
.
.André
GIDE
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Public domain |
André Paul Guillaume Gide
(22 November 1869 – 19
February 1951) was a French author and winner of the Nobel Prize
in literature in 1947. Gide's career ranged from its beginnings in
the symbolist movement, to the advent of anticolonialism between
the two World Wars.
Known for his fiction as well as
his autobiographical works, Gide exposes to public view the
conflict and eventual reconciliation between the two sides of his
personality, split apart by a straight-laced education and a
narrow social moralism. Gide's work can be seen as an
investigation of freedom and empowerment in the face of moralistic
and puritan constraints, and gravitates around his continuous
effort to achieve intellectual honesty. His self-exploratory texts
reflect his search of how to be fully oneself, even to the point
of owning one's sexual nature, without at the same time betraying
one's values. His political activity is informed by the same
ethos, as suggested by his repudiation of communism after his 1936
voyage to the USSR.
Early life
Gide was born in Paris
on 22 November 1869, into a middle-class Protestant family. His
father was a
Paris University professor of law and died in 1880. His uncle
was the political economist
Charles Gide.
Gide was brought up in isolated conditions in
Normandy and became a prolific writer at an early age,
publishing his first novel, The Notebooks of Andre Walter
(French: Les Cahiers d'André Walter), in 1891.
In 1893 and 1894, Gide traveled in northern Africa. Gide
realized he was homosexual after an encounter with a boy
prostitute in North Africa.
He befriended
Oscar Wilde in Paris, and in 1895 Gide and Wilde met in
Algiers. There, Wilde had the impression that he had introduced
Gide to homosexuality, but, in fact, Gide had already discovered
this on his own.
The middle years
In 1895, after his mother's death, he married his
cousin Madeleine Rondeaux, but the marriage remained
unconsummated. In 1896, he became mayor of
La Roque-Baignard, a
commune in Normandy.
In 1901, Gide rented the property
Maderia in St. Brelade's Bay and lived there while residing in
Jersey. This period, 1901–1907, is commonly seen as a period
of apathy and unsettlement in his life.
In 1908, Gide helped found the literary magazine
Nouvelle Revue Française (The New French Review).
In 1916,
Marc Allégret, still only 15 years old, became his lover. Marc
was the son of Elie Allégret, best man at Gide's wedding. Of
Allégret's five children, André Gide adopted Marc. The two fled to
London, in retribution for which his wife burned all his
correspondence, "the best part of myself," as he was later to
comment. In 1918, he met
Dorothy Bussy, who was his friend for over thirty years and
who would translate many of his works into English.
In the 1920s,
Gide became an inspiration for writers such as
Albert Camus and
Jean-Paul Sartre. In 1923, he published a book on
Fyodor Dostoyevsky; however, when he defended homosexuality in
the public edition of
Corydon (1924) he received widespread condemnation. He
later considered this his most important work.
In 1923, he sired a daughter, Catherine, by Elisabeth van
Rysselberghe – a much younger woman whom he had known since
childhood – who was the daughter of his closest woman friend,
Maria Monnom, the wife Belgian neo-impressionist painter
Théo van Rysselberghe. This would cause the only crisis in the
long-standing and intense friendship between Allégret and Gide.
This was possibly his only sexual liaison with a woman and it was
brief in the extreme, but Catherine became his only descendant by
blood. He liked to call Elisabeth "La Dame Blanche" ("The White
Lady"). Elisabeth eventually left her husband to move to Paris and
manage the practical aspects of Gide's life (she had adjoining
apartments built for each of them on the rue Vavin). She
worshipped him, but evidently they no longer had a sexual
relationship. Gide's legal wife, Madeleine, died in 1938. Later he
used the background of his unconsummated marriage in his novel
Et Nunc Manet in Te.
In 1924, he published an autobiography, Unless the seed dies
(French:
Si le grain ne meurt).
After 1925, he began to demand more humane conditions for
criminals.
Africa
From July 1926 to May 1927, he
travelled through the French Equatorial Africa colony with his
lover Marc Allégret. He went successively to Middle Congo (now the
Republic of the Congo), Oubangui-Chari (now the Central African
Republic), briefly to Chad and then to Cameroun before returning
to France. He related his peregrinations in a journal called
Travels in the Congo (French: Voyage au Congo) and Return
from Chad (French: Retour du Tchad). In this published
journal, he criticized the behavior of French business interests
in the Congo and inspired reform. In particular, he strongly
criticized the Large Concessions regime (French: régime des
Grandes Concessions), i.e. a regime according to which part of
the colony was conceded to French companies and where these
companies could exploit all of the area's natural resources, in
particular rubber. He related for instance how natives were forced
to leave their village during several weeks to collect rubber in
the forest, and went as far as comparing their exploitation to
slavery. The book had important influence on anti-colonialism
movements in France and helped re-evaluate the impact of
colonialism.
Russia
During the 1930s, he briefly became a
communist, or more precisely, a
fellow traveler (he never formally joined the Communist
Party). As a distinguished writer sympathizing with the cause of
communism, he was invited to tour the
Soviet Union as a guest of the Soviet Union of Writers. The
tour disillusioned him and he subsequently became quite critical
of Soviet Communism. This criticism of Communism caused him to
lose
socialist friends, especially when he made a clean break with
it in Retour de L'U.R.S.S. in 1936. He was also a
contributor to
The God That Failed.
The 1940s
Gide left France for Africa in 1942 and lived in Tunis
until the end of
World War II. In 1947, he received the
Nobel Prize in Literature.
Gide died on 19 February 1951. The
Roman Catholic Church placed his works on the
Index of Forbidden Books in 1952.
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