Denis Jeambar

Denis Jeambar in 2010

Denis Jeambar (born 1948 in Valréas) is a French journalist.

Biography

Having started his career at Paris-Match in 1970, he joined Le Point in 1972, rising to chief of its political staff in 1981. In 1988 he became editor-in-chief, as well as editor-in-chief of the political and cultural staffs. In 1995, Jeambar became general director of Europe 1 and after a few months, of L'Express. In 2001 he became president of the directory of Groupe Express-Expansion. In August 2006, he became director of Seuil editions.[1]

According to the French electronic magazine "La République des Lettres", Jeambar is ideologically close to neoconservatism, having displayed in the French journal L'Express "the opinion of the neoconservative, atlantist and zionist french right, mostly represented recently in France by former president Nicolas Sarkozy".[2] René-Éric Dagorn underlines Jeambar's ideological proximity with Samuel Huntington, author of the "Clash of cvilizations":[3] according to him, Denis Jeambar and Alain Louyot have written an article published in L'Express, September 13, 2001 in which "all the arguments point to Huntington [...]".

According to French author Guillaume Weill-Raynal Denis Jeambar, along with journalist Daniel Leconte, has played an important role in the building of the controversy around the Muhammad al-Durrah incident.[4]

He has been a member of Le Siècle.[5]

Bibliography

References

  1. Éric Frezel (9 August 2006). "Denis Jeambar quitte L'Express pour les Éditions du Seuil" (in French). La République des Lettres. Retrieved July 9, 2011.
  2. Éric Frezel, « Denis Jeambar quitte L'Express pour les Éditions du Seuil. », La République des Lettres, 9 août 2006.
  3. « Huntington ou la culture de l'ennemi. », EspacesTemps.net, 5 mars 2003.
  4. Guillaume Weill-Raynal, Affaire Mohamed Al Doura : les vrais imposteurs ont gagné, Marianne2 du 26 mai 2008,
  5. Frédéric Saliba, 'Le pouvoir à la table du Siècle', in Stratégies, issue 1365, April 14, 2005, p. 49