André Malraux : politics and the temptation of myth

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Bibliographic Information

André Malraux : politics and the temptation of myth

Gino Raymond

(Avebury series in philosophy)

Avebury, c1995

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 201-212)

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Andre Malraux was pre-eminent among his contemporaries in his passionate espousal of left-wing causes, and was the French writer who enjoyed the highest reputation during the 1930s for his attempts to reconcile the imperatives of literary creation with those of political action. However, of the many studies devoted to Malraux, few have analyzed the politics depicted in his fiction in relation to the politics he proclaimed, in an effort to establish the extent to which they informed or subverted each other. This study juxtaposes the inconsistencies in Malraux's personal convictions with the contradictions inherent in his novels of revoltion, and in so doing addresses the broad issues of political action and moral choice, and the susceptibility of politics to mythication. This book marks a development in the interdisciplinary study of the inter-war years in Europe.

Table of Contents

  • Part I Radical ideas and radical change: an age of uncertainty
  • Malraux, Trotsky and Marxist inheritance
  • the temptation of the right. Part II The mythical dimension: an ahistorical vision and an atemporal plane
  • reason and the mythical sensibility
  • myth inflated.

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