Augustin Hamon
Augustin Frédéric Hamon (1862–1945) was a French socialist-anarchist writer and editor.
Hamon founded the anarchist magazine L'Humanité nouvelle in 1897, and edited it until 1903.[1]
Hamon met George Bernard Shaw for the first time at a Fabian Congress in London in 1894.[2] From 1904 onwards he and his wife Henriette (née Rynenbroeck) translated Shaw's work into French.[3]
His papers are held at the International Institute of Social History.[1]
Works
- Les hommes et les théories du l'anarchie, 1893
- Psychologie de l'anarchiste-socialiste, 1895
- La psychologie du militaire professionnel, 1894
- Patrie et Internationalisme, 1896
- Un Anarchisme, fraction du socialisme, 1896
- Une enquête sur la guerre et le militarisme, 1899. Reprinted 1972.
- The twentieth century Molière: Bernard Shaw, 1911
- The technique of Bernard Shaw's plays, 1912
- Lessons of the world-war, 1917
References
- 1 2 Augustin Frédéric Adolphe Hamon Papers
- ↑ Miron Grindea, Art, drama, architecture and music: an anthology of Miron Grindea's ADAM editorials, 2006, p. 11.
- ↑ Bernard F. Dukore, ed., Selected Correspondence of George Bernard Shaw. Vol. 3. Bernard Shaw and Gabriel Pascal. University of Toronto Press, 1996, p. 4.
External links
- Anarchist Encyclopedia: Augustin Hamon
- Works by or about Augustin Hamon in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
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