ÃÂric Hazan (23 July 1936 â 6 June 2024) was a French author and editor. He was the founder of .
Born in Paris on 23 July 1936, Hazan's mother was a Romanian Jew originally from Palestine, while his father, Fernand Hazan, was a Jew originally from Egypt and the brother of editor and librarian . During World War II, his family took refuge in Marseille. After the war, his father founded the publishing house . Hazan attended the Lycée Louis-le-Grand and joined communist activists, as well as the National Liberation Front during the Algerian War. He became a cardiovascular surgeon and campaigned for abortion rights in France. In 1975, as a founder of the , he travelled to Lebanon during the civil war to work as a combat doctor. He was a member of the , which began work on 4 March 2009.
In 1983, Hazan gave up surgery and became director of the family publishing business, ÃÂditions Hazan. However, he left management after the publisher was acquired by Groupe Hachette. In 1998, he founded the publishing house La Fabrique ("The Factory"), where the works published were primarily left-wing and historical or philosophical. He allegedly only published works by his friends according to Libération, which included the authors Norman Finkelstein and Houria Bouteldja. The Coming Insurrection, published, written by The Invisible Committee and published by La Fabrique was denounced by Minister of the Interior Michèle Alliot-Marie and led to Hazan's testimony in the . He also wrote and translated more than twenty works, including those of Edward Said.
ÃÂric Hazan died in Paris on 6 June 2024, aged 87. Jacques Rancière wrote a tribute to him in Liberation, published in English in the New Left Review.