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André Gide

André Paul Guillaume Gide (French: [ɑ̃dʁe pɔl ɡijom ʒid]; 22 November 1869 – 19 February 1951) was a French author whose writings spanned a wide variety of styles and topics. He was awarded the 1947 Nobel Prize in Literature. Gide's career ranged from his beginnings in the symbolist movement, to criticising imperialism between the two World Wars. The author of more than fifty books, he was described in his obituary in The New York Times as "France's greatest contemporary man of letters" and "judged the greatest French writer of this century by the literary cognoscenti."[1]

André Gide
BornAndré Paul Guillaume Gide
(1869-11-22)22 November 1869
Paris, France
Died19 February 1951(1951-02-19) (aged 81)
Paris, France
Resting placeCimetière de Cuverville, Cuverville, Seine-Maritime
OccupationNovelist, essayist, dramatist
EducationLycée Henri-IV
Notable worksThe Immoralist
Strait Is the Gate
Les caves du Vatican (The Vatican Cellars; sometimes published in English under the title Lafcadio's Adventures)
The Pastoral Symphony
The Counterfeiters
The Fruits of the Earth
Notable awardsNobel Prize in Literature
1947
SpouseMadeleine Rondeaux Gide
ChildrenCatherine Gide
Signature

Known for his fiction as well as his autobiographical works, Gide expressed the conflict and eventual reconciliation of the two sides of his personality (characterized by a Protestant austerity and a transgressive sexual adventurousness, respectively). He suggested that a strict and moralistic education had helped set these facets at odds. Gide's work can be seen as an investigation of freedom and empowerment in the face of moralistic and puritanical constraints. He worked to achieve intellectual honesty. As a self-professed pederast, he used his writing to explore his struggle to be fully oneself, including owning one's sexual nature, without betraying one's values. His political activity was shaped by the same ethos. While sympathetic to Communism in the early 1930s, as were many intellectuals, after his 1936 journey to the USSR he supported the anti-Stalinist left; during the 1940s he shifted towards more traditional values and repudiated Communism as an idea that breaks up with the traditions of the Christian civilization.

Early life edit

 
Gide in 1893

Gide was born in Paris on 22 November 1869, into a middle-class Protestant family. His father Jean Paul Guillaume Gide was a professor of law at University of Paris; he died in 1880, when the boy was eleven years old. His mother was Juliette Maria Rondeaux. His uncle was political economist Charles Gide. His paternal family traced its roots to Italy. The ancestral Guidos had moved to France and other western and northern European countries after converting to Protestantism during the 16th century, and facing persecution in Catholic Italy.[2][3][4]

Gide was brought up in isolated conditions in Normandy. He became a prolific writer at an early age, publishing his first novel The Notebooks of André Walter (French: Les Cahiers d'André Walter), in 1891, at the age of twenty-one.

In 1893 and 1894, Gide traveled in Northern Africa. There he came to accept his attraction to boys and youths.[5]

Gide befriended Irish playwright Oscar Wilde in Paris, where the latter was in exile. In 1895 the two men met in Algiers. Wilde had the impression that he had introduced Gide to homosexuality, but Gide had discovered homosexuality on his own.[6][7]

The middle years edit

 
Gide photographed by Ottoline Morrell in 1924.
 
André Gide by Paul Albert Laurens (1924)

In 1895, after his mother's death, Gide married his cousin Madeleine Rondeaux,[8] but the marriage remained unconsummated. In 1896, he was elected mayor of La Roque-Baignard, a commune in Normandy.

In 1901, Gide rented the property Maderia in St. Brélade's Bay and lived there while residing on the island of Jersey. This period, 1901–07, is commonly seen as a time of apathy and turmoil for him.

In 1908, Gide helped found the literary magazine Nouvelle Revue Française (The New French Review).[9]

During World War I], Gide visited England. One of his friends there was artist William Rothenstein. Rothenstein described Gide's visit to his Gloucestershire home in his autobiography:

André Gide was in England during the war...He came to stay with us for a time, and brought with him a young nephew, whose English was better than his own. The boy made friends with my son John, while Gide and I discussed everything under the sun. Once again I delighted in the range and subtlety of a Frenchman's intelligence; and I regretted my long severance from France. Nobody understood art more profoundly than Gide, no one's view of life was more penetrating. ...

Gide had a half satanic, half monk-like mien; he put one in mind of portraits of Baudelaire. Withal there was something exotic about him. He would appear in a red waistcoat, black velvet jacket and beige-coloured trousers and, in lieu of collar and tie, a loosely knotted scarf. ...

The heart of man held no secrets for Gide. There was little that he didn't understand, or discuss. He suffered, as I did, from the banishment of truth, one of the distressing symptoms of war. The Germans were not all black, and the Allies all white, for Gide.[10]

In 1916, Gide was about 47 years old when he took Marc Allégret, age 15, as a lover. Marc was one of five children of Élie Allégret and his wife. Gide had become friends with the senior Allégret during his own school years when Gide's mother had hired Allégret as a tutor for her son. Élie Allégret had been best man at Gide's wedding. After Gide fled with Marc to London, his wife Madeleine burned all his correspondence in retaliation– "the best part of myself," Gide later commented.

In 1918, Gide met and befriended Dorothy Bussy; they were friends for more than 30 years, and she translated many of his works into English.

Gide also became close friends with the critic Charles Du Bos.[11] Together they were part of the Foyer Franco-Belge, in which capacity they worked to find employment, food and housing for Franco-Belgian refugees who arrived in Paris following the 1914 German invasion of Belgium.[12][13] Their friendship later declined, due to Du Bos's perception that Gide had disavowed or betrayed his spiritual faith, in contrast to Du Bos's own return to faith.[14][15]

Du Bos's essay Dialogue avec André Gide was published in 1929.[16] The essay, informed by Du Bos's Catholic convictions, condemned Gide's homosexuality.[17] Gide and Du Bos's mutual friend Ernst Robert Curtius criticised the book in a letter to Gide, writing that "he [Du Bos] judges you according to Catholic morals suffices to neglect his complete indictment. It can only touch those who think like him and are convinced in advance. He has abdicated his intellectual liberty."[18]

In the 1920s, Gide became an inspiration for such writers as Albert Camus and Jean-Paul Sartre. In 1923, he published a book on Fyodor Dostoyevsky. 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, Gide sired a daughter, Catherine, by Elisabeth van Rysselberghe, a much younger woman. He had known her for a long time, as she was the daughter of his friends Maria Monnom and Théo van Rysselberghe, a Belgian neo-impressionist painter. This caused the only crisis in the long-standing relationship between Allégret and Gide, and damaged his friendship with van Rysselberghe. This was possibly Gide's only sexual relationship with a woman,[19] and it was brief in the extreme. Catherine was 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 (they had adjoining apartments built on the rue Vavin). She worshipped him, but evidently they no longer had a sexual relationship.[citation needed]

In 1924, he published an autobiography If it Die... (French: Si le grain ne meurt). In the same year, he produced the first French-language editions of Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness and Lord Jim.

