‘Ce qui nous unit tous les cinq n’est pas une doctrine mais une amitié et une sensibilité commune liée au pays qui est le nôtre… Notre aventure ne laissera sans doute aucune trace dans une histoire de la littérature française au XXe siècle, et peu importe: nous nous serons bien amusés’. 1
Meet and greet local authors…
First time I came across ‘l’École de Brive’ was in Claude Michelet’s (1981); ‘Mon Père, Edmond Michelet’, on the life of his father; resistance leader of the first hour, Dachau survivor, legislator and multiple times minister under various governments/cabinets (1945, 1958, 1959, 1967, 1968 and 1969). Before the second world war he married and settled in Brive (his wife’s place of origin), where he became an active member of local Catholic and social initiatives and formed a group of friends to study, discuss and invite speakers from outside. It became locally known as ‘l'École de Brive’.
Maybe (or maybe not) the name was bound to re-emerge when a new group formed around his son, 'farmer by day / writer by night', Claude. Neither a ‘school’ in the artistic sense nor literal sense of the word, it might be a ‘school of thought’ but mostly is a group of like minded friends (bande). In the book ‘L’Ecole de Brive, Son histoire, ses acteurs’ (Editions Laffont, 1996), Jacques Peuchmaurd (working for the publisher Robbert Laffont) tells the story of a series of encounters with writer Michel Peyramaure, by which he saw this bande emerging
Claude Michelet’s tetralogy; ‘Les gens de Saint-Libéral’.
Michel Peyramaure had published a long list of historical novels since 1954 . Jacques accompanied him to a book signing event at the open metal market hall of Guierle in Brive, 1973. Jacques had been tasked by Laffont to work on a series ‘Un homme et son métier’, when they ran into Claude Michelet. Michel told him that this would be the guy if he was looking for a farmer for his series. So in 1975, ‘J’ai choisi la terre’ came out and sold 30.000 copies! A few years later ‘Des grives aux loups’, was expected to do equally well … it sold millions.
By 1980, Dennis Tilllinac surfaced when Jacques discovered a version of ‘Spleen en Corrèze’ abandoned on the desk of a fellow editor… Everything we have come to love about this ‘agitated Tintin’ was there; ‘acute, funny, tender, nostalgic, volatile, elusive and faithful’. So that made three, a bande, ‘the Correziens of Laffont’. By 1981 the town of Brive made an effort to restart the book-fair, this time inside the closed fruits and vegetable market hall of Georges-Brassens. And this time the time was ripe. Attracting readers ‘that would never enter a bookshop’, tired of the ‘Parisian intellectual terrorism of the 50 and 60’ and the ‘dictatorship of the nouveau roman’ with its snobbish darkness. Readers that loved life, real persona’s, close to the soil, natural sentiments and an intimate relationship to the past.
One of the 1.200 dedicated copies of ‘Marie des brebis’ by Christian Signol and the last novel of Denis Tillinac.
By 1984 Christian Signol joined, in 1989 Gilbert Bordes, it was around this time the term École de Brive (re)surfaced for this band of local writers reviving the great romantic and popular tradition of the nineteenth century. The Foire du livre de Brive became an event on the cultural calendar, a special ‘train du livre’ left Paris-Austerlitz carrying ‘a swarm of editors, academics of all kinds, critics and authors... returning to Paris on Sunday evening with rosy cheeks and alarming rates of cholesterol’. 2 Michelet signed 1.900 copies of ‘L’Appel des engoulevent’ in 1990, a few years later Signol dedicated 1.200 copies of his ‘Marie des brebis’. The 1990’s saw an acceleration of a social movement towards ‘La France profonde’, people started to retire earlier and earlier towards their village of origin.
Life in the city started to loose its luster, growing environmental awareness, longings for a return to human scale of living and production, a renewed interest in regional identities (supposedly opposing globalization) and a general appreciation for country living. The ‘rural exodus’ bottomed out in the 80’s and a reverse flow (led by retirees) made for some interesting new statistical trends in demographics. By the 00’s the Dordogne Department had the largest surplus of people dying over birth numbers, … and the population was rising at the same time? The trend only accelerated with the terrorist attacks and COVID related lock-downs of the 10’s. Tillinac’s ‘last’ (he died around the time of publishing) novel ‘Le Patio bleu’ (2020) is set against the dynamics of the well-off retirees returnees and a more and more desperate rural population taking-up their ‘yellow vests’.
The stickers had a whiff of ‘country’ last year, looking forward to the big 40th!
This remains an interesting contradiction that is well represented within the École de Brive, Michelet gave up his farm to write. Peyramaure, Tillinac, Bordes all ‘localliers’; journalists paid to live in the country. Laussac, Muller, Soumy, Viollier all on a teaching salary. Living in the country is great, as long as you do not have to make a living there…
Last year (2021) the 39th Foire du livre de Brive was held under restrictions after it had to skip a year due to COVID. The posters, bookmarks and leaflets were reprinted, the stickers had a whiff of ‘country’ to them. This year; 4, 5 and 6 November, the 40th edition drops all COVID restrictions. Looking forward to see what’s new. Find the program here (in French) on the official website.
‘What unites all five of us is not a doctrine but a friendship and a common sensitivity linked to the country which is ours… Our adventure will undoubtedly leave no trace in the history of French literature of the 20th century, but whatever : we will have had a lot of fun.’
Dauzier P. et Tillinac D., 1991. Les Corréziens. Éditions Robert Laffont. ISBN 2-221-07232-4