Caillois was born in
Reims in 1913 which he left for
Paris at the age of 16. There he completed his secondary studies at the
Lycée Louis-le-Grand, an elite school where students prepared for entry examinations to France's most prestigious
École Normale Supérieure. Caillois' efforts paid off: he graduated as a
normalien in 1933 before entering the
École Pratique des Hautes Études, where he came into contact with such eminent linguists as
Georges Dumézil and
Alexandre Kojève. During these formative years Caillois extended his circle of friends that came to include many influential figures of the French intelligentsia like
André Breton,
Jacques Lacan,
Michel Leiris or
George Bataille. The years before the war were marked by Caillois' increasingly leftist political commitment, particularly in his fight against
fascism. He was also engaged in Paris' avant-garde intellectual life. With Georges Bataille he founded the
College of Sociology, a group of intellectuals who lectured regularly to one another. Formed partly as a reaction to the
Surrealist movement that was dominant in the 1920s, the college sought to move away from surrealism's focus on the fantasy life of an individual's unconscious and focus instead more on the power of ritual and other aspects of communal life. Caillois' background in
anthropology and
sociology, and particularly his interest in the sacred, exemplified this approach. In June 1939, at the invitation of
Victoria Ocampo whom he had met in Paris a few months earlier and with whom he engaged a close, life-long amorous friendship, Caillois left France for Argentina, where the start of
World War II forced him to stay. There he played an active role against the spread of Nazism in Latin America through his conferences and his contributions to anti-fascist magazines such as
Sur and
Les Volontaires and as editor of the new periodical
Lettres françaises. Back to Paris in 1945, he persuades the publisher
Gaston Gallimard to create a collection of books translated from contemporary Latin American authors; this will be
La Croix du Sud which he directs as founding editor, and will play a key role in introducing authors such as
Jorge Luis Borges,
Alejo Carpentier and
Pablo Neruda to the French-speaking public. In 1948 he is recruited by
UNESCO - where he will retire 25 years later at the age of 60 - and begins to travel widely. He finds the time to conduct serious, personal research on a broad range of subjects and publishes widely, receiving increasing praise and recognition in literary circles: among his most notable books
Les jeux et les hommes (1958) translated to English by Meyer Barash in 1961 as
Man, Play and Games,
Puissances du rêve (1962),
Pierres (1966), ''Cases d'un échiquier'' (1970). In 1971 he is elected to the
Académie française and publishes in 1978 a powerful 'imaginary' autobiography,
Le fleuve Alphée an award-winning autobiographical essay (
Marcel Proust Awards and
European Union Prize for Literature). Roger Caillois died in Paris on 21 December 1978, aged 65, following a brain hemorrhage. Today Caillois is also remembered for founding in 1952
Diogenes, an interdisciplinary quarterly journal edited in French, Spanish and English with initial funding by UNESCO and still published to this day. He is also widely cited in the nascent field of
ludology, primarily from passages in his book
Les Jeux et les hommes (1958). ==Key ideas on play==