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・ Marcel Möring
・ Marcel Ndjeng
・ Marcel Nguyen
・ Marcel Nguyễn Tân Văn
・ Marcel Niat Njifenji
・ Marcel Nicolet
・ Marcel Noebels
・ Marcel Nogues
・ Marcel Nys
・ Marcel Odenbach
・ Marcel Oerlemans
・ Marcel Ohmann
・ Marcel Olinescu
・ Marcel Jones
・ Marcel Jones (basketball)
Marcel Jouhandeau
・ Marcel Journet
・ Marcel Jousse
・ Marcel Jovine
・ Marcel Jullian
・ Marcel Junod
・ Marcel Just
・ Marcel Jérôme Rigollot
・ Marcel Kaffenberger
・ Marcel Kajzer
・ Marcel Kalla
・ Marcel Kandziora
・ Marcel Kappeler
・ Marcel Kappelmaier
・ Marcel Kars


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Marcel Jouhandeau : ウィキペディア英語版
Marcel Jouhandeau
Marcel Jouhandeau (July 26, 1888 – April 7, 1979) was a French writer.
==Biography==
Born in Guéret, Creuse, Marcel Jouhandeau grew up in a world of women presided over by his grandmother. Under the influence of a young woman from the Carmel of Limoges, he embraced a mystical form of Catholicism and for a time thought to enter the orders. However, in 1908 he left for Paris where he studied first at the Lycée Henri-IV, and then at the Sorbonne where he began to write. In 1912 he became a professor in a school at Passy.
As a very young man, Marcel Jouhandeau discovered his homosexual feelings, which provoked great guilt as offensive to God. Still, his feelings of shame did not prevent him from engaging in numerous homosexual acts and his whole life alternated between a celebration of the male body and mortification of sexuality. In 1914, during a mystical crisis, he burned his manuscripts and attempted suicide. Once the crisis had passed, he turned again to writing and created the village chronicles which brought him his first literary successes.
During World War I, he was initially a secretary in his hometown of Guéret. In 1924 he published ''Pincegrain'', a barely disguised chronicle of the inhabitants of Guéret, which shocked the people of the town. His voyages became an opportunity for him to give himself over to his love of men, as he recounted in the ''Amateur d'imprudences''.
At age 40, he married a dancer, Élisabeth Toulemont, known as Caryathis « Elyse », the former mistress of Charles Dullin and an intimate friend of Jean Cocteau and Max Jacob. She hoped to rid him of his homosexual leanings. During this period he undertook a work of Christian moralism (''De l'abjection'') before tumbling again into the arms of men—much to the dismay of his wife—which he wrote about in ''Chronique d'une passion'' and ''Eloge de la volupté''.
Nevertheless, Jouhandeau and his wife adopted a girl named Céline, who gave birth to a baby boy, Marc. Following the death of Élise in 1971, Jouhandeau finished his last days in Rueil-Malmaison with Marc.
Jouhandeau has been described as antisemitic.〔David M. Halperin, ''What Do Gay Men Want?: An Essay on Sex, Risk, and Subjectivity'', Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 2007, p. 71〕 He wrote an anti-Jewish lampoon, ''Le Péril Juif'', in 1938.

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