Jean-Marie Déguignet
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Jean-Marie Déguignet (19 July 1834 – 29 August 1905) was a
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soldier, farmer, salesman, shopkeeper, and writer who is best known for his memoirs illuminating the life of the rural poor of 19th-century France.


Life

Déguignet was born into a farming family in south-west Brittany.. He spent time in the army—he was posted as far away as Mexico—and fought in the
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.. His love of learning, and the extensive and eclectic nature of his studies and travel while a young man, led him to
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and
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..
The editor of , Bernez Rouz, notes in his introduction that Déguignet lost his faith as a soldier while "on furlough in Jerusalem, revolted by the commercial practices around pilgrimage."
In 1868, having finished his last stint in the military and accumulated some respectable savings, he returned to his childhood home of
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. There he reluctantly married the 19-year-old daughter of a farmer's widow in Toulven (south of Quimper), where he converted a struggling farm successfully to
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with the help of the modern farming techniques he had picked up during the first half of the 1850s..
Trying to end the marriage, he portrayed himself to his post-marital landlord as "a republican of the most advanced sort, and in religion a freethinker, a philosophic friend to humankind and … the declared enemy of all gods, who are only imaginary creatures, and priests who are only charlatans and knaves" and attempted to offend the clerics whose sanction of the nuptials was required. See , and commentary on the remark by .
He stayed on his farm at Toulven for fifteen years, but was then evicted for his persistent and prominent Republican agitation. His views meant he was unable to secure tenancy elsewhere and he was unluckily run over by his own cart. During his convalescence, his wife, by now an alcoholic, bought a bar and left Déguignet to bring up their children alone. He turned to selling insurance, but soon had to take full-time care of his wife, who had drunk herself into very serious ill health. She died and the widowed Déguignet switched to selling tobacco from a shop in a parish west of Quimper. His retail tenancy was not renewed, however, and a local priest saw to it that he was denied the opportunity to rent an alternative shop. Déguignet spent his remaining years living in poverty in and around Quimper. Worse, he went without the support of his children, who, he believed, had been turned against him by their mother's family. The insatiably curious
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and former farming success even attempted suicide.


Memoirs

It was during these difficult twilight years that Déguignet turned to writing his memoirs. A first attempt was handed to
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, who eventually got the first part of them published in a Parisian magazine in 1904. That was that, however, and with Le Braz in possession of his original script, Déguignet had to start over for his second attempt. He filled notebook after notebook with his journeys, observations, and experiences, as well as setting down heated criticisms of the people and institutions who had upended his successful life and truncated his ambitions—including, of course, the church and Le Braz. Recorded, too, were musings on philosophy, politics, and other topics. It was these notebooks that languished unknown until their discovery in a farm house, thereafter edited and published in France by
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in 1998 as ''Mémoires d'un paysan Bas-Breton'' 'Memoirs of a Breton Peasant'' An English translation followed from
Seven Stories Press Seven Stories Press is an independent American publishing company. Based in New York City, the company was founded by Dan Simon in 1995, after establishing Four Walls Eight Windows in 1984 as an imprint at Writers and Readers, and then incorpora ...
in 2004. One reviewer described the ''Memoirs'' as "one of the fullest descriptions of nineteenth-century peasant society by one who was born into it, spent his life kicking against it.".


References


Notes


Bibliography

* * *


External links


2004 English-language edition by Seven Stories Press
{{DEFAULTSORT:Deguinet, Jean-Marie 1834 births 1905 deaths People from Finistère 19th-century French writers French male writers 19th-century French male writers