Alice Rivaz

Alice Rivaz (August 14, 1901 February 27, 1998) was a Swiss author and feminist.

Alice Rivaz
Born Alice Golay
14 August 1901
Rovray
Died 27 February 1998(1998-02-27) (aged 96)
Genthod, Switzerland
Nationality Swiss

Life

She was born Alice Golay in the small Swiss municipality of Rovray, in the Canton of Vaud, the only child of Paul Golay and Ida Ettler, both strong Calvinists. Her mother had been a deaconess before deciding to leave that life to marry, while her father was a school teacher at the time of her birth. With a growing embrace of socialism, he later gave up that career and became a writer for the leftist periodical, Le Grutléen, for which the family moved to Lausanne.

Alice Rivaz' later writings are thought to reflect the conflict the couple experienced as a result of their differing points of view, with her mother's piety butting up against her father's political convictions.<ref name=MLN /[1]

At the age of 25 Rivaz moved to Geneva, where she spent the rest of her life. She originally studied music, training to become a pianist. After several years of work with the International Labour Organization she turned to writing, and became one of the foremost French language writers of Switzerland.[2] She died in that city at the age of 96 and was buried at the prestigious Cimetière des Rois.

Alice Rivaz - Cimetière des Rois

In her birthplace there is a commemorative plaque

Commemorative plaque in Rovray

Writing

Rivaz began working on her first novel around 1937, which came to be titled Nuages dans la main (Clouds in your Hands), published in 1940. Her novel Jette ton pain (Cast your Bread), published in 1979, is considered her finest work.[2] Her writings are known for dealing with women in art and in the family, as well as having feminist themes. Along with novels, short stories, essays and diaries she also did a study of poet Jean-Georges Lossier.

Bibliography

External links

References

  1. Schlossman, Beryl (2001). "Alice Rivaz and the Subject of Lost Time". MLN. 116: 1025–1044.
  2. 1 2


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