Albert Ollivier

Alter Ollivier was a French historian, author, journalist, politician and member of the French resistance. He was born March 1, 1915 in Paris and died July 18, 1964 in Paris.

Biography

After studying law and literature in Sorbonne, then in political sciences, Albert Ollivier started reading the Nouvelle Revue française. He became Gaston Gallimard's secretary in 1937. Enlisted in 1939, he later became a radio journalist alongside Claude Roy, but soon left the Vichy radio to join the ranks of the French Resistance. During the occupation, he worked on Combat, the clandestine newspaper of the Resistance, and participated in the Resistance radio movement with Maurice Bourdet and Pierre Schaeffer, preparing with this team of journalists the shows for the future "radio libre" (free radio) in a semi-secret Paris studio. He remained friends with André Malraux and Albert Camus, and did not resist the charisma of Charles de Gaulle.

Editor of Combat with Camus at the 1944 Liberation (he would later quit in 1945), Ollivier became a member of the first drafting committee Les Temps moderns, a journal created by Jean-Paul Satre.

gollark: Those are bizarre customs and stuff too, yes.
gollark: They may have "mandatory" bizarre rituals, or be annoying to outsiders. But modern societies also do similar things to some extent, so "yaaaaay".
gollark: As planned.
gollark: That would also be annoying. The various Greek/Latin epics I've read bits of are **3** long.
gollark: Yes, that would also be annoying.
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