Raphaël Tardon

Raphaël Louis Thomas Tardon (October 27, 1911 - January 16, 1967) was a French writer, novelist and essayist of Martiniquais origin. He was the father of screenwriter Bruno Tardon. He was posthumously awarded the Prix littéraire des Caraïbes in 1966 for his complete body of work.

Biography

Born into a wealthy family in Fort-de-France, Martinique, Tardon attended at the Lycee Schoelcher in Fort-de-France and studied law and history in France. At the outbreak of World War II he served briefly in the French army and later in the resistance in southern France.[1] After the war, he worked in Paris as a journalist, and subsequently worked for the Ministry of Information, in Madagascar, Dakar and Guadeloupe.[1]

His first published book was a collection of stories, Bleu des Isles. It was followed by the novels Starkenfirst (1947), which deals with the slave trade,[1] La Caldeira (1948), and Christ aux poing(1950). In 1951 he published the biography Toussaint Louverture, le Napoléon noir, and in 1963 a study of race entitled Noirs et blancs.

Tardon died in Paris in 1967.

List of works

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Tardon, Raphaël", in Donald E. Herdeck (ed), Caribbean Writers: A Bio-Bibliographical-Critical Encyclopedia, Washington, DC: Three Continents Press, 1979, pp. 510-11.


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