After 1925, Gide began to campaign for more humane conditions for convicted criminals. His legal wife, Madeleine Gide, died in 1938. Later he explored their unconsummated marriage in Et nunc manet in te, his memoir of Madeleine, published in English in the United States in 1952.

Africa edit

From July 1926 to May 1927, Gide traveled through the colony of French Equatorial Africa with his lover Marc Allégret. They went successively to Middle Congo (now the Republic of the Congo), Ubangi-Shari (now the Central African Republic), briefly to Chad and then to Cameroon. He kept a journal, which he published as Travels in the Congo (French: Voyage au Congo) and Return from Chad (French: Retour du Tchad).[9]

In this work, he criticized the behavior of French business interests in the Congo and inspired reform.[9] In particular, he strongly criticized the Large Concessions regime (French: Régime des Grandes Concessions). The government had conceded part of the colony to French companies, allowing them to exploit the area's natural resources, in particular rubber. He related that native workers were forced to leave their village for several weeks to collect rubber in the forest, and compared their exploitation by the companies to slavery. The book contributed to the growing anti-colonialism movements in France and helped thinkers to re-evaluate the effects of colonialism in Africa.[20]

Political views and the Soviet Union edit

During the 1930s, Gide briefly became a Communist, or more precisely, a fellow traveler (he never formally joined any Communist party), but he, an individualist himself, advocated the idea of Communist individualism.[21] Despite supporting the Soviet Union, he acknowledged the political repression in the USSR. Gide insisted on the release of Victor Serge, a Soviet writer and a member of the Left Opposition who was prosecuted by the Stalinist regime for his views.[22][23] As a distinguished writer sympathizing with the cause of Communism, he was invited to speak at Maxim Gorky's funeral and to tour the Soviet Union as a guest of the Soviet Union of Writers. He encountered censorship of his speeches and was particularly disillusioned with the state of culture under Soviet Communism. In his work, Retour de L'U.R.S.S. (Return from the USSR, 1936), he broke with such socialist friends as Jean-Paul Sartre[citation needed]; the book was addressed to pro-Soviet readers, so the purpose was to expose a reader to doubts instead of presenting harsh criticism.[23] While admitting the economic and social achievements of the USSR compared to the Russian Empire, he noted the decay of culture, the erasure of the individuality of Soviet citizens, and the suppression of any dissent:

Then would it not be better to, instead of playing on words, simply to acknowledge that the revolutionary spirit (or even simply the critical spirit) is no longer the correct thing, that it is not wanted any more? What is wanted now is compliance, conformism. What is desired and demanded is approval of all that is done in the U. S. S. R.; and an attempt is being made to obtain an approval that is not mere resignation, but a sincere, an enthusiastic approval. What is most astounding is that this attempt is successful. On the other hand the smallest protest, the least criticism, is liable to the severest penalties, and in fact is immediately stifled. And I doubt whether in any other country in the world, even Hitler's Germany, thought to be less free, more bowed down, more fearful (terrorized), more vassalized.

— André Gide Return from the U. S. S. R.[24]

Gide does not express his attitude towards Stalin, but he describes the signs of his personality cult: "in each [home], ... the same portrait of Stalin, and nothing else"; "portrait of Stalin... , in the same place no doubt where the icon used to be. Is it adoration, love, or fear? I do not know; always and everywhere he is present."[25] However, Gide wrote that these problems could be solved by raising the cultural level of the Soviet society.

When Gide began preparing his manuscript for publication, the Kremlin was immediately informed about it,[26] and the soon Gide would be visited by the Soviet author Ilya Ehrenburg, who said that he agreed with Gide, but asked to postpone the publication, as the Soviet Union assisted the Republicans in Spain; two days later, Louis Aragon delivered a letter from Jef Last asking to postpone the publication. These measures didn't help, and as the book was published, Gide was condemned in the Soviet press[26][23] and by the "friends of the USSR": Nordahl Grieg wrote that the reason of writing the book was Gide's impatience, and that with his book he made a favour to the Fascists, who greeted it with joy.[27] In 1937, in response, Gide published Afterthoughts on the U. S. S. R.; earlier, Gide read Trotsky's The Revolution Betrayed and met Victor Serge who provided him more information about the Soviet Union.[23] In Afterthoughts, Gide is more direct in his criticism of the Soviet society: "Citrine, Trotsky, Mercier, Yvon, Victor Serge, Leguay, Rudolf and many others have helped me with their documentation. Everything they have taught me so far I had only suspected it – has confirmed and reinforced my fears".[28] The main points of Afterthoughts were that the dictatorship of the proletariat became the dictatorship of Stalin, and that the privileged bureaucracy became the new ruling class which profited by the workers' surplus labour, spending the state budget on projects like the Palace of Soviets or to raise its own standards of living, while the working class lived in extreme poverty; Gide cited the official Soviet newspapers to prove his statements.[28][23][29]

During the World War II Gide came to a conclusion that "absolute liberty destroys the individual and also society unless it be closely linked to tradition and discipline"; he rejected the revolutionary idea of Communism as breaking with the traditions, and wrote that "if civilization depended solely on those who initiated revolutionary theories, then it would perish, since culture needs for its survival a continuous and developing tradition." In Thesee, written in 1946, he showed that an individual may safely leave the Maze only if "he had clung tightly to the thread which linked him with the past". In 1947, he said that although during the human history the civilizations rose up and died, the Christian civilization may be saved from doom "if we accepted the responsibility of the sacred charge laid on us by our traditions and our past." He also said that he remained an individualist and protested against "the submersion of individual responsibility in organized authority, in that escape from freedom which is characteristic of our age."[21]

Gide contributed to the 1949 anthology The God That Failed. He could not write an essay because of his state of health, so the text was written by Enid Starkie, based on paraphrases of Return from the USSR, Afterthoughts, from a discussion held in Paris at l'Union pour la Verite in 1935, and from his Journal; the text was approved by Gide.[21]

1930s and 1940s edit

In 1930 Gide published a book about the Blanche Monnier case titled La Séquestrée de Poitiers, changing little but the names of the protagonists. Monnier was a young woman who was kept captive by her own mother for more than 25 years.[30][31]

In 1939, Gide became the first living author to be published in the prestigious Bibliothèque de la Pléiade.

