Jean Daive

Jean Daive
Born Jean de Schrynmakers
(1941-05-13) 13 May 1941
Péruwelz, Belgium
Nationality Belgium
Occupation poet, translator

Jean Daive (born 13 May 1941) is a French poet and translator. He is the author of novels, collections of poetry and has translated work by Paul Celan and Robert Creeley among others.

He has edited encyclopedias, worked as a radio journalist and producer with France Culture, and has edited three magazines: fragment (1970–73), fig. (1989–91), and FIN (1999–2006). His first book, Décimale blanche (Mercure de France, 1967) was translated into German by Paul Celan, and into English by Cid Corman.[1]

Life and work

Jean Daive was born in Bon-Secours, a section of the city of Péruwelz located in Wallonia, a predominantly French speaking southern region of Belgium and part of the province of Hainaut. Having been an encyclopedist for seventeen years, he worked on various radio programs for France Culture from 1975 until 2009.[2]

Publishing since the 1960s and today known as one of the important French avant-garde poets, Daive's work is an investigation alternating between poetry, narration and reflective prose.[3] He has published several interrelated volumes, including a sequence with the general title Narration d'équilibre (1982–90) and the prose series, La Condition d'infini (1995-97: 7 volumes, of which Under the Dome: Walks with Paul Celan, published in English in 2009, is volume 5).

According to Peter France, Daive's tense, elliptical poems explore the difficulties of existence in an enigmatic world.[4]

Also a photographer, Daive chairs the Centre international de poésie de Marseille.[5]

Publications

In English
Poetry
Novels and récits
Other texts
Translations
Interviews

References

  1. Jean Daive: from Under the Dome: A Memoir of Paul Celan the selection includes an introductory note from the translator Rosmarie Waldrop
  2. Jean Daive from the article on the French Wikipedia site
  3. Jean Daive catalogue page at Burning Deck
  4. Jean Daive: Information from Answers.com
  5. http://www.cipmarseille.com/auteur_fiche.php?id=628

Further reading

External links

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