André Gide (1869-1951)
French writer, humanist, and moralist who received the Nobel Prize for
Literature in 1947. As a novelist, and still more as an intellectual figure,
Gide has appealed to different audiences: a traditional psychological novelist
to some, an innovative modernist to others; he was a major literary critic,
social crusader, and spokesman for homosexual rights. Gide's search for self -
the underlying theme of his several works - remained essentially religious.
Throughout his career Gide used his writings to examine moral questions. He is
as well known for his influence as a moralist and as a thinker as for his
contributions to literature.
"It is not so much about events that I'm curious, as about myself. There's
many a man thinks he's capable of anything, who draws back when it comes to
the point... What a gulf between the imagination and the deed! And no more
right to take back one's move than at chess. Pooh! If one could foresee all
the risks, there'd be no interests in the game!... Between the imagination and
a deed and... Hullo! the bank's come to an end. Here we are on a bridge, I
think, a river..." (from The Vatican Cellars, 1952)
André Gide was born in Paris. His father, Paul Gide, a professor of law at the
University of Paris, was descended from Cévennes Huguenots. He died in 1880.
In SI LE GRAIN NE MEURT... (1924-26, If It Die: An Autobiography), Gide
recalled that his father "spent most of the day shut up in a vast and rather
dark study, into which I was only allowed when he expressly invited me." In
his study he read his son works by Molière, passages from the Odyssey, and
after discussing with his wife, also the first part of the Book of Job. "But
the reading certainly made the deepest impression on me, not only because of
the solemnity of the story, but because of the gravity of my father's voice
and my mother's expression, as she sat with her eyes closed, in order
alternately to signify or to shield her pious absorption, and opened them only
to cast a questioning glance on me, full of love and hope." (from If It Die)
Gide was raised by three women - his Aunt Claire, the English spinster Anna
Shackleton, and his Calvinist mother, Juliette Rondeaux, who devoted her life
to him. In his childhood Gide was educated mostly at home - he was lonely and
ill for long periods. At the age of 13, Gide fell in love with his cousin
Madeleine Rondeaux; they married 12 years later, but in 1923, after twenty-seven
years of unconsummated marriage, Gide had a daughter, Catherine, by another
woman. Catherine's mother, Maria Van Rysselberghe, wrote about Gide's domestic
life in Cahiers de la Petite Dame 1918-1945 (1973-77). Madeleine died in 1938,
his unconsummated "marriage of Heaven and Hell" Gide dealt in ET NUNC MANET IN
TE (1951).
Gide attended several schools. At the École Alsacienne Gide developed an
interest in literature. He made friends with other aspiring writers and
artists and attended the literary salons of José Maria de Heredia and Stéphane
Mallarmé. In 1891 Gide made his debut as a novelist with LES CAHIERS D'ANDRÉ
WALTER. He had started to write it at the age of 18. The book, published
anonymously, told the story of an unhappy young man and his pure love for his
cousin Emmanuèle. Next year appeared his first collection of poems, POÉSIES,
but by 1900 he had practically abandoned poetry.
In 1893 and 1894 Gide traveled to North Africa, learning different moral and
sexual conventions. At Biskra Gide fell ill and narrowly escaped death. These
experiences gave basis for his psychological novels The Immoralist (1902),
about the destructive force of hedonism and hunger for new experiences, and
Strait is the Gate (1909), the counterpoint of the former work, or the "twin",
as Gide called it. "The capacity to get free is nothing," says Mchael, the
narrator of the Immoralist, "the capacity to be free, that is the task." In
PALUDES (1895) Gide examined ironically his former life; Africa had made him
accept his sexual inclinations. He became close friends with Oscar Wilde whom
he met in Algiers, and whose caricature Gide drew in his memoir. The
Immoralist played with the dialogue between the inner narrator and the outer
narrator.
"Families, I hate you! Shut-in homes, closed doors, jealous possessions of
happiness." (from Fruits of the Earth)
Gide's hymn in prose and poetry to the beauty of all, Fruits of the Earth,
appeared in 1897. It became in the 1920s his most popular work, influencing a
generation of young writers, including the existentialists Albert Camus and
Jean-Paul Sartre, to cast off all that is artificial or merely conventional.
In 1909 Gide helped found the influential literary magazine Nouvelle Revue
française (The New French Review). For it he wrote a large number of essays
and reviews. Gide rejected nationalism in French literature. He stated that "great
minds never fear influences; on the contrary, they seek them with a sort of
eagerness like the eagerness of being." Gide's defense of homosexuality in
CORYDON, published first privately in 1911, was violently attacked. In the
1930s he announced his conversion to Communism, which shocked his readers, but
he also was rejected by his new admirers after his disillusioning trip to the
Soviet Union. In RETOUR DE L'URSS (1936) Gide made a decisive break with the
Soviets.
In 1916 Gide started to keep a second journal, in which he recorded his search
for God. His religious crisis of 1915-16 Gide analyzed in NUMQUID ET TU...?