He left France for Africa in 1942 and lived in Tunis from December 1942 until it was re-taken by French, British and American forces in May 1943 and he was able to travel to Algiers where he stayed until the end of World War II.[32] In 1947, he received the Nobel Prize in Literature "for his comprehensive and artistically significant writings, in which human problems and conditions have been presented with a fearless love of truth and keen psychological insight".[33] He devoted much of his last years to publishing his Journal.[34] Gide died in Paris on 19 February 1951. The Roman Catholic Church placed his works on the Index of Forbidden Books in 1952.[35]

Gide's life as a writer edit

Gide's biographer Alan Sheridan summed up Gide's life as a writer and an intellectual:

Gide was, by general consent, one of the dozen most important writers of the 20th century. Moreover, no writer of such stature had led such an interesting life, a life accessibly interesting to us as readers of his autobiographical writings, his journal, his voluminous correspondence and the testimony of others. It was the life of a man engaging not only in the business of artistic creation, but reflecting on that process in his journal, reading that work to his friends and discussing it with them; a man who knew and corresponded with all the major literary figures of his own country and with many in Germany and England; who found daily nourishment in the Latin, French, English and German classics, and, for much of his life, in the Bible; [who enjoyed playing Chopin and other classic works on the piano;] and who engaged in commenting on the moral, political and sexual questions of the day.[36]

"Gide's fame rested ultimately, of course, on his literary works. But, unlike many writers, he was no recluse: he had a need of friendship and a genius for sustaining it."[37] But his "capacity for love was not confined to his friends: it spilled over into a concern for others less fortunate than himself."[38]

Writings edit

André Gide's writings spanned many genres – "As a master of prose narrative, occasional dramatist and translator, literary critic, letter writer, essayist, and diarist, André Gide provided twentieth-century French literature with one of its most intriguing examples of the man of letters."[39]

But as Gide's biographer Alan Sheridan points out, "It is the fiction that lies at the summit of Gide's work."[40] "Here, as in the oeuvre as a whole, what strikes one first is the variety. Here, too, we see Gide's curiosity, his youthfulness, at work: a refusal to mine only one seam, to repeat successful formulas...The fiction spans the early years of Symbolism, to the "comic, more inventive, even fantastic" pieces, to the later "serious, heavily autobiographical, first-person narratives"...In France Gide was considered a great stylist in the classical sense, "with his clear, succinct, spare, deliberately, subtly phrased sentences."

Gide's surviving letters run into the thousands. But it is the Journal that Sheridan calls "the pre-eminently Gidean mode of expression."[41] "His first novel emerged from Gide's own journal, and many of the first-person narratives read more or less like journals. In Les faux-monnayeurs, Edouard's journal provides an alternative voice to the narrator's." "In 1946, when Pierre Herbert asked Gide which of his books he would choose if only one were to survive," Gide replied, 'I think it would be my Journal.'" Beginning at the age of 18 or 19, Gide kept a journal all of his life and when these were first made available to the public, they ran to 1,300 pages.[42]

Struggle for values edit

"Each volume that Gide wrote was intended to challenge itself, what had preceded it, and what could conceivably follow it. This characteristic, according to Daniel Moutote in his Cahiers de André Gide essay, is what makes Gide's work 'essentially modern': the 'perpetual renewal of the values by which one lives.'"[43] Gide wrote in his Journal in 1930: "The only drama that really interests me and that I should always be willing to depict anew, is the debate of the individual with whatever keeps him from being authentic, with whatever is opposed to his integrity, to his integration. Most often the obstacle is within him. And all the rest is merely accidental."[44]

As a whole, "The works of André Gide reveal his passionate revolt against the restraints and conventions inherited from 19th-century France. He sought to uncover the authentic self beneath its contradictory masks."[45]

Sexuality edit

In his journal, Gide distinguishes between adult-attracted "sodomites" and boy-loving "pederasts", categorizing himself as the latter.

I call a pederast the man who, as the word indicates, falls in love with young boys. I call a sodomite ("The word is sodomite, sir," said Verlaine to the judge who asked him if it were true that he was a sodomist) the man whose desire is addressed to mature men...The pederasts, of whom I am one (why cannot I say this quite simply, without your immediately claiming to see a brag in my confession?), are much rarer, and the sodomites much more numerous, than I first thought...That such loves can spring up, that such relationships can be formed, it is not enough for me to say that this is natural; I maintain that it is good; each of the two finds exaltation, protection, a challenge in them; and I wonder whether it is for the youth or the elder man that they are more profitable.[46]

From an interview with film documentarian Nicole Védrès with Andre Gide:
Védrès "May I ask you an indiscreet question?
Gide "There are no indiscreet questions, only indiscreet answers."
Védrès "Is it true, cher Maître, that you are a homosexual?"
Gide "No monsieur, I am not a homosexual, I am a pederast!"
—from Vedres' documentary Life Starts Tomorrow (1950)[47]

Gide's journal documents his behavior in the company of Oscar Wilde.

Wilde took a key out of his pocket and showed me into a tiny apartment of two rooms...The youths followed him, each of them wrapped in a burnous that hid his face. Then the guide left us and Wilde sent me into the further room with little Mohammed and shut himself up in the other with the [other boy]. Every time since then that I have sought after pleasure, it is the memory of that night I have pursued...My joy was unbounded, and I cannot imagine it greater, even if love had been added. How should there have been any question of love? How should I have allowed desire to dispose of my heart? No scruple clouded my pleasure and no remorse followed it. But what name then am I to give the rapture I felt as I clasped in my naked arms that perfect little body, so wild, so ardent, so sombrely lascivious? For a long time after Mohammed had left me, I remained in a state of passionate jubilation, and though I had already achieved pleasure five times with him, I renewed my ecstasy again and again, and when I got back to my room in the hotel, I prolonged its echoes until morning.[48]

Gide's novel Corydon, which he considered his most important work, includes a defense of pederasty. At that time, the age of consent for any type of sexual activity was set at 13.

