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Eugénie Bastié

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Eugénie Bastié
Bastié in 2017
Bastié in 2017
Born (1991-11-18) 18 November 1991 (age 32)
Toulouse, France
OccupationWriter, essayist, editor, critic
NationalityFrench
EducationSciences Po

Eugénie Bastié (born 18 November 1991) is a French journalist and essayist.

A Le Figaro employee, she is at the same time chief editor of the integral ecology magazine Limite, of Catholic inspiration. In 2016, she published a critical essay on feminism, Adieu mademoiselle. A conservative, she is part of a generation of young Catholic intellectuals sometimes regarded as néo-réactionnaires by part of the media.[1] The Nation in 2018 described her as "a rising star."[2]

Childhood and education

Daughter of a landscaper and a specialist in nuclear medicine, Eugénie Bastié has four brothers and sisters; she grew up in Pibrac, in the Haute-Garonne[3] in a solidly Catholic family.[4]

Career

She partook in 2013 in the La Manif pour tous.[5] From 2013 to 2015 she collaborated with Causeur,[6] an internet site and biweekly magazine directed by Élisabeth Lévy. Following a stint at Figarovox, the opinion and debate site of Le Figaro (considered by Nolwenn Le Blevennec, from L'Obs, as the "hard right platform of Le Figaro"[7]), she was hired by Le Figaro in 2015,[8] recommended by Alexis Brézet.[7]

In 2015, Bastié co-founded the French ecologist "Limite" magazine.[9]

Bastié has compared Marine Le Pen "a little bit" to Hillary Clinton.[10]

The Huffington Post has reported that Bastié's comments on #metoo have "created a controversy."[11]

Works

  • Adieu mademoiselle. Paris: Le Cerf. 2016. p. 224. ISBN 978-2-2041-0489-0..
  • Le porc émissaire. Paris: Le Cerf. 2018. ISBN 978-2-204-12838-4..

References

  1. ^ Arnaud Gonzague (5 November 2016). "Médias : la nouvelle tribu réac". Le Nouvel Observateur. Retrieved 5 September 2017..
  2. ^ Karina Piser (2 November 2018). "In France, Is the #MeToo Movement Passé?". The Nation. Retrieved 25 April 2019. 27-year-old journalist Eugénie Bastié, something of a rising star in the conservative media
  3. ^ Johanna Luyssen, « Eugénie Bastié, déjà croisée » sur Libération, 18 mai 2016.
  4. ^ Audrey Kucinskas « Qui est Eugénie Bastié, la chroniqueuse déjà comparée à Éric Zemmour ? », L'Express, 3 septembre 2016.
  5. ^ Meddy Mensah, « Qui est Eugénie Bastié, la « fille spirituelle » d'Éric Zemmour ? » sur planet.fr, 29 avril 2016.
  6. ^ Fiche sur Eugénie Bastié sur Causeur, consulté le 20 mai 2016.
  7. ^ a b Nolwenn Le Blevennec (2015). "FigaroVox : rech. jeune plume qui vomit son époque". Le Nouvel Observateur (in French)..
  8. ^ Fiche sur Eugénie Bastié sur Le Figaro, consulté le 20 mai 2016.
  9. ^ Amélie Quentel (30 September 2018). "Martine Storti : "Elisabeth Lévy, Eugénie Bastié et Valeurs actuelles ont une vision victimaire des hommes"". Les Inrockuptibles (in French). Retrieved 25 April 2019. Eugénie Bastié [journaliste au Figaro et fondatrice de la revue Limite, ndlr]
  10. ^ Susan Chira (4 May 2017). "Marine Le Pen's Canny Use of Gender in Her Campaign". The New York Times. Retrieved 25 April 2019. "She's been around so long that it's a little bit like Hillary Clinton – we forget that she's a woman," said Eugénie Bastié,
  11. ^ Lucie Cayrol (24 September 2018). "Eugénie Bastié provokes a controversy with her comments on #MeToo". HuffPost (in French). Retrieved 25 April 2019.