(1922). On 4 August 1922 he wrote in the journal, "I present my own ethics
under the cover of Dostoevsky." Gide's interest in the Russian writer went
back to his youth. In 1923 he published a book on Dostoevsky, which consisted
mainly on lectures and earlier writings. Gide noted that Dostoevsky's main
ideas were expressed through his characters: "He lost himself in each of the
characters of his books and for this reason it is in them that he can be found
again." Gide also recorded his everyday observations in his journal, examining
often vices mirroring the problems of society. "10 May 1927: Many opium
smokers and cocaine addicts in Zurich. Some of them, Rychner tells me, began
to inject themselves during their last year at the Gymnasium; that is, when
aged sixteen or seventeen. He knows one whom the professors caught using a
syringe in a final examination. Cornered, he confessed that he had got his
habit in class. 'Do you think anyone could endure the dullness of X's teaching
without shooting up?' he asked."
After the mid-1920s Gide became a champion of society's victims, who demanded
more humane conditions for criminals. He had observed social injustices more
closely than many other writers from the 1890s - first as mayor of a commune
in Normandy (1896), and later as a juror in Rouen (1912), and then as a
special envoy of the Colonial Ministry (1925-26). In July 1925 Gide set out
for a journey to the Congo with his friend Marc Allegret, returning in 1927.
During this time Gide published If It Die..., which has been compared to
Jacques Rousseau's Confessions.
In the novel The Counterfreiters (1926) Gide exposed the hypocrisy and self-deception
with which people try to avoid sincerity. The protagonist, Edouard, keeps a
journal of events in order to write a novel about the nature of reality.
Another internal author - the 'pseudo-author', an intervening first person
voice - comments the action. Edouard falls in love with his nephew Oliver
Molinier. Through their story Gide illustrates what he considered a
constructive homosexual relationship. Numerous themes are woven into the
complex structure, not only the novelist writing a novel about a novelist who
is writing a novel about forging. The intrigues of a gang of counterfeiters
symbolize the counterfeit personalities with which people disguise themselves.
The novels ends with the suicide of one of the characters.
In The Pastoral Symphony (1919), written in the form of the diary, Gide
explored the hypocrisy which masquerades as Christian pity and duty. In the
story a Swiss Protestant pastor adopts and educates the blind orphan Gertrude.
The pastor is afraid that Gertrude loves him less than his son Jacques, and
seduces the girl on the eve of an operation, which may restore her sight.
After the successful operation, Gertrude understands the truth about the
people around her and she commits suicide. The pastor doesn't realize his own
blindness before he starts to re-examine his own thinking and behavior. The
film version of the book, directed by Jean Delannoy, gained critical and
popular success in 1946, but the author himself was not happy with the result.
Delannoy gave Gerture her sight some two-thirds of the way through the film,
not at the end. The novella, Gide claimed, "makes sense only in terms of its
artistic construction. It is, in sum, a tragedy in five acts which takes on
its final value only through the long night of the first four acts. The young
blind girl recovers her sight only in the last pages - to her detriment as it
turns out. Everything resides in this sudden rupture. They explained to me
that the necessities of the screen warranted a new conception of the tale,
that it had to be translated into another language." The novella Isabelle
exposed illusions of a young student, who falls in love with a woman pictured
in a mysterious miniature. It was published in the UK in the same volume as La
Symphonie Pastorale.
From 1942 until the end of WW II, Gide lived in North Africa. In the 1940s he
began receive honors, which culminated in the Nobel Prize. Gide's
correspondence with his friends Francis Jammes (pub. 1948) and Paul Claudel (pub.
1949) reveals their unsuccessful attempt to convert the author to Catholicism.
Among Gide's later works is THÉSÉE (1946), which contributed to the renewed
use of Greek myth in the 20th century literature. Gide died on February 19,
1951. The Catholic Church placed his works on the Index in 1952. Gide's wide
correspondence with Proust, Paul Claudel, Rainer Maria Rilke, Paul Valéry,
Martin du Gard, and others started to appear regularly in 1948.
For further reading: Le Dialogue avec André Gide by C. Du Bos (1929); André
Gide by R. Fernandez (1931); André Gide by J. Hytier (1938); Portrait of André
Gide by Justin O'Brien (1953); Theory and Practice of the Novel: A Study of
André Gide by W. Wolfgang Holdheim (1968); André Gide by G.W. Ireland (1970);
Gide: A Study by Christopher D. Bettinson (1972); Portraits of Artist by
Arthur E. Babock (1982); Fiction et vie sociale dans l'oeuvre d'André Gide by
Alain Goulet (1985); André Gide and the Codes of Homotextuality by Emily S.