Bibliography edit

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ . www.andregide.org. Archived from the original on 6 August 2011. Retrieved 20 March 2018.
  2. ^ Wallace Fowlie, André Gide: His Life and Art, Macmillan (1965), p. 11
  3. ^ Pierre de Boisdeffre, Vie d'André Gide, 1869–1951: André Gide avant la fondation de la Nouvelle revue française (1869–1909), Hachette (1970), p. 29
  4. ^ Jean Delay, La jeunesse d'André Gide, Gallimard (1956), p. 55
  5. ^ If It Die: Autobiographical Memoir by André Gide (first edition 1920, Vintage Books, 1935, translated by Dorothy Bussy: "but when Ali – that was my little guide's name – led me up among the sandhills, in spite of the fatigue of walking in the sand, I followed him; we soon reached a kind of funnel or crater, the rim of which was just high enough to command the surrounding country...As soon as we got there, Ali flung the coat and rug down on the sloping sand; he flung himself down too, and stretched on his back...I was not such a simpleton as to misunderstand his invitation"..."I seized the hand he held out to me and tumbled him on to the ground." [p. 251]
  6. ^ Out of the past, Gay and Lesbian History from 1869 to the present (Miller 1995:87)
  7. ^ If It Die: Autobiographical Memoir by André Gide (first edition 1920) (Vintage Books, 1935, translated by Dorothy Bussy: "I should say that if Wilde had begun to discover the secrets of his life to me, he knew nothing as yet of mine; I had taken care to give him no hint of them, either by deed or word....No doubt, since my adventure at Sousse, there was not much left for the Adversary to do to complete his victory over me; but Wilde did not know this, nor that I was vanquished beforehand or, if you will...that I had already triumphed in my imagination and my thoughts over all my scruples." [p. 286])
  8. ^ "André Gide (1869–1951) – Musée virtuel du Protestantisme". www.museeprotestant.org. Retrieved 20 March 2018.
  9. ^ a b c André Gide on Nobelprize.org  
  10. ^ William Rothenstein, Men and Memories, Faber & Faber, 1932, p. 344
  11. ^ Woodward, Servanne (1997). "Du Bos, Charles". In Chevalier, Tracy (ed.). Encyclopedia of the Essay. Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers. p. 233. ISBN 978-1-135-31410-1.
  12. ^ Davies, Katherine Jane (2010). "A 'Third Way' Catholic Intellectual: Charles Du Bos, Tragedy, and Ethics in Interwar Paris". Journal of the History of Ideas. 71 (4): 655. doi:10.1353/jhi.2010.0005. JSTOR 40925953. S2CID 144724913.
  13. ^ Price, Alan (1996). The End of the Age of Innocence: Edith Wharton and the First World War. St. Martin's Press. pp. 28–9. ISBN 978-1-137-05183-7.
  14. ^ Dieckmann, Herbert (1953). "André Gide and the Conversion of Charles Du Bos". Yale French Studies (12): 69. doi:10.2307/2929290. JSTOR 2929290.
  15. ^ Woodward 1997, p. 233.
  16. ^ Einfalt, Michael (2010). "Debating Literary Autonomy: Jacques Maritain versus André Gide". In Heynickx, Rajesh; De Maeyer, Jan (eds.). The Maritain Factor: Taking Religion into Interwar Modernism. Leuven University Press. p. 160. ISBN 978-90-5867-714-3.
  17. ^ Einfalt 2010, p. 158.
  18. ^ Einfalt 2010, p. 160.
  19. ^ White, Edmund (10 December 1998). "On the chance that a shepherd boy …". London Review of Books. 20 (24): 3–6. Retrieved 20 March 2018.
  20. ^ Voyage au Congo suivi du Retour du Tchad 16 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine, in Lire, July–August 1995 (in French)
  21. ^ a b c http://chinhnghia.com/the-god-that-failed.pdf
  22. ^ https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/victor-serge-the-spirit-of-liberty/
  23. ^ a b c d e Alan Sheridan. André Gide: A Life in the Present (1999)
  24. ^ Return from the U. S. S. R. translated in English, D. Bussy (Alfred Knopf, 1937), pp. 41–42
  25. ^ Return from the U. S. S. R. translated in English, D. Bussy (Alfred Knopf, 1937), pp. 25; 45
  26. ^ a b https://www.researchgate.net/publication/314098942_Andre_Gide%27s_Retour_de_L%27URSS_and_Its_Publication_History_A_View_from_the_Kremlin
  27. ^ https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_Making_of_an_Antifascist/NIZnEAAAQBAJ
  28. ^ a b Afterthoughts: A Sequel to Back from the U.S.S.R (1937)
  29. ^ https://files.libcom.org/files/Vanguard%20(Vol.%204,%20No.%201,%20November%201937).pdf
  30. ^ Pujolas, Marie. En tournage, un documentaire sur l'incroyable affaire de "La séquestrée de Poitiers". France TV info. Feb 27, 2015 [1]
  31. ^ Levy, Audrey. Destins de femmes: Ces Poitevines plus ou moins célèbres auront marqué l'Histoire. Le Point. Apr 21, 2015. [2]
  32. ^ O'Brien, Justin (1951). The Journals of Andre Gide Volume IV 1939–1949. Translated from the French. Secker & Warburg.
  33. ^ "The Nobel Prize in Literature 1947". www.nobelprize.org. Retrieved 20 March 2018.
  34. ^ "André Gide (1869–1951)". Musée virtuel du Protestantisme français. Retrieved 6 September 2010.
  35. ^ André Gide Biography (1869–1951). eninimports.com
  36. ^ André Gide: A Life in the Present by Alan Sheridan. Harvard University Press, 1999, p. xvi.
  37. ^ Alan Sheridan, p. xii.
  38. ^ Alan Sheridan, p. 624.
  39. ^ Article on André Gide in Contemporary Authors Online 2003.
  40. ^ Information in this paragraph is extracted from André Gide: A Life in the Present by Alan Sheridan, pp. 629–33.
  41. ^ Information in this paragraph is extracted from André Gide: A Life in the Present by Alan Sheridan, p. 628.
  42. ^ Journals: 1889–1913 by André Gide, trans. by Justin O'Brien, p. xii.
  43. ^ Quote taken from the article on André Gide in Contemporary Authors Online, 2003.
  44. ^ Journals: 1889–1913 by André Gide, trans. by Justin O'Brien, p. xvii.
  45. ^ Quote taken from the article on André Gide in the Encyclopedia of World Biography, Dec. 12, 1998, Gale Pub.
  46. ^ Gide, Andre (1948). The Journals Of André Gide, Vol II 1914–1927. Alfred A. Knopf. pp. 246–247. ISBN 978-0-252-06930-7. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
  47. ^ Weinberg, Herman G., 1967. Josef von Sternberg. A Critical Study. New York: Dutton p. 121. Weinberg notes "Gide replied testily, with that refined distinction so characteristic of him…"
  48. ^ Gide, Andre (1935). If It Die: An Autobiography (New ed.). Random House. p. 288. ISBN 978-0-375-72606-4. Retrieved 27 April 2016.. Viewable here: Gide, André. "If it die : an autobiography [archived]". Internet Archive. Retrieved 14 May 2023. Note: some editions of this same work omit this section.

