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・ Jean Gilbert
・ Jean Gilbert (diver)
・ Jean Gilbert Bayaram
・ Jean Gilbert Victor Fialin, duc de Persigny
・ Jean Gilles
・ Jean Gilles (composer)
・ Jean Gilles (French Army officer)
・ Jean Gilletta
・ Jean Gillie
・ Jean Gillon
・ Jean Gilpin
・ Jean Gimbel Lane Prize in Piano Performance
・ Jean Gimpel
・ Jean Ginibre
・ Jean Ginn Marvin
Jean Giono
・ Jean Giono Prize
・ Jean Giral
・ Jean Girard
・ Jean Girardet
・ Jean Giraud
・ Jean Giraud (mathematician)
・ Jean Giraudeau
・ Jean Giraudoux
・ Jean Girault
・ Jean Girel
・ Jean Glavany
・ Jean Glover
・ Jean Goblet d'Alviella
・ Jean Godden


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Jean Giono : ウィキペディア英語版
Jean Giono

Jean Giono (30 March 1895 – 8 October 1970) was a French author who wrote works of fiction mostly set in the Provence region of France.
==First period==
He was born to a family of modest means, his father a cobbler of Piedmontese descent and his mother a laundry woman. He spent the majority of his life in Manosque, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence. Forced by family needs to leave school at the age of sixteen and get a job in a bank, he nevertheless continued to read voraciously, in particular the great classic works of literature including the Bible, Homer's ''Iliad'', the works of Virgil, and the ''Tragiques'' of Agrippa d'Aubigné. He continued to work at the bank until he was called up for military service at the outbreak of World War I, and the horrors he experienced on the front lines turned him into a lifelong and ardent pacifist. In 1919, he returned to the bank, and a year later, married a childhood friend with whom he had two children. Following the success of his first novel, ''Colline'' (1929) (which won him the Prix Brentano and $1000, and an English translation of the book〔), he left the bank in 1930 to devote himself to writing on a full-time basis.
''Colline'' was followed by two more novels heavily influenced by Virgil and Homer, ''Un de Baumugnes'' (1929) and ''Regain'' (1930), the three together comprising the famous “Pan Trilogy”, so-called because in it Giono depicts the natural world as being imbued with the power of the Greek god Pan. The other novels Giono published during the nineteen-thirties on the whole continued in the same vein, set in Provence, with peasants as protagonists, and displaying a pantheistic view of nature. Marcel Pagnol based three of his films on Giono’s work of this period: ''Regain'', with Fernandel and music by Honegger, ''Angèle'', and ''La Femme du boulanger'', with Raimu.〔
Throughout the nineteen-thirties, Giono was also expressing the pacifism he had adopted as a result of his experiences during World War I in novels such as ''Le grand troupeau'' (1931), and pamphlets such as ''Refus d’obéissance'' (1937), and the ''Lettre aux paysans sur la pauvreté et la paix'' (1938).〔 This in turn resulted in his forming a relationship with a group of like-minded people including Lucien Jacques and Henri Fluchère among others, who gathered each year in the hamlet of Contadour, and whose pacifist writings were published as the ''Cahiers du Contadour''.〔(Bibliographie des ouvrages de Jean GIONO ) (in French)〕

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