Mathieu Lindon

Mathieu Lindon in 2011.

Mathieu Lindon, born in Caen, 9 August 1955, is a French journalist and writer. He is the youngest son of publisher Jérôme Lindon[1](who discovered Marguerite Duras and died in 2001), and the first cousin of actor Vincent Lindon. He won the Médicis Prize in 2011.

Biography

He spent his youth in a wealthy secularized family of Jewish origins with family connections with the Citroën family. His father was a well-known publisher (Éditions de Minuit), highly estimated by left wing and New Wave intellectuals. Mathieu Lindon was a close friend of Michel Foucault with whom he lived and spent most of his time between 1978 and 1984, without being his lover. He was also friend of writer Hervé Guibert with whom he won a scholarship at Villa Medicis in Rome between 1987 and 1989.[2] Hervé Guibert recorded it in L'Incognito, published in 1989.

From the 1980s, Mathieu Lindon has been a journalist at Libération, a left-wing daily. He has written a pamphlet against Jean-Marie Le Pen in 1998.[3] He is openly homosexual and his work deals often with gay thematic.

Bibliography

Notes

  1. Jérôme Garcin, paper in Le Nouvel Obs about Lindon's biography January 11, 2011
  2. Pensionnaires de la Villa Médicis 1988
  3. The Guardian, Furious French writers challenge Le Pen to take them to court, 17 November 1999

See also

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