Works cited edit

  • Edmund White, [3] André Gide: A Life in the Present. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1998]

Further reading edit

  • Noel I. Garde [Edgar H. Leoni], Jonathan to Gide: The Homosexual in History. New York:Vangard, 1964. OCLC 3149115
  • For a chronology of Gide's life, see pp. 13–15 in Thomas Cordle, André Gide (The Griffin Authors Series). Twayne Publishers, Inc., 1969.
  • For a detailed bibliography of Gide's writings and works about Gide, see pp. 655–678 in Alan Sheridan, André Gide: A Life in the Present. Harvard, 1999.

External links edit

  • Website of the Catherine Gide Foundation, held by Catherine Gide, his daughter
  • Works by André Gide at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by André Gide at Faded Page (Canada)
  • Works by or about André Gide at Internet Archive
  • List of Works
  • Works by André Gide at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)    
  • André Gide at Goodreads
  • in French
  • Period newspaper articles on Gide interface in French
  • André Gide, 1947 Nobel Laureate for Literature
  • André Gide: A Brief Introduction
  • Newspaper clippings about André Gide in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW  

andré, gide, andré, paul, guillaume, gide, french, dʁe, pɔl, ɡijom, ʒid, november, 1869, february, 1951, french, author, whose, writings, spanned, wide, variety, styles, topics, awarded, 1947, nobel, prize, literature, gide, career, ranged, from, beginnings, s. Andre Paul Guillaume Gide French ɑ dʁe pɔl ɡijom ʒid 22 November 1869 19 February 1951 was a French author whose writings spanned a wide variety of styles and topics He was awarded the 1947 Nobel Prize in Literature Gide s career ranged from his beginnings in the symbolist movement to criticising imperialism between the two World Wars The author of more than fifty books he was described in his obituary in The New York Times as France s greatest contemporary man of letters and judged the greatest French writer of this century by the literary cognoscenti 1 Andre GideBornAndre Paul Guillaume Gide 1869 11 22 22 November 1869Paris FranceDied19 February 1951 1951 02 19 aged 81 Paris FranceResting placeCimetiere de Cuverville Cuverville Seine MaritimeOccupationNovelist essayist dramatistEducationLycee Henri IVNotable worksThe ImmoralistStrait Is the Gate Les caves du Vatican The Vatican Cellars sometimes published in English under the title Lafcadio s Adventures The Pastoral Symphony The CounterfeitersThe Fruits of the EarthNotable awardsNobel Prize in Literature 1947SpouseMadeleine Rondeaux GideChildrenCatherine GideSignatureKnown for his fiction as well as his autobiographical works Gide expressed the conflict and eventual reconciliation of the two sides of his personality characterized by a Protestant austerity and a transgressive sexual adventurousness respectively He suggested that a strict and moralistic education had helped set these facets at odds Gide s work can be seen as an investigation of freedom and empowerment in the face of moralistic and puritanical constraints He worked to achieve intellectual honesty As a self professed pederast he used his writing to explore his struggle to be fully oneself including owning one s sexual nature without betraying one s values His political activity was shaped by the same ethos While sympathetic to Communism in the early 1930s as were many intellectuals after his 1936 journey to the USSR he supported the anti Stalinist left during the 1940s he shifted towards more traditional values and repudiated Communism as an idea that breaks up with the traditions of the Christian civilization Contents 1 Early life 2 The middle years 3 Africa 4 Political views and the Soviet Union 5 1930s and 1940s 6 Gide s life as a writer 6 1 Writings 6 2 Struggle for values 7 Sexuality 8 Bibliography 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Works cited 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Gide in 1893Gide was born in Paris on 22 November 1869 into a middle class Protestant family His father Jean Paul Guillaume Gide was a professor of law at University of Paris he died in 1880 when the boy was eleven years old His mother was Juliette Maria Rondeaux His uncle was political economist Charles Gide His paternal family traced its roots to Italy The ancestral Guidos had moved to France and other western and northern European countries after converting to Protestantism during the 16th century and facing persecution in Catholic Italy 2 3 4 Gide was brought up in isolated conditions in Normandy He became a prolific writer at an early age publishing his first novel The Notebooks of Andre Walter French Les Cahiers d Andre Walter in 1891 at the age of twenty one In 1893 and 1894 Gide traveled in Northern Africa There he came to accept his attraction to boys and youths 5 Gide befriended Irish playwright Oscar Wilde in Paris where the latter was in exile In 1895 the two men met in Algiers Wilde had the impression that he had introduced Gide to homosexuality but Gide had discovered homosexuality on his own 6 7 The middle years editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Andre Gide news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Gide photographed by Ottoline Morrell in 1924 nbsp Andre Gide by Paul Albert Laurens 1924 In 1895 after his mother s death Gide married his cousin Madeleine Rondeaux 8 but the marriage remained unconsummated In 1896 he was elected 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 on the island of Jersey This period 1901 07 is commonly seen as a time of apathy and turmoil for him In 1908 Gide helped found the literary magazine Nouvelle Revue Francaise The New French Review 9 During World War I Gide visited England One of his friends there was artist William Rothenstein Rothenstein described Gide s visit to his Gloucestershire home in his autobiography Andre Gide was in England during the war He came to stay with us for a time and brought with him a young nephew whose English was better than his own The boy made friends with my son John while Gide and I discussed everything under the sun Once again I delighted in the range and subtlety of a Frenchman s intelligence and I regretted my long severance from France Nobody understood art more profoundly than Gide no one s view of life was more penetrating Gide had a half satanic half monk like mien he put one in mind of portraits of Baudelaire Withal there was something exotic about him He would appear in a red waistcoat black velvet jacket and beige coloured trousers and in lieu of collar and tie a loosely knotted scarf The heart of man held no secrets for Gide There was little that he didn t understand or discuss He suffered as I did from the banishment of truth one of the distressing symptoms of war The Germans were not all black and the Allies all white for Gide 10 In 1916 Gide was about 47 years old when he took Marc Allegret age 15 as a lover Marc was one of five children of Elie Allegret and his wife Gide had become friends with the senior Allegret during his own school years when Gide s mother had hired Allegret as a tutor for her son Elie Allegret had been best man at Gide s wedding After Gide fled with Marc to London his wife Madeleine burned all his correspondence in retaliation the best part of myself Gide later commented In 1918 Gide met and befriended Dorothy Bussy they were friends for more than 30 years and she translated many of his works into English Gide also became close friends with the critic Charles Du Bos 11 Together they were part of the Foyer Franco Belge in which capacity they worked to find employment food and housing for Franco Belgian refugees who arrived in Paris following the 