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Alain Soral, identified in the civil registry as Alain Bonnet, and frequently also named using the full family name as Alain Bonnet de Soral (; born 2 October 1958), is a Franco-Swiss essayist, and film maker, as well as being the author of several polemical essays. He is the brother of the actress Agnès Soral, who first used the simplified "Soral" pseudonym, which her brother now also uses. Soral lives in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques. Since June 2004, he has been a boxing coach. Soral used to work for the far-right National Front, and co-founded in July 2015 his own party, ''Réconciliation Nationale''. == Life and career == Soral was born in Aix-les-Bains, Savoie and grew up in the suburbs of Annemasse (department of Haute-Savoie), where he attended a local primary school. When Soral was about 12, his family moved to Meudon la Forêt so that he could go to a reputable private Catholic high school, the Collège Stanislas de Paris.〔 (« Du communisme au nationalisme : itinéraire d’un intellectuel français » ), allocution prononcée à Vénissieux le vendredi 2 March 2007.〕 Soral spent two years doing small jobs before being accepted into the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts at 20, where he studied for two years. Soral was then taken in by a family of academics, who encouraged him to enroll at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, where he attended lectures given by Cornelius Castoriadis. Following his studies, and working with Hector Obalk and Alexandre Pasche, Soral wrote a book on the sociology of trendiness, ''Les mouvements de mode expliqués aux parents'', as well as a fictionalised autobiography, ''Le Jour et la nuit ou la vie d'un vaurien''. The latter work sold badly, and this led Soral to turn away from writing for a time. Soral then focused on cinematic techniques, and after 2 promotional films, wrote and directed his first short film, ''Chouabadaballet, une dispute amoureuse entre deux essuie-glaces''. After a stint as a reporter in Zimbabwe, Soral wrote and directed his second short film, ''Les Rameurs, misère affective et culture physique à Carrière-sur-Seine''. In the mean time, Soral had joined the French Communist Party. He became interested in the works of Karl Marx and other Marxist thinkers such as Georg Lukács, Henri Wallon, Lucien Goldmann and Michel Clouscard. He published ''Sociologie du dragueur'' ("Sociology of the womaniser"), his most successful sociological essay to date. Soral performed in Catherine Breillat's 1996 film ''Parfait Amour!'' in the role of Philippe. He then published another polemical essay, ''Vers la féminisation? - Démontage d'un complot antidémocratique'' ("Towards feminisation? - Analysis of an antidemocratic plot"), and spent the following couple of years writing and directing his first full-length movie, ''Confession d'un dragueur'' ("Confessions of a womaniser"), which was a commercial and critical failure.〔 (< In the 2007 he became part of the central committee of Front National, trying to place social issues in the program of the party. He left the party in 2009. His latest essay ''Comprendre l'Empire'': ''Demain la gouvernance mondiale ou la Révolte des nations'' (''Understanding the Empire'': ''Tomorrow global governance or an uprising of nations'')〔http://www.comprendrelempire.fr〕 was published in France on 10 February 2011, and is a best-seller in France despite being ostracized by the mainstream media. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Alain Soral」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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