François_Wahl
François Wahl (13 May 1925 - 15 September 2014) was a French editor and structuralist.[1]
François Wahl | |
---|---|
Born | May 13, 1925 |
Died | September 15, 2014 Avilly-Saint-Léonard, France |
Nationality | French |
François Wahl was editor at the Éditions du Seuil, a publishing company in Paris.[2] He was the editor of Jacques Lacan and Jacques Derrida, among others.[3]
He was involved in the publication of Tel Quel.[4] and he became friends with Roland Barthes and Philippe Sollers.[5] He was Severo Sarduy's partner until the latter's death.[2] He also taught philosophy to Elie Wiesel in the 1940s.[6]
In 1987, Wahl, acting as Roland Barthes's literary executor, published his essays Incidents, which tells of his homosexual bouts with Moroccan young men, and Soirées de Paris, which chronicles his difficulty to find a male lover in Paris.[7] Wahl met with controversy, compounded by the fact that he refused to publish more of Barthes's seminars.[7]
- L'éditeur François Wahl est mort Archived 2014-10-07 at the Wayback Machine (in French)
- Francois Dosse and Deborah N. Glassman, History of Structuralism: The Sign Sets, 1967-Present v. 2, University of Minnesota Press, 1997, p. 78
- George Haggerty (ed.), Encyclopedia of Gay Histories and Cultures: 2, Routledge, 1999, p. 1192.
- Jonathan Culler, Barthes: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 1983, pp.110-112
This biography of a French philosopher is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |