Pierre François Lacenaire
Pierre François Lacenaire (20 December 1803 – 9 January 1836) was a French poet and murderer.
Biography
Lacenaire was born in Lyon. Upon finishing his education with excellent results, he joined the army, eventually deserting in 1829 at the time of the expedition to the Morea. He became a crook and was in and out of prison, which was, as he called it, his "criminal university". Whilst in prison, Lacenaire recruited two henchmen, Victor Avril and François Martin, and wrote a song, "Petition of a Thief to a King his Neighbor", as well as "The Prisons and the Penal Regime" for a journal.
In the months between the beginning of his trial for a double murder and his execution, he wrote Memoirs, Revelations and Poems, and during the trial he fiercely defended his crime as a valid protest against social injustices, turning the judicial proceedings into a theatrical event and his cell into a salon. He made a lasting impression on the age and on several writers such as Balzac and Dostoevsky. He was executed in Paris, at the age of 32.
In literature and film
- His hand, severed after death, was the subject of a poem by Théophile Gautier.[1]
- Dostoyevsky read about Lacenaire's case and there are some similarities between his crime and Raskolnikov's crime in Crime and Punishment. In another of his novels, The Idiot, the character Yevgeny Pavlovitch mentions Lacenaire when discussing Hippolite's failed suicide attempt with the prince.[2]
- He is depicted in the French film Children of Paradise (Les Enfants du Paradis, 1945), directed by Marcel Carné from a script by Jacques Prévert. where his stance as a loner and a rebel is stressed. In the film, Lacenaire (Marcel Herrand) refers to himself as a bold criminal and a social rebel, but his actual criminal activities mostly stay outside the film's narrative.
- Philosopher Michel Foucault believed Lacenaire's notoriety among Parisians marked the birth of a new kind of lionized outlaw (as opposed to the older folk hero), the bourgeois romantic criminal, and eventually to the detective and true crime genres of literature.
- There is a French film called Lacenaire (1990) starring Daniel Auteuil.
See also
For more information, see the French Wikipedia entry for Lacenaire: http://fr.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pierre_Fran%C3%A7ois_Lacenaire
References
- ↑ Gautier, Théophil (1887) [1887]. "Étude De Mains" [Studies of Hands] (poem). Émaux et Camées [Enamels and Cameos] (in French). Paris. pp. 15–19. Retrieved 1 May 2010. "Curiosité Depravée !"
- ↑ Dostoyevsky, Fyodor (April 2010) [First published in Russian in 1869]. "Part II, chap. 7". The Idiot (novel ). United States of America: Signet Classics. p. 441. ISBN 978-0-451-53152-0.
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