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David Charles Harvey

 
French Literature Companion: Jean-Charles Harvey

Harvey, Jean-Charles (1891-1967). Canadian journalist and writer, best known for Les Demi-Civilisés (1934), a novel which gained notoriety from being condemned by the Church as dangerously freethinking. But the novel is too stereotyped in expression to carry conviction as a clarion call for freedom of thought and speech. Moreover, its thesis that modern Quebec has fallen from the natural simplicity of its agrarian past into the decadence of a semieducated society is strangely conservative and substantially undercuts its ostensible radicalism.

[Ian Lockerbie]

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David Charles Harvey was born on 29 July 1946 in East Ham. He is notable for his seminal work Monuments To Courage which documents the graves of almost all recipients of the Victoria Cross, a task which took him over 36 years to complete.

Harvey was the son of a grocer and worked as a salesman after attending Hinchley Wood School in Surrey. He later joined the Metropolitan Police where he started the mounted police magazine One One Ten, before moving to Denver, Colorado to run an equestrian Centre for over a decade.

A chance meeting with Canon William Lummis led him to take over his life-work of researching and documenting the final resting places of all Victoria Cross recipients. This task took Harvey to 48 countries over the next four decades. However, an accident during a visit to the Somme in 1992 left Harvey in a wheelchair for the remainder of his life and he later had to have a leg amputated. Monuments to Courage was finally published in 1999.

Harvey married once in 1968, to Ruth Ward. The couple had a son and two daughters. They divorced in 1979.

Harvey died on 4 March 2004.

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French Literature Companion. The New Oxford Companion to Literature in French. Copyright © 1995, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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