1914 German invasion of Belgium 12 13 Their friendship later declined due to Du Bos s perception that Gide had disavowed or betrayed his spiritual faith in contrast to Du Bos s own return to faith 14 15 Du Bos s essay Dialogue avec Andre Gide was published in 1929 16 The essay informed by Du Bos s Catholic convictions condemned Gide s homosexuality 17 Gide and Du Bos s mutual friend Ernst Robert Curtius criticised the book in a letter to Gide writing that he Du Bos judges you according to Catholic morals suffices to neglect his complete indictment It can only touch those who think like him and are convinced in advance He has abdicated his intellectual liberty 18 In the 1920s Gide became an inspiration for such writers as Albert Camus and Jean Paul Sartre In 1923 he published a book on Fyodor Dostoyevsky 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 Gide sired a daughter Catherine by Elisabeth van Rysselberghe a much younger woman He had known her for a long time as she was the daughter of his friends Maria Monnom and Theo van Rysselberghe a Belgian neo impressionist painter This caused the only crisis in the long standing relationship between Allegret and Gide and damaged his friendship with van Rysselberghe This was possibly Gide s only sexual relationship with a woman 19 and it was brief in the extreme Catherine was 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 they had adjoining apartments built on the rue Vavin She worshipped him but evidently they no longer had a sexual relationship citation needed In 1924 he published an autobiography If it Die French Si le grain ne meurt In the same year he produced the first French language editions of Joseph Conrad s Heart of Darkness and Lord Jim After 1925 Gide began to campaign for more humane conditions for convicted criminals His legal wife Madeleine Gide died in 1938 Later he explored their unconsummated marriage in Et nunc manet in te his memoir of Madeleine published in English in the United States in 1952 Africa editFrom July 1926 to May 1927 Gide traveled through the colony of French Equatorial Africa with his lover Marc Allegret They went successively to Middle Congo now the Republic of the Congo Ubangi Shari now the Central African Republic briefly to Chad and then to Cameroon He kept a journal which he published as Travels in the Congo French Voyage au Congo and Return from Chad French Retour du Tchad 9 In this work he criticized the behavior of French business interests in the Congo and inspired reform 9 In particular he strongly criticized the Large Concessions regime French Regime des Grandes Concessions The government had conceded part of the colony to French companies allowing them to exploit the area s natural resources in particular rubber He related that native workers were forced to leave their village for several weeks to collect rubber in the forest and compared their exploitation by the companies to slavery The book contributed to the growing anti colonialism movements in France and helped thinkers to re evaluate the effects of colonialism in Africa 20 Political views and the Soviet Union editDuring the 1930s Gide briefly became a Communist or more precisely a fellow traveler he never formally joined any Communist party but he an individualist himself advocated the idea of Communist individualism 21 Despite supporting the Soviet Union he acknowledged the political repression in the USSR Gide insisted on the release of Victor Serge a Soviet writer and a member of the Left Opposition who was prosecuted by the Stalinist regime for his views 22 23 As a distinguished writer sympathizing with the cause of Communism he was invited to speak at Maxim Gorky s funeral and to tour the Soviet Union as a guest of the Soviet Union of Writers He encountered censorship of his speeches and was particularly disillusioned with the state of culture under Soviet Communism In his work Retour de L U R S S Return from the USSR 1936 he broke with such socialist friends as Jean Paul Sartre citation needed the book was addressed to pro Soviet readers so the purpose was to expose a reader to doubts instead of presenting harsh criticism 23 While admitting the economic and social achievements of the USSR compared to the Russian Empire he noted the decay of culture the erasure of the individuality of Soviet citizens and the suppression of any dissent Then would it not be better to instead of playing on words simply to acknowledge that the revolutionary spirit or even simply the critical spirit is no longer the correct thing that it is not wanted any more What is wanted now is compliance conformism What is desired and demanded is approval of all that is done in the U S S R and an attempt is being made to obtain an approval that is not mere resignation but a sincere an enthusiastic approval What is most astounding is that this attempt is successful On the other hand the smallest protest the least criticism is liable to the severest penalties and in fact is immediately stifled And I doubt whether in any other country in the world even Hitler s Germany thought to be less free more bowed down more fearful terrorized more vassalized Andre Gide Return from the U S S R 24 Gide does not express his attitude towards Stalin but he describes the signs of his personality cult in each home the same portrait of Stalin and nothing else portrait of Stalin in the same place no doubt where the icon used to be Is it adoration love or fear I do not know always and everywhere he is present 25 However Gide wrote that these problems could be solved by raising the cultural level of the Soviet society When Gide began preparing his manuscript for publication the Kremlin was immediately informed about it 26 and the soon Gide would be visited by the Soviet author Ilya Ehrenburg who said that he agreed with Gide but asked to postpone the publication as the Soviet Union assisted the Republicans in Spain two days later Louis Aragon delivered a letter from Jef Last asking to postpone the publication These measures didn t help and as the book was published Gide was condemned in the Soviet press 26 23 and by the friends of the USSR Nordahl Grieg wrote that the reason of writing the book was Gide s impatience and that with his book he made a favour to the Fascists who greeted it with joy 27 In 1937 in response Gide published Afterthoughts on the U S S R earlier Gide read Trotsky s The Revolution Betrayed and met Victor Serge who provided him more information about the Soviet Union 23 In Afterthoughts Gide is more direct in his criticism of the Soviet society Citrine Trotsky Mercier Yvon Victor Serge Leguay Rudolf and many others have helped me with their documentation Everything they have taught me so far I had only suspected it has confirmed and reinforced my fears 28 The main points of Afterthoughts were that the dictatorship of the proletariat became the dictatorship of Stalin and that the privileged bureaucracy became the new ruling class which profited by the workers surplus labour spending the state budget on projects like the Palace of Soviets or to raise its own standards of living while the working class lived in extreme poverty Gide cited the official Soviet newspapers to prove his statements 28 23 29 During the World War II Gide came to a conclusion that absolute liberty destroys the individual and also society unless it be closely linked to tradition and discipline he rejected the revolutionary idea of Communism as breaking with the traditions and wrote that if civilization depended solely on those who initiated revolutionary theories then it would perish since culture needs for its survival a continuous and developing tradition In Thesee written in 1946 he showed that an