Marie Lera (original) (raw)

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Marie Lera
Born Hortense Marie Héliard2 June 1864Saint-Nazaire, France
Died 9 October 1958Bron, France
Pen name Jean D'AninMarc Hélys
Occupation journalistnovelisttranslator
Language French
Nationality French
Notable works Le secret des "Désenchantées"
Spouse Carlos Americo Léra

Marie Lera (née, Héliard; pen names, Jean D'Anin and Marc Hélys; 2 June 1864 – 9 October 1958) was a French journalist, novelist, and translator. She is best known for her book, Le secret des "Désenchantées".[1] Lera died in 1958.

Hortense Marie Héliard[2] was born on June 2nd, 1864 in Saint-Nazaire.[3] From childhood, she was taught English, Italian and, thanks to her nanny, Swedish too.[4]

She started her career in journalism by writing a report on Scandinavia, adopting the pen names "Jean D'Anin" and "Marc Hélys" when publishing her works.

During her two stays in Constantinople, Lera created relationships and spent time with two women, which opened doors for her and helped her understand the ideological debates in regard to Ottoman women. Lera wrote a book, Le jardin fermé, which she presented as a testimony on the condition of women and the events that marked her time in Constantinople,[5] but which in reality was a summary of hearsay punctuated with romantic inventions.[6] Lera was best known for her book, Le secret des "Désenchantées", published under the pseudonym of "Marc Hélys", which described how the literary success of Pierre Loti's Les désenchantées resulted from a deception of which she was one of the authors during her second stay in Constantinople in 1904.

Lera became interested in feminism while in several foreign countries. In 1906, she published À travers le féminisme en Suède[7] (Paris, Plon-Nourrit). She was also a translator (from Italian, English, Swedish, and Polish), using the pseudonym "Jean d'Anin".

Her husband was the Mexican diplomat Carlos Americo Lera.[8] Marie Lera died on 9 October 1958, in Bron.[3]

Translations as "Marc Hélys"

[[edit](/w/index.php?title=Marie%5FLera&action=edit&section=6 "Edit section: Translations as "Marc Hélys"")]

  1. ^ Lera, Marie (1924). Le secret des "désenchantées" (in French). Perrin. Retrieved 15 January 2022.
  2. ^ Holmes, Diana; Tarr, Carrie (1 January 2006). A Belle Epoque?: Women and Feminism in French Society and Culture 1890-1914. Berghahn Books. p. 293. ISBN 978-0-85745-701-1. Retrieved 15 January 2022.
  3. ^ a b Archives de la Loire Atlantique, commune de Saint-Nazaire, acte de naissance no 147, année 1864 (avec mention marginale de décès) (page 17/48)
  4. ^ Odoevsky Maslov, Loup. "Marc Hélys femme de lettres nazairienne", Histoire et Patrimoine n°97, March 2020, p. 63
  5. ^ Dussert, Éric (2018). Cachées par la forêt: 138 femmes de lettres oubliées (in French). La Table ronde. ISBN 978-2-7103-7714-6. Retrieved 15 January 2022.
  6. ^ Odoevsky Maslov, Loup, 2020, p. 70
  7. ^ Fournier, Vincent (1989). L'utopie ambiguë: la Suède et la Norvège chez les voyageurs et essayistes français, 1882-1914 (in French). Adosa. ISBN 978-2-86639-102-7. Retrieved 15 January 2022.
  8. ^ "Marc Hélys, Marie Lera, Saint-Nazaire, iyi akşamlar - Chroniques de Saint-Nazaire". saint-nazaire.hautetfort.com (in French). 4 April 2019. Retrieved 15 January 2022.