1960, while he was vice-president of the General Assembly of the students of Lyon, he was arrested along with his wife in support of the struggle for the independence of Algeria. On 14 April 1961 they were both sentenced to ten years imprisonment and jailed in prisons Saint- Paul then Montluc. He was struck with indignité nationale. He will finally be sentenced to three years in prison before receiving a presidential pardon.
Close to Gilles Deleuze and Dominique de Roux who guides him to le Magazine littéraire, in 1967, an admirer of Martin Heidegger and Jean-Paul Sartre, he had in his possession a desk of Émile Zola and became a television columnist in, a program proposed by :fr:Marc Gilbert|Marc Gilbert.
He published several novels, including Un jeune homme bien élevé , Un cauchemar Prix du Livre Inter, and L'Hallali. He is also the author of essays - notably on Camus, Sade, Vailland, Robbe-Grillet, Maupassant and Sartre - and the pamphlet entitled .
From 1995, he was a member of the jury of the. He was an honorary member of the of Saint-Malo
In 1997, Jean-Jacques Brochier established with Danièle Brison and the prize "Printemps du Roman", awarded each year at Saint-Louis, at the book fair of which he was president until his death in 2004. The presidency has since been awarded to a different jury member each year.

Private life

Passionate about hunting, a painter, he published a collection of anthologies on woodcock, wild boar, deer, rabbit, wild ducks and snipe. He married Nicole Brochier, born April 8, 1937.

Distinctions