La Synthèse du camphre, Belle Famille, Histoire de ma sexualité, Sans Véronique
Arthur Dreyfus (born 4 June 1986 in Lyon), is a French-Swiss writer, journalist, screenwriter and director. He became known in 2009, the year he received the French Young Writer Prize for his short story Il Déserte (He Deserts).[1]
Biography
Dreyfus was born in Lyon to the writer Isabelle Kauffmann.[2] He is of Jewish descent and his grandfather was deported to a concentration camp during the Holocaust.[3] Dreyfus studied literature at Lycée Henri-IV, received a diploma from CELSA Paris[4] and obtained master's degrees in marketing and communication from Sciences Po in 2012.[5] After graduating, he wanted to be an actor and worked as a magician specializing in mentalism. He also appeared in commercials; performed magic shows for brands, aftershows and fashion shows; acted in the television show Famille d'accueil, and created a magic act in 2006 with the actor Jean-Claude Dreyfus at the Théâtre des Bouffes-Parisiens.[6] In March 2013, Dreyfus set up a naked jogging event in front of the French senate in Paris to protest what he described as "ambient puritanism" (« puritanisme ambiant ») and "the legal crusade against children's literature" (« le procès fait à la littérature pour la jeunesse »).[7] In 2016, he acted in Le Système du docteur Goudron, the third film by Noël Herpe.
In 2012, he wrote a weekly column in France 2's cultural program called Avant-premieres (Previews).[9] Since 2014, he has been the French cultural correspondent for the talk show Plus on est de fous, plus on lit! (The more one is crazy, the more one reads!), hosted by Marie-Louise Arsenault and broadcast on Radio Canada.[10] In December 2015, he produced a series of shows for France Culture about music and happiness.[11] Since 2017, he has written the musical programs for the classical festival Sommets Musicaux de Gstaad.
At Canal +
During the 2016 season, alongside Augustin Trapenard, Dreyfus was one of the film critics on the show Le Cercle on Canal +. In 2018, he presented La séquence du spectateur (The spectator sequence) during Tchi Tcha, a film show on the channel.[12]
Photography
After practicing photography for years, Dreyfus presented his first exhibition, Nous sommes peut-être passés à côté d’une belle histoire... (We may have missed out on a beautiful story ...), in November 2017 at the Patrick Gutknecht Gallery in Paris. The exhibit was intended as a meditation on eternal and prolonged childhood. He used an iPhone to take the photos and Ilfochrome, a rare photographic process, to produce the prints.[13]
In October 2019, the artist Joël Andrianomearisoa invited him to participate in a collaborative exhibit called ALMOST HOME hosted by the RX gallery in Paris. Dreyfus contributed photographs and a series of poems to the exhibit.[14]
Political Positions
Dreyfus was one of the artists invited by Gérard Collomb to support Emmanuel Macron during his visit to Lyon in February 2017.[15] He later published a pro-Europe and anti-extremist letter addressing supporters of Marine Le Pen in May 2017.[16]
In February 2019, after the Jewish cemetery in Quatzenheim, Alsace was desecrated with swastikas, Dreyfus published a poem against antisemitism on Facebook which was shared 29,000 times and read by children during a ceremony at the town.[17]
Publications
Journal sexuel d'un garçon d'aujourd'hui, P.O.L, March 2021, ISBN978-2818051795
82 jours à l'Armurier, in collaboration with Laurent Pernot, Colomiers, Mairie de Colomiers, 72 pages, January 2019, ISBN978-2-90-851679-1
Je ne sais rien de la Corée, Gallimard, October 2017, ISBN2072718821
Participation in the joint publication Qu'est-ce que la gauche ?, Fayard, 2017, ISBN978-2213704586
Le Livre qui rend heureux, ill. by François Xavier Goby, Paris, Flammarion, 2011, 122 pages, ISBN978-2-08-126633-9.
La Synthèse du camphre, Paris, Gallimard, coll. Blanche, 2010, 253 pages, ISBN978-2-07-012736-8
Il déserte, short story in the eponymous volume, Buchet/Chastel, Paris 2009, joint publication of the winners of the Young Writer's Prize, ISBN978-2283023860