Jean Schlumberger
Jean Schlumberger was a French writer and journalist. He was born in Guebwiller, Alsace-Lorraine, and died in Paris.Biography
Pierre Conrad Nicolas Jean Schlumberger was the son of Paul Schlumberger, the scion of a textile manufacturing family of Alsatian origin, and Marguerite de Witt, the granddaughter of François Guizot. Two of his brothers, Conrad and Marcel, founded the Schlumberger company.
Jean Schlumberger is best known as a writer of novels, plays and books of poetry. He was co-founder of the Nouvelle Revue Française, a French literary journal. He counted the famous writer Marguerite Yourcenar among his friends. His non-fiction, especially his autobiography, Éveils, has been neglected by critics and literary historians.
Schlumberger was awarded an honorary doctorate from Leiden University in 1954, together with E. M. Forster and Victor E. van Vriesland.Works
- La mort de Sparte. This play premièred at the Théâtre du Vieux-Colombier in Paris in 1921, and was not well received by the critics or the public.
- Césaire, play.
- Les fils Louverné, play.
- Le camarade infidèle, novel, 1922.
- Plaisir à Corneille – Promenade Anthologique, 1936.
- Saint Saturnin, 1932.
- Le lion devenu vieux