Age, Biography and Wiki

Inès Cagnati was born on 21 February, 1937 in Garonne, France, is a novelist. Discover Inès Cagnati's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is She in this year and how She spends money? Also learn how She earned most of networth at the age of 70 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation Writer, teacher, translator
Age 70 years old
Zodiac Sign Pisces
Born 21 February, 1937
Birthday 21 February
Birthplace Monclar-d'Agénais, Lot-et-Garonne, France
Date of death (2007-10-09) Orsay, Essonne, France
Died Place Orsay, Essonne, France
Nationality France

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 21 February. She is a member of famous novelist with the age 70 years old group.

Inès Cagnati Height, Weight & Measurements

At 70 years old, Inès Cagnati height not available right now. We will update Inès Cagnati's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
Height Not Available
Weight Not Available
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Dating & Relationship status

She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.

Family
Parents Not Available
Husband Not Available
Sibling Not Available
Children Not Available

Inès Cagnati Net Worth

Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Inès Cagnati worth at the age of 70 years old? Inès Cagnati’s income source is mostly from being a successful novelist. She is from France. We have estimated Inès Cagnati's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2023 Under Review
Net Worth in 2022 Pending
Salary in 2022 Under Review
House Not Available
Cars Not Available
Source of Income novelist

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Timeline

1989

Cagnati's mother tongue was Italian. She was taught French when she started attending grade school. She did not consider herself French, and was naturalized into citizenship after birth. She describes the experience gaining citizenship as a tragedy. "Because clearly I wasn't French," she said, in a rare televised interview in 1989. "And then I wasn't Italian anymore, either. So I was nothing." She considered herself to be an étrangère, an outsider, all her life.

Cagnati described her childhood as unhappy. In that same 1989 interview, the journalist asks her if her unhappiness as a child was due to her isolation, her sense of separation from those around her, and the impossibility of communicating. She shrugs: "Maybe I just had a bad experience. I don't know. [As a child] you're all alone, you can't understand a thing. People expect all these things from you that you don't understand—especially when you don't speak the language."

1984

This was especially true of Cagnati's experience in school, when she was learning French. She attributed her exclusion from the other children to her foreignness and inability to learn the language, as well as an immediately noticed and acutely felt class difference with the other students. "I understood nothing anyone told me," Cagnati said in a 1984 interview in the regional paper Sud-Ouest Dimanche, as related by translator Liesl Schillinger.

1977

It appears that she lived in Brasília for a short time, according to an article by Le Monde when she won the Prix des Deux Magots for her second novel, Génie la folle, in 1977, and that she was married, briefly, to an engineer. Dr. Joanna Scutts writes. "Two years later, when her third book was published, Cagnati was back in France, photographed for Paris Match in her country home, playing, reading, and roasting chestnuts with her young son; her husband is present in one picture, leaning out of their tight circle. In the 1989 interview, Cagnati does not mention him, describing her son as her only true family."

1973

Cagnati had four sisters: Elsa, Gilda, Annie and Anabel, to whom she dedicated her first book, Le Jour de Congé (1973). Given the common occurrence of miscarriages at the time that happened at the time, and the amount of miscarriages that Galla, the protagonist of Cagnati's first novel Le Jour de Congé, witnesses, it's possible that Cagnati and her sisters had other siblings that died unborn, or in infancy.

1970

Cagnati attended high school and continued her post-secondary studies in literature. She obtained a license (Bachelor's degree) and passed the CAPES exam to become a high school teacher. She began teaching at the Lycée Carnot, a prestigious high-school in Paris, in 1970, worked on her manuscripts while employed there, and published her first novel, Le Jour de Congé, in 1973, when she was 36 years old. She published her second novel just three years later.

1937

Inès Cagnati (21 February 1937 – 9 October 2007) was an Italian-French novelist living in rural France. Her novels treat of the experience of being an outsider, of growing up poor in rural France, and of the silence that accompanies the inability to communicate. She was also a French literature teacher at the Lycée Carnot in Paris.

1930

Inès Cagnati was born in Monclar-d'Agénais, Lot-et-Garonne. Her parents were Italian agricultural workers, both from Northern Italy—her father from Treviso, and her mother from Vicenza—who, like more than eighty-thousand Italian workers and farmhands did in the 1930s, moved to the southwestern Lot-et-Garonne and Aquitaine regions in France for the prospect of a richer life.