individual may safely leave the Maze only if he had clung tightly to the thread which linked him with the past In 1947 he said that although during the human history the civilizations rose up and died the Christian civilization may be saved from doom if we accepted the responsibility of the sacred charge laid on us by our traditions and our past He also said that he remained an individualist and protested against the submersion of individual responsibility in organized authority in that escape from freedom which is characteristic of our age 21 Gide contributed to the 1949 anthology The God That Failed He could not write an essay because of his state of health so the text was written by Enid Starkie based on paraphrases of Return from the USSR Afterthoughts from a discussion held in Paris at l Union pour la Verite in 1935 and from his Journal the text was approved by Gide 21 1930s and 1940s editIn 1930 Gide published a book about the Blanche Monnier case titled La Sequestree de Poitiers changing little but the names of the protagonists Monnier was a young woman who was kept captive by her own mother for more than 25 years 30 31 In 1939 Gide became the first living author to be published in the prestigious Bibliotheque de la Pleiade He left France for Africa in 1942 and lived in Tunis from December 1942 until it was re taken by French British and American forces in May 1943 and he was able to travel to Algiers where he stayed until the end of World War II 32 In 1947 he received the Nobel Prize in Literature for his comprehensive and artistically significant writings in which human problems and conditions have been presented with a fearless love of truth and keen psychological insight 33 He devoted much of his last years to publishing his Journal 34 Gide died in Paris on 19 February 1951 The Roman Catholic Church placed his works on the Index of Forbidden Books in 1952 35 Gide s life as a writer editGide s biographer Alan Sheridan summed up Gide s life as a writer and an intellectual Gide was by general consent one of the dozen most important writers of the 20th century Moreover no writer of such stature had led such an interesting life a life accessibly interesting to us as readers of his autobiographical writings his journal his voluminous correspondence and the testimony of others It was the life of a man engaging not only in the business of artistic creation but reflecting on that process in his journal reading that work to his friends and discussing it with them a man who knew and corresponded with all the major literary figures of his own country and with many in Germany and England who found daily nourishment in the Latin French English and German classics and for much of his life in the Bible who enjoyed playing Chopin and other classic works on the piano and who engaged in commenting on the moral political and sexual questions of the day 36 Gide s fame rested ultimately of course on his literary works But unlike many writers he was no recluse he had a need of friendship and a genius for sustaining it 37 But his capacity for love was not confined to his friends it spilled over into a concern for others less fortunate than himself 38 Writings edit Andre Gide s writings spanned many genres As a master of prose narrative occasional dramatist and translator literary critic letter writer essayist and diarist Andre Gide provided twentieth century French literature with one of its most intriguing examples of the man of letters 39 But as Gide s biographer Alan Sheridan points out It is the fiction that lies at the summit of Gide s work 40 Here as in the oeuvre as a whole what strikes one first is the variety Here too we see Gide s curiosity his youthfulness at work a refusal to mine only one seam to repeat successful formulas The fiction spans the early years of Symbolism to the comic more inventive even fantastic pieces to the later serious heavily autobiographical first person narratives In France Gide was considered a great stylist in the classical sense with his clear succinct spare deliberately subtly phrased sentences Gide s surviving letters run into the thousands But it is the Journal that Sheridan calls the pre eminently Gidean mode of expression 41 His first novel emerged from Gide s own journal and many of the first person narratives read more or less like journals In Les faux monnayeurs Edouard s journal provides an alternative voice to the narrator s In 1946 when Pierre Herbert asked Gide which of his books he would choose if only one were to survive Gide replied I think it would be my Journal Beginning at the age of 18 or 19 Gide kept a journal all of his life and when these were first made available to the public they ran to 1 300 pages 42 Struggle for values edit Each volume that Gide wrote was intended to challenge itself what had preceded it and what could conceivably follow it This characteristic according to Daniel Moutote in his Cahiers de Andre Gide essay is what makes Gide s work essentially modern the perpetual renewal of the values by which one lives 43 Gide wrote in his Journal in 1930 The only drama that really interests me and that I should always be willing to depict anew is the debate of the individual with whatever keeps him from being authentic with whatever is opposed to his integrity to his integration Most often the obstacle is within him And all the rest is merely accidental 44 As a whole The works of Andre Gide reveal his passionate revolt against the restraints and conventions inherited from 19th century France He sought to uncover the authentic self beneath its contradictory masks 45 Sexuality editIn his journal Gide distinguishes between adult attracted sodomites and boy loving pederasts categorizing himself as the latter I call a pederast the man who as the word indicates falls in love with young boys I call a sodomite The word is sodomite sir said Verlaine to the judge who asked him if it were true that he was a sodomist the man whose desire is addressed to mature men The pederasts of whom I am one why cannot I say this quite simply without your immediately claiming to see a brag in my confession are much rarer and the sodomites much more numerous than I first thought That such loves can spring up that such relationships can be formed it is not enough for me to say that this is natural I maintain that it is good each of the two finds exaltation protection a challenge in them and I wonder whether it is for the youth or the elder man that they are more profitable 46 From an interview with film documentarian Nicole Vedres with Andre Gide Vedres May I ask you an indiscreet question Gide There are no indiscreet questions only indiscreet answers Vedres Is it true cher Maitre that you are a homosexual Gide No monsieur I am not a homosexual I am a pederast from Vedres documentary Life Starts Tomorrow 1950 47 Gide s journal documents his behavior in the company of Oscar Wilde Wilde took a key out of his pocket and showed me into a tiny apartment of two rooms The youths followed him each of them wrapped in a burnous that hid his face Then the guide left us and Wilde sent me into the further room with little Mohammed and shut himself up in the other with the other boy Every time since then that I have sought after pleasure it is the memory of that night I have pursued My joy was unbounded and I cannot imagine it greater even if love had been added How should there have been any question of love How should I have allowed desire to dispose of my heart No scruple clouded my pleasure and no remorse followed it But what name then am I to give the rapture I felt as I clasped in my naked arms that perfect little body so wild so ardent so sombrely lascivious For a long time after Mohammed