Tom Bishop traces his career and intellectual path through conversations with Donatien Grau.
For over sixty years (1929-2022) has contributed to shaping the literary, philosophical, cultural, artistic, but also political conversation between Paris and New York. In his position as professor and director of the Center for French Civilization and Culture at New York University, he made the Washington Square institution one of the great bridges between French innovation and a New York scene that was then in full transformation. Tom Bishop was close to Beckett, championed Robbe-Grillet in the United States, befriended
Marguerite Duras and
Hélène Cixous, organized historic public encounters—such as the one between James Baldwin and Toni Morrison. He is also a scholar, a recognized specialist in the avant-garde, notably the
Nouveau Roman and the Nouveau Théâtre.
A former student from the Ecole Normal Supérieure, Paris, Donatien Grau (born 1987 in Paris) is a literary graduate from the Political Studies Institute, Paris, and an art critic and writer. He teaches Literature at the Sorbonne University in Paris, writes for several magazines, and is contributing editor of
Flash Art magazine. He is interested in the communication of classical culture and the connections between art and literature.
Donatien Grau has edited Olivier Zahm's collection of texts
Une avant-garde sans avant-garde – Essai sur l'art (Les presses du réel & JRP|Ringier) and has coedited
Pierre Guyotat et l'Algérie (Diaphanes).