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Robert Poulet : ウィキペディア英語版 | Robert Poulet
Robert Poulet (4 September 1893 – 6 October 1989) was a Belgian writer, literary critic and journalist. Politically he was a Maurras-inspired integral nationalist who became associated with a collaborationist newspaper during the occupation of Belgium by Nazi Germany. ==Literature == Educated at the Faculté des Mines in his hometown, Poulet served in the First World War and before taking odd jobs in Belgium and France.〔Adèle King, ''Rereading Camara Laye'', 2002, p. 132〕 He began writing for a number of literary reviews in the 1920s and published his first novel, the surrealist ''Handji'', in 1931.〔King, ''Rereading Camara Laye'', p. 133〕 He became a part of the 'Groupe du Lundi' that built up around Franz Hellens which attacked the regional novels prevalent in France at the time and instead endorsed magic realism.〔King, ''Rereading Camara Laye'', p. 134〕 As a literary critic he became noted for his rejection of female authors, dismissing them as ''midinettes en diable''.〔Toril Moi, ''Simone de Beauvoir: The Making of an Intellectual Woman'', 1994, pp. 78-9〕
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