Alain Gheerbrant


Alain Gheerbrant was a French writer, editor, poet and explorer, noted for his expedition inside the basins of Amazonian rivers.

Career

Alain Gheerbrant was the first avant-garde publisher, founder of the publishing house K Éditeur, which published in particular the works by Antonin Artaud, Benjamin Péret, Georges Bataille, Aimé Césaire, et cetera. For the second edition of Story of the Eye by Bataille, Gheerbrant introduced Bataille to the German artist Hans Bellmer in May 1946: "It was tempting, says Gheerbrant, to make a dialogue between a papist and a Lutheran on their common obsession. One's Nordic and surgical precision was made to give shape to the nocturnal and romantic imaginations of the other. The project took their common approval from the outset." Moreover, the book has been entirely rewritten by Bataille himself, still published by K Éditeur.
From 1948 to 1950, Alain Gheerbrant led the Orinoco-Amazon expedition. He travelled through the basin of both rivers for two years and wrote of his travels in L'Expédition Orénoque-Amazone. He is considered the first Westerner who had peaceful contact with the Yanomami Indians and also the first to cross the Parima Mountains between 1948 and 1950. In 1952, he directed a documentary film called Des hommes qu'on appelle sauvages.
He has produced numerous reports all over the world and published Dictionnaire des symboles in 1982, a collaborative work with Jean Chevalier, an encyclopaedia of cultural anthropology about the symbolism of myths and folklore, which was republished 19 times between 1982 and 1997. He authored an illustrated pocket book for the "Découvertes Gallimard" collection, L'Amazone, un géant blessé, which has been translated into eleven languages, including English. In 1995, he released his memoir entitled La Transversale.

Selected bibliography