Jean Tortel

Jean Tortel (4 April 1904, Saint-Saturnin-lès-Avignon, Vaucluse – 2 March 1993[1]) was a 20th-century French poet and essayist.

Works

  • 1931: Cheveux bleus, Albert Messein, Paris
  • 1946: Élémentaires, Mermod, Lausanne
  • 1947: Paroles du poème, Robert Laffont, Paris
  • 1965: Les Villes ouvertes, Éditions Gallimard, Paris
  • 1968: Relations, Gallimard
  • 1971: Limites du regard, Gallimard
  • 1973: Instants qualifiés, Gallimard
  • 1984: Feuilles tombées d'un discours, éditions Ryôan-ji, Marseille, Prix France Culture
  • 1986: Arbitraires espaces, Flammarion, Paris
  • 1989: Des corps attaqués, Flammarion
gollark: I agree, extracurricular stuff is a weird thing to base admission stuff on and probably not all that relevant.
gollark: Standardized test things aren't really ideal in terms of judging how good you actually would be about a subject, but if you actually can measure merit well it seems a way better thing to base admission stuff on than the alternatives. It is kind of a big "if", though.
gollark: I mean, it is still discrimination, it's not *reducing* it.
gollark: Presumably, second amendment?
gollark: It would be neat if they had supercapacitor-based low-end short-range self-driving electric cars which could be temporarily rented from a pool for travel in cities or something.

References

  1. Jean Tortel on Encyclopédie Universalis
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