Mickael Korvin


Mickael Korvin is a Franco-American author and translator, who is of Hungarian origin. He is best known for his French spelling reform called “nouvofrancet”, an extremely simplified method of learning, teaching, writing and sharing the French language. He lives in Paris.

Works

Fluent in the English and French languages, Korvin has alternated between writing novels in French and English, and translating foreign texts into French. His early work, Le boucher du Vaccarès and Je, Toro revisited the nouveau roman in an attempt to break what Korvin saw as the reigning nostalgia in contemporary French letters. Korvin's translations include Iggy Pop's I Need More and 19th-century American anarchist Lysander Spooner's Vices Are Not Crimes. Korvin formerly worked in advertising and journalism, but subsequently became a full-time writer and linguist. He is also a dealer in antique toys and art brut from his stall in the les Puces flea-market in Saint-Ouen, northern Paris.

Controversy

In early 2012, Korvin published a novel, Journal d'une cause perdue, which formed part of his campaign to abolish accents, capital letters and all punctuation from written language, specifically the French language. His campaign gained notoriety in France as a result of a promotional video Korvin filmed with Franco-Algerian rapper :fr:Morsay|Morsay, during which the rapper threatened to sexually violate grammarian and member of the Académie française Érik Orsenna. During the video, Korvin called Orsenna a "dictator of grammar" who is "killing the French language." The video was filmed in Les Puces, a flea-market in the Saint-Ouen area of Paris. An article on the website of French culture magazine L'Express called Korvin's intervention "fleas against the Académie française", while the same article compared Korvin's stance in Journal d'une cause perdue to Queneau, Apollinaire, Perec and Tristan Tzara. An article in le Nouvel Observateur compared Korvin's stance on punctuation with those of Georges Perec, Mathias Énard and Philippe Sollers. When contacted for a response to Korvin's position, Orsenna's publicist, in an attempt to put an end to the feud, provided a brief statement suited to the author of An Elegy for Punctuation: "full stop".
Korvin subsequently proposed himself for membership of the Académie, in a public letter that was published on the website of L'Express. The controversy was also covered by the magazine Les Inrocks and the daily newspaper Libération. In mid-April 2012 another video was posted online, in which Korvin and Morsay, wearing balaclavas and calling themselves the "front intl de libération de la langue française", humiliated the broadcaster and writer Patrick Poivre d'Arvor, calling him a plagiarist — referring to accusations that Poivre d'Arvre, who has also been nominated for membership of the Académie plagiarized portions of his recent biography of Ernest Hemingway from another work — and the Machiavelli of the media. On April 19, 2012, Korvin was officially listed as a candidate to the Académie. On April 26, 2012, following the vote to fill another empty chair at the Académie, at the fourth vote, Poivre d'Arvor only received the votes of two academicians, including one from Erik Orsenna.
On that same day, Korvin, published a manifesto for the simplification of French on L'Express titled j'abuse in reference to the J'Accuse…! by Émile Zola, published on January 13, 1898.
In the beginning of 2016, Korvin published his ninth novel, L'homme qui se croyait plus beau qu'il n'était at which occasion he also introduced his nouvofrancet under the alternative title - lom qi se croyet plubo qil netet - which is the same as the paper format, but using the simplified spelling that he had proposed.
In 2020 the author also became a singer-composer videocaster publishing up to seven songs per week — one of them is, for example, Signs of Hope in Wonderland.

Novels