24 November 1941(1941-11-24) (aged 73) Vernègues, Vichy France
Occupation
Novelist
Language
French
Nationality
French
Émile Baumann (24 November 1868 – 24 November 1941) was a French writer.
Biography
Baumann was born in Lyons in 1868. He was descended from a Lutheran family converted to Catholicism.[1] In Algiers he met Saint-Saëns, and devoted his first work to him. He was directly involved in the Catholic Literary Renaissance movement, alongside such people as François Mauriac, Paul Claudel and Pierre Reverdy.[2] Sister Mary Keeler, in her Catholic Literary France says that of all French novelists of the time Baumann was perhaps the most completely Catholic.[3] He was awarded the Prix Balzac in 1922 for his novel Job le Prédestiné.[4] In 1931 he married the engraver and artist Elisabeth de Groux, daughter of Belgian painter Henry de Groux.
"Quand Dieu Parle", La Revue Universelle, No. 15 (1926).
"Mon frère le Dominicain: Son Enfance et sa Mort", Chroniques, No. 4 (1927).
"Les Chartreux, les Statuts et le Gouvernement d’un Grand Ordre", La Revue Universelle, (1928).
Works in English translation
Saint Paul (1929).
"The Catholic and Supernatural Novel." In: Fiction by its Makers (1928).
Notes
^Hoehn, Matthew (1948). "Émile Baumann." In: Catholic Authors: Contemporary Biographical Sketches. Newark, N.J.: St. Mary's Abbey, p. 31.
^Balmer, Yves (2010). "Religious Literature in Messiaens Personal Library." In: Andrew Shenton, ed., Messiaen the Theologian. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., p. 19.
^Keeler, Mary Jerome (1935). Catholic Literary France from Verlaine to the Present Time. Milwaukee: Bruce Pub. Co., p. 89.
^Sheen, Fulton J. (2009). Treasure in Clay: The Autobiography of Fulton J. Sheen. New York: Doubleday Religious Publishing Group, p. 134.
Further reading
Alexander, Calvert (1935). The Catholic Literary Revival. Milwaukee: Bruce Pub.
Lawhead, Alice (1941). The Reversibility of Grace in the Novels of Emile Baumann. (M.A.) Thesis: University of Notre Dame.
Seeley, Paul Alan (1995). Virile Pursuits: Youth, Religion, and Bourgeois Family Politics in Lyon on the Eve of the French Third Republic. (M.A.) Thesis: University of Michigan.