had left me I remained in a state of passionate jubilation and though I had already achieved pleasure five times with him I renewed my ecstasy again and again and when I got back to my room in the hotel I prolonged its echoes until morning 48 Gide s novel Corydon which he considered his most important work includes a defense of pederasty At that time the age of consent for any type of sexual activity was set at 13 Bibliography editMain article Bibliography of Andre GideSee also editMise en abyme PederastyReferences editCitations edit new york time obituary www andregide org Archived from the original on 6 August 2011 Retrieved 20 March 2018 Wallace Fowlie Andre Gide His Life and Art Macmillan 1965 p 11 Pierre de Boisdeffre Vie d Andre Gide 1869 1951 Andre Gide avant la fondation de la Nouvelle revue francaise 1869 1909 Hachette 1970 p 29 Jean Delay La jeunesse d Andre Gide Gallimard 1956 p 55 If It Die Autobiographical Memoir by Andre Gide first edition 1920 Vintage Books 1935 translated by Dorothy Bussy but when Ali that was my little guide s name led me up among the sandhills in spite of the fatigue of walking in the sand I followed him we soon reached a kind of funnel or crater the rim of which was just high enough to command the surrounding country As soon as we got there Ali flung the coat and rug down on the sloping sand he flung himself down too and stretched on his back I was not such a simpleton as to misunderstand his invitation I seized the hand he held out to me and tumbled him on to the ground p 251 Out of the past Gay and Lesbian History from 1869 to the present Miller 1995 87 If It Die Autobiographical Memoir by Andre Gide first edition 1920 Vintage Books 1935 translated by Dorothy Bussy I should say that if Wilde had begun to discover the secrets of his life to me he knew nothing as yet of mine I had taken care to give him no hint of them either by deed or word No doubt since my adventure at Sousse there was not much left for the Adversary to do to complete his victory over me but Wilde did not know this nor that I was vanquished beforehand or if you will that I had already triumphed in my imagination and my thoughts over all my scruples p 286 Andre Gide 1869 1951 Musee virtuel du Protestantisme www museeprotestant org Retrieved 20 March 2018 a b c Andre Gide on Nobelprize org nbsp William Rothenstein Men and Memories Faber amp Faber 1932 p 344 Woodward Servanne 1997 Du Bos Charles In Chevalier Tracy ed Encyclopedia of the Essay Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers p 233 ISBN 978 1 135 31410 1 Davies Katherine Jane 2010 A Third Way Catholic Intellectual Charles Du Bos Tragedy and Ethics in Interwar Paris Journal of the History of Ideas 71 4 655 doi 10 1353 jhi 2010 0005 JSTOR 40925953 S2CID 144724913 Price Alan 1996 The End of the Age of Innocence Edith Wharton and the First World War St Martin s Press pp 28 9 ISBN 978 1 137 05183 7 Dieckmann Herbert 1953 Andre Gide and the Conversion of Charles Du Bos Yale French Studies 12 69 doi 10 2307 2929290 JSTOR 2929290 Woodward 1997 p 233 Einfalt Michael 2010 Debating Literary Autonomy Jacques Maritain versus Andre Gide In Heynickx Rajesh De Maeyer Jan eds The Maritain Factor Taking Religion into Interwar Modernism Leuven University Press p 160 ISBN 978 90 5867 714 3 Einfalt 2010 p 158 Einfalt 2010 p 160 White Edmund 10 December 1998 On the chance that a shepherd boy London Review of Books 20 24 3 6 Retrieved 20 March 2018 Voyage au Congo suivi du Retour du Tchad Archived 16 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine in Lire July August 1995 in French a b c http chinhnghia com the god that failed pdf https lareviewofbooks org article victor serge the spirit of liberty a b c d e Alan Sheridan Andre Gide A Life in the Present 1999 Return from the U S S R translated in English D Bussy Alfred Knopf 1937 pp 41 42 Return from the U S S R translated in English D Bussy Alfred Knopf 1937 pp 25 45 a b https www researchgate net publication 314098942 Andre Gide 27s Retour de L 27URSS and Its Publication History A View from the Kremlin https www google com books edition The Making of an Antifascist NIZnEAAAQBAJ a b Afterthoughts A Sequel to Back from the U S S R 1937 https files libcom org files Vanguard 20 Vol 204 20No 201 20November 201937 pdf Pujolas Marie En tournage un documentaire sur l incroyable affaire de La sequestree de Poitiers France TV info Feb 27 2015 1 Levy Audrey Destins de femmes Ces Poitevines plus ou moins celebres auront marque l Histoire Le Point Apr 21 2015 2 O Brien Justin 1951 The Journals of Andre Gide Volume IV 1939 1949 Translated from the French Secker amp Warburg The Nobel Prize in Literature 1947 www nobelprize org Retrieved 20 March 2018 Andre Gide 1869 1951 Musee virtuel du Protestantisme francais Retrieved 6 September 2010 Andre Gide Biography 1869 1951 eninimports com Andre Gide A Life in the Present by Alan Sheridan Harvard University Press 1999 p xvi Alan Sheridan p xii Alan Sheridan p 624 Article on Andre Gide in Contemporary Authors Online 2003 Information in this paragraph is extracted from Andre Gide A Life in the Present by Alan Sheridan pp 629 33 Information in this paragraph is extracted from Andre Gide A Life in the Present by Alan Sheridan p 628 Journals 1889 1913 by Andre Gide trans by Justin O Brien p xii Quote taken from the article on Andre Gide in Contemporary Authors Online 2003 Journals 1889 1913 by Andre Gide trans by Justin O Brien p xvii Quote taken from the article on Andre Gide in the Encyclopedia of World Biography Dec 12 1998 Gale Pub Gide Andre 1948 The Journals Of Andre Gide Vol II 1914 1927 Alfred A Knopf pp 246 247 ISBN 978 0 252 06930 7 Retrieved 27 April 2016 Weinberg Herman G 1967 Josef von Sternberg A Critical Study New York Dutton p 121 Weinberg notes Gide replied testily with that refined distinction so characteristic of him Gide Andre 1935 If It Die An Autobiography New ed Random House p 288 ISBN 978 0 375 72606 4 Retrieved 27 April 2016 Viewable here Gide Andre If it die an autobiography archived Internet Archive Retrieved 14 May 2023 Note some editions of this same work omit this section Works cited edit Edmund White 3 Andre Gide A Life in the Present Cambridge Harvard University Press 1998 Further reading editNoel I Garde Edgar H Leoni Jonathan to Gide The Homosexual in History New York Vangard 1964 OCLC 3149115 For a chronology of Gide s life see pp 13 15 in Thomas Cordle Andre Gide The Griffin Authors Series Twayne Publishers Inc 1969 For a detailed bibliography of Gide s writings and works about Gide see pp 655 678 in Alan Sheridan Andre Gide A Life in the Present Harvard 1999 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Andre Gide nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Andre Gide nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Andre Gide Website of the Catherine Gide Foundation held by Catherine Gide his daughter Center for Gidian Studies Works by Andre Gide at Project Gutenberg Works by Andre Gide at Faded Page Canada Works by or about Andre Gide at Internet Archive List of Works Works by Andre Gide at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp nbsp Andre Gide at Goodreads Amis d Andre Gide in French Period newspaper articles on Gide interface in French Andre Gide 1947 Nobel Laureate for Literature Andre Gide A Brief Introduction Gide at Maderia in Jersey 1901 07 Newspaper clippings about Andre Gide in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW nbsp Portals nbsp Biography nbsp France nbsp Novels nbsp LGBT Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Andre Gide amp oldid 1185869480, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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