https://fr.1lib.fr/book/1202396/972f48
"This older brother played a major role in shaping his younger brother’s identity, if only as an absence. Schooled at Saint-Cyr to become a military offi cer, Georges Deleuze joined the Re sis tance during the war. He was caught by the Germans and deported to a concentration camp. He died en route. For his inconsolable parents, Georges was a martyr. Gilles suff ered doubly from his brother’s death. Nothing he could do could compare with his older brother’s heroism; Gilles Deleuze was insignifi cant in his parents’ eyes." (p.89)
"Gilles’ father, Louis Deleuze, was an engineer whose small company—he had a single employee, an Italian worker— was developing a way to make roofs watertight. He was forced to close during the 1930s and was hired by another company that made airplane fuselages. The Popular Front’s victory in the 1936 elections distressed Louis Deleuze, who was a right-wing sympathizer of the Croix-de-Feu: he and his friends all hated the Jewish president, Léon Blum. Unlike his father, Gilles, who was eleven at the time, remembered the election as something extraordinary and was thrilled to see the first workers come to the Deauville beaches during their newly declared paid vacations. “It was grandiose.” Louis Deleuze’s wife, Odette Camaüer, was a house wife and mother who sympathized with her husband’s po liti cal values and ideas ; she was outraged by the invasion of working- class vacationers on the nearby beaches." (p.89)
"
(p.91)
-François Dosse, Gilles Deleuze & Félix Guattari. Intersecting Lives, Columbia University Press, 2010, 686 pages.
https://fr.1lib.fr/book/5621342/3e3ccb
https://fr.1lib.fr/book/5691106/62f478
"This older brother played a major role in shaping his younger brother’s identity, if only as an absence. Schooled at Saint-Cyr to become a military offi cer, Georges Deleuze joined the Re sis tance during the war. He was caught by the Germans and deported to a concentration camp. He died en route. For his inconsolable parents, Georges was a martyr. Gilles suff ered doubly from his brother’s death. Nothing he could do could compare with his older brother’s heroism; Gilles Deleuze was insignifi cant in his parents’ eyes." (p.89)
"Gilles’ father, Louis Deleuze, was an engineer whose small company—he had a single employee, an Italian worker— was developing a way to make roofs watertight. He was forced to close during the 1930s and was hired by another company that made airplane fuselages. The Popular Front’s victory in the 1936 elections distressed Louis Deleuze, who was a right-wing sympathizer of the Croix-de-Feu: he and his friends all hated the Jewish president, Léon Blum. Unlike his father, Gilles, who was eleven at the time, remembered the election as something extraordinary and was thrilled to see the first workers come to the Deauville beaches during their newly declared paid vacations. “It was grandiose.” Louis Deleuze’s wife, Odette Camaüer, was a house wife and mother who sympathized with her husband’s po liti cal values and ideas ; she was outraged by the invasion of working- class vacationers on the nearby beaches." (p.89)
"
(p.91)
-François Dosse, Gilles Deleuze & Félix Guattari. Intersecting Lives, Columbia University Press, 2010, 686 pages.
https://fr.1lib.fr/book/5621342/3e3ccb
https://fr.1lib.fr/book/5691106/62f478