Marcel Martinet

Marcel Martinet (Dijon, 22 August 1887 – Saumur, 18 February 1944) was a French pacifist socialist revolutionary militant and a prolétarian writer.

Martinet, a Communist and pacifist, opposed the First World War from its outset: his antiwar poems Les temps maudits were banned in France during the war, but circulated secretly: helped by Marguerite Rosmer, he sent copies on thin paper to soldiers at the front.

[1] La Maison à l'Abri, a novel about the First World War, was runner-up for the Prix Goncourt in 1919.

[2] Martinet's poem La Nuit, completed in 1919, was published in 1922 with a preface by Leon Trotsky,[3] whom Martinet had befriended when Trotsky was in Paris.

[1] Martinet's series Les Cahiers du Travail [Labour Notebooks] published pamphlets by Victor Serge.