Politically, a follower of Charles Maurras, his views evolved towards fascism in the 1930s. Bonnard was one of the ministers of National Education under the Vichy regime (1942-44). The political satirist Jean Galtier-Boissière gave him the nickname "la Gestapette",1 a portmanteau of Gestapo and tapette, the latter French slang for a homosexual. The name, along with the homosexual inclinations it implied, became well known.2
Bonnard was one of only two members expelled from the Académie française after World War II for collaboration with Germany. (The other was the elderly writer Abel Hermant.) Bonnard was condemned in absentia to death during the épuration légale period for wartime activities. However, Francisco Franco granted him political asylum in Spain. In 1960, he returned to France to face retrial for his crimes. He received a symbolic sentence of 10 years banishment to be counted from 1945, but dissatisfied with the verdict of guilty, he chose to return to Spain where he lived out the remainder of his life.
Bibliography
1906 Les Familiers
1908 Les Histoires
1908 Les Royautés
1913 La Vie et l’Amour
1914 Le Palais Palmacamini
1918 La France et ses morts
1924 Notes de voyage : En Chine (1920-1921), 2 vol.
1926 Éloge de l’ignorance
1926 La vie amoureuse d’Henri Beyle
1927 L’Enfance
1928 L’Amitié
1928 L’Argent
1929 Saint François d’Assise
1931 Rome
1936 Le drame du présent : Les Modérés
1937 Savoir aimer
1939 L’Amour et l’Amitié
1941 Pensées dans l’action
1992 Ce monde et moi (selection of aphorisms, posthumous)
References
^Olivier Mathieu, Abel Bonnard, une aventure inachevée, Mercure, 1988, p. 188.
^ Jean-François Louette, Valéry et Sartre, in Bulletin des études valéryennes, éd. L'Harmattan, 2002, p. 105, on line