André Malraux
André Malraux (born Georges André Malraux, 3 November 1901 – 23 November 1976) was a French novelist, art theorist and Minister for Cultural Affairs. Malraux's novel La Condition Humaine (1933) won the Prix Goncourt.
Works
- Lunes en Papier, 1923
- La Tentation de l'Occident, 1926
- Royaume-Farfelu, 1928
- Le Temps du mépris, Editions Gallimard, 1935
- An Age Of Oppression, trans. Roberta A. E. Newnham, Bristol & Portland: Elm Bank, 2003 (in English).
- Psychologie de l’art, 1947-49, rewritten and published as Les Voix du silence, Gallimard, 1951.
- The Voices of Silence, trans. Stuart Gilbert, Doubleday, 1953; Publisher Paladin, UK, 1974
- Œuvres complètes [Collected works], Skira, 1945; 6 vols., Gallimard, 1989-2011
Literature
- Charles D. Blend, André Malraux: Tragic Humanist, 1963.
- Jean Lescure, Album Malraux. Iconographie commentée, 1986, 368 pp. [1] (French)
- Hannah Feldman, "Fragments and Façades: André Malraux and the Image of the Past as the Future of the Present", part 1 in Feldman, From a Nation Torn: Decolonizing Art and Representation in France, 1945-1962, Duke University Press, 2014, pp 19-74.