Flavien Ranaivo (born May 13, 1914, Arivonimamo, Madagascar—died December 20, 1999, Troyes, France) was a lyric poet deeply influenced by Malagasy ballad and song forms, in particular the hain-teny, a poetic dialogue usually on the subject of love. Ranaivo also held a number of important civic and government posts.
Educated at the Lycae Gallieri in Tananarive (now Antananarivo), Ranaivo worked in the information service until 1945, turned to journalism until 1952, and then returned to government work, especially in the Ministry of Education.
Ranaivo published three volumes of verse: L’Ombre et le vent (1947; “Shadow and Wind”), Mes chansons de toujours (1955; “My Lifelong Songs”), and Le Retour au bercail (1962; “Return to the Fold”). They were issued in a combined translation, Poetic Works of Flavien Ranaivo (1970). Ranaivo followed Jean-Joseph Rabéarivelo in adapting traditional Malagasy poetry into French, and his crisp and sometimes impudent and slangy use of language reflects the vernacular traditions that inspired him. His poems are personal rather than ideological and are praised for their technical perfection and lyricism.