- The Mandarins
"The Mandarins" ( _fr. Les Mandarins) is a 1954
roman-à-clef bySimone de Beauvoir . The novel is perhaps de Beauvoir's most celebrated, and in 1954 it won her thePrix Goncourt ."The Mandarins" is about life & works of French
Intellectual s mainly during the time after1945 . It's a kind of chronicle ofexistentialism . The book describes (slightly veiled) the struggles betweenJean-Paul Sartre (here called Robert Dubreuilh) on the one side, andAlbert Camus (called Henri Perron) andArthur Koestler (called Victor Scriassine) on the other side. Then, it also tells the story of Anne Dubreuilh, wife of Robert Dubreuilh, who's an "alter ego " of Author de Beauvoir herself. Anne lost her Catholicfaith in early years but still preserved some principles of her conservative upbringing. This leads to herconflict between freedom and dutifulness. She tries to flee from themonotony of everyday life with the American Lewis Brogan ("i.e."Nelson Algren ), but it ends in resignation.The whole story has a more pessimist atmosphere. It's about the
moral conflicts coming from the question whether one's supposed to always tell thetruth and the problem of authors' engagement per se. So, Dubreuilh and Perron are just Mandarins, restricted to the power(lessness) ofLiterature . Anne'ssoliloquy s are interspersed by long, existentialistically painteddialogue s. The Author confronts the reader with philosophical axioms by Sartre and the change from "I" to "he". At the end, there's the feeling of isolation, solitude and especially the realization that all the characters are irreconcilable.The British novelist and philosopher
Iris Murdoch described the book as "endearing because of its persistent seriousness".
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