3464 x 2335 px | 29,3 x 19,8 cm | 11,5 x 7,8 inches | 300dpi
Date de la prise de vue:
1996
Lieu:
Paris, France, Cafe Les Halles
Informations supplémentaires:
Cette image peut avoir des imperfections car il s’agit d’une image historique ou de reportage.
"Martel was successively head of the book office at the French Embassy in Romania (1990-1992), project manager at the international affairs department of the Ministry of Culture (1992-1993), collaborator of the former Prime Minister Michel Rocard (1993-1994), then editor-in-chief of the intellectual review of the CFDT (1995-1997, with Nicole Notat). He was then in charge of mission in the office of the Minister of Employment and Solidarity, Martine Aubry (1997-2000), where he "became his pen", then researcher at the EHESS and advisor to the president of the EHESS, Jacques Revel (2000-2001), and more recently cultural attaché at the French Embassy in the United States (2001-2005) His 1996 book Le Rose et le Noir, on the history of the LGBT movement in France, is according to Laurence Follea for Le Monde "a thorough and complete documentary research on the history of homosexual men and women in France since 1968" , and a documentary work “unanimously welcomed”; but the work tackles "two sensitive questions: that of" communitarianism "and that of the" denial of AIDS "by gay activists until the years 1984-1985" and arouses a controversy. Numerous articles are published in favor of the book, including the editorials of three French magazines. The health journalist of Liberation, Éric Favereau (close to AIDES and criticized by Act-Up), gives a positive account of the book, as do several managers of AIDES, including its founding president, Daniel Defert, Pierre Lascoumes, then president of AIDES Paris-Île-de-France and Alain Molla, president of AIDES Marseille-Provence. While some LGBT activists defend the book, others such as Hélène Hazera and Didier Eribon criticize a distortion of the facts on the initial denial of gay activists, and the positions of the author who denounces a communitarianism of LGBT movements.. Frédéric Martel responds to the controversy in the journal Esprit." (Wikipedia, Translated in Google)