Jean Lebrun

For other uses, see Lebrun.
Jean Lebrun at the salon du livre de Paris in 2008.

Jean Lebrun (14 May 1950,[1] Saint-Malo, Ille-et-Vilaine) is a French journalist. A professor agrégé of history, he soon preferred journalism to the Éducation nationale. After he collaborated with Combat, La Croix and Esprit, he became a producer for the radio stations France Culture then France Inter.

Career

Born of a gardener father and a caretaker mother, Jean Lebrun grew up in the Parisian suburbs and studied in the Catholic college Notre-Dame de la Providence at Enghien-les-Bains.[2] He pursued his higher studies at the Sorbonne, then immersed in the May 1968 events in France. He devoted a master's thesis to the history of the La Trappe Abbey, at Rancé.[3] An agrégé of history, he abandoned teaching to engage in journalism. He collaborated at Combat, the TV program Le Jour du Seigneur in the 1970s, the magazine Esprit, whose editorial board he was a member, and La Croix, whose cultural service he co-directed.

At France Culture, where Jean Lebrun has spent most of his career, he produced and hosted the programs Culture Matin (from 1992 to 1999) and Pot-au-feu before animating Travaux Public, a program broadcast from Monday to Friday from 6.30 pm to 7.30 pm which he periodically recorded in a "Deep France Culture" ambiance from Blumeray (Haute-Marne). The program was live from the Argentinian café El Sur on Boulevard Saint-Germain in Paris on Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays, and in various French cities on Thursdays and Fridays. The recording sometimes took place at festivals or abroad. In June 2008, Jean Lebrun stopped producing the program Travaux publics. He then worked until February 2011 as program advisor to the director of the France Culture channel.

Lebrun replaced Patrice Gélinet, producer of Deux mille ans d'Histoire on France Inter, with La Marche de l'Histoire on 28 February 2011.

He is the author of Journaliste en campagne (October 2006) and Le Journalisme en chantier : chronique d'un artisan[4] (October 2008), both published by the publishing house Bleu autour.

In 2014, he was awarded the prix Goncourt de la Biographie for Notre Chanel, published by Bleu autour,[5] A biographical work on the fashion designer undertaken years earlier with his companion Bernard Costa (died of AIDS in 1990).

He joined the editorial board of La Quinzaine littéraire in 2015.

Jean Lebrun was awarded the Prix Richelieu in 1997.

Works

References

  1. « Lebrun, Jean », notice d'autorité personne n° FRBNF13168291, catalogue Bn-Opale Plus, Bibliothèque nationale de France, created 15 September 1997, modified 12 July 2007.
  2. Hélène Delye, « Jean Lebrun, passeur d'Histoire », Le Monde, 10 May 2013.
  3. Le Monde de l'éducation, Editions 247-254, 1997
  4. « Jean Lebrun, artisan-journaliste », critique de Jean-Marie Borzeix, former director of France Culture, published by Nonfiction.
  5. "Le Goncourt de la biographie à Jean Lebrun pour “Notre Chanel”", lepoint.fr, 3 June 2014.
  6.  : Jean Lebrun in the program "Pas la peine de crier" by Marie Richeux on France Culture, prix Goncourt de la Biographie ; see on the site of académie Goncourt.
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