Review
This well-annotated volume is recommended for graduate students, researchers, and faculty in the fields of French cultural and literary studies and European intellectual history. Choice
Book Description
At the peak of his career, after having established himself as an accomplished writer, astute moraliste, and the foremost spokesperson of his generation for personal freedom and self-realization, Gide became aware, first, that his particular brand of bourgeois individualism was becoming increasingly irrelevant in the contemporary world and, second, that social commitment and even revolution could serve as a powerful source of inspiration and self-renewal. Over a ten-year period that began in the 1920s and ended with his public break with the Soviet Union in 1936, Gide the committed intellectual interacted with society in ways that were for him unprecedented. These essays examine the outcomes of Gide’s evolving commitment to a host of controversial issues ranging from the sexual to the political, from the literary to the social.
About the Author
Tom Conner is Associate Professor of French at St. Norbert College in De Pere, Wisconsin.
Andre Gide's Politics: Rebellion and Ambivalence FROM THE PUBLISHER
At the peak of his career, after having established himself as an accomplished writer, astute moraliste, and the foremost spokesperson of his generation for personal freedom and self-realization, Gide became aware, first, that his particular brand of bourgeois individualism was becoming increasingly irrelevant in the contemporary world and, second, that social commitment and even revolution could serve as a powerful source of inspiration and self-renewal. Over a ten-year period that began in the 1920s and ended with his public break with the Soviet Union in 1936, Gide the committed intellectual interacted with society in ways that were for him unprecedented. These essays examine the outcomes of Gide's evolving commitment to a host of controversial issues ranging from the sexual to the political, from the literary to the social.At the peak of his career, after having established himself as an accomplished writer, astute moraliste, and the foremost spokesperson of his generation for personal freedom and self-realization, Gide became aware, first, that his particular brand of bourgeois individualism was becoming increasingly irrelevant in the contemporary world and, second, that social commitment and even revolution could serve as a powerful source of inspiration and self-renewal. Over a ten-year period that began in the 1920s and ended with his public break with the Soviet Union in 1936, Gide the committed intellectual interacted with society in ways that were for him unprecedented. These essays examine the outcomes of Gide's evolving commitment to a host of controversial issues ranging from the sexual to the political, from the literary to the social.
Author Biography: TomConner is Associate Professor of French at St. Norbert College in De Pere, Wisconsin.
FROM THE CRITICS
Booknews
In the 1920s, Gide (1869-1951) was at the peak of his career as writer, moralist, and advocate of personal freedom and self- realization. Then he realized that his bourgeois individualism was becoming irrelevant, and that social commitment and revolution could serve as a source of inspiration and self-renewal. Here US and European scholars of French literature focus on the his subsequent devotion to a range of controversial sexual, political, literary, and social issues until his break with the Soviet Union in 1936. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)