Teklik, Joanna2012-07-192012-07-192012-06-26Studia Romanica Posnaniensia, 2012, vol. 39, nr 1, pp. 60-67978-83-232-2410-50137-2475http://hdl.handle.net/10593/2914Over the period directly following the Second World War, continuity and discontinuity were closely interwoven in the Walloon literature. From one hand, esthetic models from Interwar period were still present and no novel concepts appeared in the writings of Walloon authors. From the other, however, a large number of new State-run institutions were inaugurated. The hardships suffered during the war, seen mainly as an instance of disruption, are abundantly described in literary works, especially in testimonies. It is in this context that Arthur Haulot, Belgian poet and novelist, made prisoner and taken to Dachau, created his literary poignant output. His writings are marked by harsh experiences undergone in camps.frBelgiumWorld War TwoConcentration campLiterary testimoniesArthur HaulotRaconter pour témoigner : la guerre et l’Occupation dans le champ littéraire belge au sortir du second conflit mondialTo narrate in order to give evidence : the war and the occupation in the Belgian literature of a direct Post-War period