Name: Marguerite Duras
Birthday: April 4, 1914
Constellation: Aries birthday code
Gender: Female
Blood type: Unknown
Region: Vietnam
Province of birth: Unknown
City of birth: Ho Chi Minh City
p>Identity: Writer
About Marguerite Duras
Marguerite Duras (1914]] April 4 March 3, 1996), the most famous contemporary female novelist, playwright and film artist in France. She was born in Jiading, Vietnam on April 4, 1914. Her parents were both primary school teachers. Born in 1914 in Judeng, a northern suburb of Saigon City during the French rule of Vietnam. At the age of 18, he returned to his native France for the first time. Studied law, mathematics, and political science at university in Paris. But he aspires to be a novelist. In 1942, he published his debut novel "The Shameless People", and then published novels such as "Quiet Life", "The Waves of the Pacific", and "The Sailors of Gilbuda". When the Nouveau craze hit France, the New Novel movement also emerged in the French literary world. He is also known as one of the representative writers of new novels for his novel "The Graduation of Diratganda" published in 1958. Won a literary award. In 1959, the famous director Alan Lerner asked her to write the screenplay for his first feature film "Hiroshima Mon Amour". The work was very popular in France, setting a high box office record, and her name spread throughout the world. Later, another film she wrote won an award, and her fame became even more famous, and her novels were adapted into movies one after another. In 1966 she began her directing career. Duras began her literary career with the novel "The Shameless One" (1943). Her works are not only rich in content and diverse in genre, but also pay special attention to style and have a novel and unique style. Her early novel "Pacific Levee" (1950) fully reflected the impoverished life in her childhood, and many other works also took the social reality of Indochina as their themes. "The Sailor of the Strait of Gibraltar" (1952) is full of camera-like images and spoken dialogues, so most of them were adapted into films; later novels such as "The Targinian Pony" (1953), "The Sound of Music" (1958), "The Enchantment of Lor V. Stein" (1964), etc. are good at breaking the traditional narrative mode and integrating fiction and reality. Therefore, she was once considered a writer of the New Novel School. In fact, Her novels are similar to the new novels in terms of technique, emphasizing the poetry and musicality of the style, but they are quite different in terms of conception. She depicts the opposition between rich and poor and human desires in her works, which exposes society in a unique way. Reality. Duras also had outstanding achievements in theater and film. She published three drama collections in 1965, 1968 and 1984 respectively. In 1983, she also won the Drama Grand Prix of the French Academy. As a member of the Left Bank faction, an important French film school, she not only wrote such outstanding film scripts as "Hiroshima Mon Amour" (1960) and "The Long Separation" (1961), but also served as director herself since 1965. Since the film "Song of India" (1974), one or two films have been released every year, and many of them have won international awards. Duras's more than sixty works have always had a wide range of readers and audiences, the most famous of which is the novel "The Lover" (1984), which Duras published when he was seventy years old. In this very popular and exotic work, she recalled with astonishing frankness her first love with a Chinese lover in Indochina when she was sixteen. It won the Prix Goncourt for Literature that year and was translated into More than 40 books in various languages ??have sold more than 2.5 million copies so far, making her the most famous French writer in the world today.
Sunday, March 3, 1996. The popular contemporary French female writer Marguerite Duras has completed her 81-year life journey. Her last work had a prophetic title - "This Is All".
Representative works
1943: "The Shameless Man" (novel)
1944: "A Quiet Life" (novel)
1950: "The Great Pacific Levee" (novel)
1952: "The Sailor of the Strait of Gibraltar" (novel)
1953: "The Pony of Tarquinia" (novel)
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1954: "Days and Nights in the Forest" (novel) Appendix: "The Python", "Mrs. Dodan" and "Construction Site" (novel)
1955: "The Square" (novel) )
1958: "The Cantabile" (novel, the Chinese translation is titled "The Sound of the Piano is Like a Complaint")
1959: "The Dry Bridge of Seine-Oise" (Script)
1960: "Half-A-Ten on a Summer Night" (novel) "Hiroshima Mon Amour" (movie script)
1961: "The Long Separation" (movie script, with money La Jarreau)
1962: "The Afternoon of Monsieur Andesma" (novel)
1964: "The Madness of Lore Val Stein" ( Novel)
1965: "The First Episode of Drama": "River and Forest", "The Square", "Musical Comedy"; "Vice Consul" (novel)
1966: " "Music" (film script)
1967: "The English Lover" (novel)
1958: "The English Lover" (script) "Drama Part 2": "Suzanne Ender" Thunder", "Days and Nights in the Woods", "Yes, Maybe So", "Saga", "A Man Came to See Me".
1969: "She Said Destruction" (novel) "She Said Destruction" (movie)
1970: "Abarn, Sabana, David" (novel)
1971: "Love" (novel) "Yellow Sun" (movie)
1972: "Natalie Grande" (movie)
1973: "Song of India" (movie script) "The Woman of the Ganges" (movie) "Natalie Grande" Attached: "The Woman of the Ganges" (movie script)
1974 : "The Talking Woman" (conversation with Zavier Gautier)
1975: "Song of India" (film)
1976: "Baxtel, Vera Baxter" (film) "Her Name in Venice in Desolate Calcutta" (film)
1976: "Days and Nights in the Woods" (film)
1977: "Truck" (movie) "Truck", with: "Conversation with Michel Porte" (movie script)
"Marguerite Dura's Writings" "The Place" (conversation co-written with Michel Poulter) "The Movie Eden" (screenplay)
1978: "Night Boat" (film)
1979: " "Night Boat", with: "Caesar City", "The Back Hand", "Aurelia Steiner" (movie script)
"Caesar City" (movie)
"The Back Hand" (movie)
"Aurelia Steiner, Aurelia Melburne Says" (movie)
"Aurelia Lea Sidney, Orea Wangkuwe said" (film)
1980: "Vera Baxter or Atlantic Shores" (novel) "Sitting in the Corridor" "Man" (novel) "Summer of 1980" (essay) "Green Eyes" (movie script)
1981: "Agata" (novel) "Agata and Endless Reading" ( Movie) "The Outside World" (essay) "Young Girl and Boy" (audio tape, adapted by Jan André based on "The Summer of 1980", read by Marguerite Dura) "Atlantiques" (movie)
1982: "Dialogues in Rome" (film)
1982: "Atlantic" (novel) "Savannah Bay" (screenplay) "The Sickness of Death" (novel)
1984: "The Third Episode of Drama": "The Jungle Beast", "Asberth's Document", "Dance of Death"; "The Lover" (novel)
1985: "Pain" ” (Novel) “The Musical Sequel” (screenplay) “Chekhov’s Seagull” (essay) “The Children” (film, with Jean Mascolot and Jean-Marc Thirine)
1986: "Blue Eyes, Black Hair" (novel) "The Prostitute of the Normandy Sea" (novel)
1987: "Emily L. "(Novel)
1987: "Material Life" (Essay)
1990: "Xia Yu" (Novel)
1992: "The Man from Northern China" "Lover" (novel) "Lover from Northern China" (movie script)