Pierre Naville


Pierre Naville was a French Surrealist writer and sociologist. He was a prominent member of the "Investigating Sex" group of Surrealist thinkers.
In politics, he was a Communist and then a Trotskyist, before joining the PSU. He led a career as an occupational sociologist.

Early life

Naville was born in 1903 in Paris, to a family of Swiss Protestant bankers.

Surrealist from its earliest times

In 1922 he founded the avant-garde periodical L'œuf dur together with Philippe Soupault, François Gérard, Max Jacob, Louis Aragon and Blaise Cendrars.
He was co-editor with Benjamin Péret for the three first numbers of La Révolution Surréaliste, founded the Bureau de Recherches Surréalistes in (1924 and participated in surrealist activities with André Breton before eventually opposing Surrealism because of his political divergences from the emerging Surrealist orthodoxy.

Politics

In 1926, Naville joined the French Communist Party, for which he managed the publication Clarté. He was a member of a delegation that visited Leon Trotsky in Moscow in 1927. He returned convinced by Trotsky's arguments and was expelled from the Communist Party in 1928 for deviationism. From this point onwards, he participated in the life of the French Trotskyist extreme left and notably its publications. However, he became less and less convinced by Trotsky's position, and broke with the group in 1939. He then organised attempts to create a Marxist left, devoid of Communist and Trotskyist trappings, through a publication called the Revue Internationale.
Initially passing through the PSU, Naville continued to search for a modern left in the PSG, then the UGS, before taking part in the re-establishment of the Parti Socialiste Unifié under the Fifth Republic. He remained loyal to this party in spite of his opposition to the "realists" and showed total rejection of François Mitterrand.

Psycho-sociology of work

Appointed director of research at the CNRS in 1947, he worked with Georges Friedmann at the Centre d'études sociologiques, dedicating his work to the psychosociology of work, and the study of automation, industrial society, the psychology of comportment, and the strategists and theoreticians of war, notably Carl von Clausewitz. He supervised the French translation and publication of the complete works of Clausewitz.

Existentialism

He was the primary other contributor mentioned at the end of Jean-Paul Sartre's L'existentialisme est un humanisme, criticising existentialism.

Honours

The laboratory of research in social sciences and management at the University of Évry Val d'Essonne bears his name.

Works

Surrealist