Louis Aragon ( October 3, 1897 - December 24, 1982), French historian, poet and novelist.
( French Faggot Artist and Jew Puppet... The CSR)
Member of the Dadaist and subsequently the surrealist circles.
Married Russian-born author Elsa Triolet (born 1896) in 1939, the sister-in-law of Russian poet Vladimir Mayakovsky.
During the occupation of France he wrote for the underground press Les Editions de Minuit, and was one of several writers who adopted the name of a French region as a pseudonym. After process of Manouchian group when the Germans began a propaganda campaign- Red Poster- in which the Germans wanted to show the French that the resistance movement was composed of foreigners, mainly Jewish, who served the interests of England and Russia. Aragon later wrote a poem entitled "Red Poster," in which he honoured those foreigners who had died fighting to free France.
After the death of his wife (June 16, 1970) in the 1970s, Aragon came out as a bisexual, appearing at gay pride parades in a pink convertible (Ivry 1996, p.134).
Source
* Ivry, Benjamin (1996). Francis Poulenc, 20th-Century Composers series. Phaidon Press Limited. BooksEnthsiast.com.
http://www.economicexpert.com/a/Louis:Aragon.htm (http://www.economicexpert.com/a/Louis:Aragon.htm)
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Along with Paul Éluard, Pierre Seghers or René Char, Aragon would maintain the memory of the Resistance in his post-war poems. He thus wrote, in 1954, Strophes pour se souvenir in commemoration of the role of foreigners in the Resistance, which celebrated the Francs-Tireurs et Partisans de la Main d'Oeuvre Immigrée (FTP-MOI).
The theme of the poem was the Red Poster affair, mainly the last letter that Missak Manouchian, an Armenian-French poet and Resistant, wrote to his wife Mélinée before his execution on 21 February 1944 [3]. This poem was then set to music by Léo Ferré.
After the war
At the Liberation, Aragon became one of the leading Communist intellectuals, assuming political responsibilities in the Comité national des écrivains (National Committee of Writers). He celebrated the role of the general secretary of the PCF, Maurice Thorez, and defended the Kominform's condemnation of the Titoist regime in Yugoslavia.
Sponsored by Thorez, Aragon was elected, in 1950, to the central committee of the PCF. His post, however, did not protect him from all forms of criticism. Thus, when his journal, Les Lettres françaises, published a drawing by Picasso on the occasion of Stalin's death in March 1953, Aragon was forced to make excuses to his critics, who judged the drawing iconoclastic. Through the years, he had been kept informed of Stalinist repression by his Russian-born wife, and so his political line evolved.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Aragon (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Aragon)
I'm sitting in Media Theory and Design 2 class watching a video on Fluxus right now. My first thought was this must be some Jewish-bred nonsense. To verify my hypothesis, I Google "fluxus jews" and this was the first link to appear LOL...thanks CSR!