Alain Mamou-Mani | |
---|---|
Born | 26 December 1949 |
Occupation | Writer, Producer |
Alain Mamou-Mani (born 26 December 1949, Nabeul, Tunisia) is a French film producer and writer.
He has written several books (essays, novels) including Life in green on the marriage of ecology and economy" and "Beyond profit" on SRI investments, prefaced by Raoul Vaneigem (before he defended the freedom of expression of Holocaust deniers, [1] supported by Robert Ménard, Siné, Michel Onfray, [2] Bruno Gaccio and Dieudonné [3] ). Alain Mamou Mani is quoted, meanwhile, in the book of The Ten Commandments by Albert Cohen and Pascal Obispo, with Monsignor Thomas, Dalil Boubakeur and Joseph Sitruk, in 2000 then in 2001, by the novelist Maurice Dantec, identified as Nouveau réactionnaire, close to identitaires and support of Philippe de Villiers. [4]
In 2012, Mamou-Mani was named an Officer of the National Order of Merit (France). [5]
Married to Chantal Pottier, the Éditions Albin Michel publishing press officer, he is the father of the humorist Mamouz, the co-founder of Dynamic Beta Investments, Mathias Mamou-Mani, [6] the architect Arthur Mamou-Mani, and the brother of Guy Mamou-Mani, project manager of the platform Health Data Hub, heavily criticized for storing data on US Microsoft Azure servers. [7]
Sami Awad Aldeeb Abu-Sahlieh is a Swiss Palestinian lawyer.
Jean Maurice Jules Cabut, known by the pen-name Cabu, was a French comic strip artist and caricaturist. He was murdered in the January 2015 shooting attack on the Charlie Hebdo newspaper offices. Cabu was a staff cartoonist and shareholder at Charlie Hebdo.
Éditions Albin Michel is a French publisher. In January 2022, the new director is Anna Pavlowitch, the daughter of Paul Pavlowitch, Romain Gary and Jean Seberg's nephew.
Louis Pauwels was a French journalist and writer.
Patrick Besson is a French writer and journalist.
Robert Ménard is a French far-right politician, currently serving as Mayor of Béziers. Formerly a journalist, he was a co-founder of the Paris-based international non-governmental organisation Reporters Without Borders, acting as its general-secretary from 1985 to 2008. He subsequently participated in the launch of the conservative information website 'Boulevard Voltaire' in 2012. An Independent since 1981, he was elected as mayor of Béziers in 2014 with the support of the National Front. He joined the Les Amoureux de la France alliance in 2017.
Régine Pernoud was a French historian and archivist.
Émile Poulat, was until 1954 a Catholic priest, associated with the Prêtres Ouvriers movement, and thereafter a French historian and sociologist. Director of Studies at the École des hautes études en sciences sociales, he was also director of research at CNRS and historian of the contemporary church. He was a founding member of the Group of Sociology of Religion, director and member of the editorial boards of several journals including Politica Hermetica. His research concentrated on the conflict between Catholic culture and modern culture in the history of contemporary Catholicism.
Robert Manuel was a 20th-century French stage, television, and film actor, and film director.
The Prix Méditerranée is a French literary award. It was created in 1984 in Perpignan by the Mediterranean Centre of Literature (CML) in order to promote cultural interaction among the numerous countries surrounding the Mediterranean Sea. Two awards are handed out every year, the Prix Méditerranée itself and the Prix Méditerranée Étranger. The latter is given to a writer from the Mediterranean basin whose original work has been translated into French.
Véronique Olmi is a French playwright and novelist. She won the Prix Alain-Fournier emerging artist award for her 2001 novella Bord de Mer. It has since been translated into several European languages. Olmi has published a dozen plays and half a dozen novels.
The Grand prix des lectrices de Elle is a French literary prize awarded by readers of Elle magazine.
Guy Mamou-Mani is a French columnist for the French language edition of The Huffington Post, and president of Syntec Numérique.
The prix Contrepoint is a French literary award established in 1971 by a group of young French novelists and journalists. Each year a French-speaking novelist is selected.
The Prix France Télévisions are annual literary awards in France. Since 1995, the national television broadcaster France Télévisions has awarded two prizes, for a novel and an essay. The judging panel consists of 15 television viewers chosen from across France, on the basis of their cover letters.
Raymond Escholier, real name Raymond-Antoine-Marie-Emmanuel Escolier, was a French journalist, novelist and art critic. He was curator of the Maison de Victor Hugo and of the Petit Palais.
Antoine Bonfanti was a French sound engineer and a professor at cinema schools and institutes in France and other countries. He taught regularly at INSAS in Brussels and EICTV in Cuba, and occasionally at Fémis and ENSLL.
Patricia Reznikov is a Franco-American writer.
Frédéric Jacques Temple was a French poet and writer. His work includes poems, novels, travel stories and essays.
Jacques Salomé is a French psychologist and writer.