Apter (1987); Réflections sur 'Les Faux-Monnayeurs' by Pierre Masson (1990);
André Gide by David H. Walker (1990); Andre Gide: A Life in the Present by
Alan Sheridan (1999) - Noter sur André Gide by Roger Martin du Gard - See also:
Olavi Paavolainen, Saint-John Perse, Colette, Francois La Rochefoucauld,
Rainer Maria Rilke
Selected works:
* LES CAHIERS D'ANDRÉ WALTER, 1891 - The Notebooks of André Walter
* LE TRAITÉ DU NARCISSE, 1891 - Narcissus
* LES POÉSIES D'ANDRÉ WALTER, 1892
* LE VOYAGE D'URIEN, 1983 - Urien's Voyage
* LA TENTATIVE AMOUREUSE, 1893 - The Lover's Attempt, trans. in The Return of
the Prodigal
* LE VOYAGE D'URIEN, 1893 - Urien's Travels
* PALUDES, 1895 - Marshlands
* LES NOURRITURES TERRESTRES, 1897 - Fruits of the Earth
* LE PROMÉTHÉE MAL ENCHAÎNÉ, 1899 - Prometheus Illbound / Prometheus Misbound
* EL HADJ, 1899 - trans.
* PHILOCTÈTE, 1899 - Philoctetes
* LE ROI CANDAULE, 1901 - King Candaules
* L'IMMORALISTE, 1902 - The Immoralist
* SAÜL, 1903
* PRÉTEXTES, 1903
* AMYNTAS, 1906 - trans.
* LE RETOUR DE L'ENFANT PRODIGUE, 1907 - The Retour of the Prodical
* LA PORTE ÉTROITE, 1909 - Strait is the Gate - Ahdas portti
* OSCAR WILDE, 1910 - trans.
* ISABELLE, 1911 - trans.
* NOUVEAUX PRÉTEXTES, 1911
* BETHSABÉ, 1912 - Bathsheba
* SOUVENIRS DE LA COUR D'ASSISES, 1914 - Recollections of the Azzize Court
* LES CAVES DU VATICAN, 1914 - The Vatican Cellars / Lafcadio's Adventures
* LA SYMPHONIE PASTORALE, 1919 - The Pastoral Symphony - Pastoraalisinfonia -
film 1946, dir. by Jean Delannoy, screenplay by Jean Aurenche and Pierre Bost,
starring Michele Morgan, Pierre Blanchar, Line Noro, Jean Dessailly. - "And so
we have in this film a wonderful example of a type of film worth looking at,
but a type which, though especially dependent on adaptation, was not supple
enough to do justice to the literature it celebrated." (Dudley Andrew in
Modern European Filmmakers and the Art of Adaptation, ed. by Andrew S. Horton
and Joan Magretta, 1981)
* MORCEAUX CHOISIS, 1921
* NUMQUID ET TU...?, 1922
* DOSTOÏEVSKY, 1923 - Dostoevsky
* CORYDON, 1924
* INCIDENCES, 1924
* SI LE GRAIN NE MEURT..., 1924-26 - If It Die... - Ellei vehnänjyvä kuole
* LES FAUX-MONNAYEURS, 1926 - The Counterfeiters - Vääränrahantekijät
* LE JOURNAL DES FAUX-MONNAYEURS, 1926 - The Journal of the Counterfeiters
* VOYAGE AU CONGO, 1927 - To the Congo, in Travels in the Congo
* LE RETOUR DU TCHAD, 1928 - Back from the Chad, in Travels in the Congo
* ESSAI SUR MONTAIGNE, 1929 - Montaigne
* L'ECOLE DES FEMMES, 1929 - The School for Wives - Naisten koulu
* ROBERT, 1929 - trans.
* LA SÉQUESTRÉE DE POITIERS, 1930
* NE JUGEZ PAS, 1930 - Andre Gide, Judge Not (trans. by Benjamin Ivry)
* ŒDIPE, 1931 (play) - Oedipus
* DIVERS, 1931
* PERSÉPHONE, 1934 - Persephone
* LES NOUVELLES NOURRITURES, 1935 - The New Fruits, in Fruits of the Earth
* GENEVIÈVE, 1936 - Genevieve
* RETOUR DE L'URSS, 1936 - Return from the U.S.S.R.
* RETOUCHES À MON "RETOUR DE L'USSR", 1937 - After thoughts on the U.S.S.R.
* JOURNAL 1889-1939, 1939
* LE TREIZIÈME ARBRE, 1942
* ATTENDU QUE, 1943
* INTERVIEWS IMAGINAIRES, 1943
* DEUX INTERVIEWS IMAGINAIRES, SUIVIS DE FEUILLETS, 1946
* JOURNAL 1939-42, 1946
* THÉSÉE, 1946 - Two Legends: Oidipus and Theseus
* NOTES SUR CHOPIN, 1948 - Notes on Chopin
* FEUILLETS D'AUTOMNE, 1949 - Autumn Leaves
* ROBERT; OU, L'INTERÊT GÉNÉRAL, 1949
* LITTÉRATURE ENGAGÉE, 1950
* JOURNAL 1939-49, 1950
* ET NUNC MANET IN TE, 1951 - The Secret Drama of My Life / Madeleine
* AINSI SOIT-IL, 1952 - So Be It
* ŒUVRES COMPLÈTES, 1932-1954