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Simone de Beauvoir |
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Biography
- 1908-1986 -
Kirjasto
French philosopher, novelist, and
essayist, the lifelong companion of
Jean-Paul Sartre
and vice versa. Beauvoir's two volume treatise Le deuxième sexe
(1949, The Second Sex) is among the most widely read feminist works.
Her own life she documented in a monumental, four-volume
autobiography. Beauvoir once stated:
"When we abolish the slavery
of half of humanity, together with the whole system of hypocrisy
that it implies, then the "division" of humanity will reveal its
genuine significance and the human couple will find its true
form."
Simone de Beauvoir was born in Paris
into a bourgeois family. Her father, Georges Bertrand de Beauvoir,
was a lawyer, whose fortunes declined after World War I. Beauvoir's
mother, born Françoise Brasseur, was a devout Roman Catholic; she
raised her daughters in a strict, traditional mode. However, as an
adolescent Beauvoir rejected the religious and social values of her
family.
Beauvoir was educated at Catholic
girls' schools. She then studied philosophy at the Sorbonne, where
she met Sartre in 1928, eventually joining his circle. At the age of
21 she passed the difficult final examination, agrégation.
Beauvoir became Sartre's most trustworthy critic, who read his new
manuscript before he sent it to a publisher.
After graduating Beauvoir taught
philosophy in several schools in Marseille, Rouen, and Paris. The
French photographer From 1941 to 1943 she was professor at the
Sorbonne, until she was dismissed by the German authorities. During
the Nazi occupation of France, Beauvoir apparently was not involved
with the activities of the Resistance.
After the war Beauvoir founded with
Sartre Merleau-Ponty and Raymond Aron the monthly review Les
Temps modernes. It was for twenty-five years the most prominent
forum for radical political and philosophical debate. Beauvoir's
Pour une morale de l'ambiguité (1947, The Ethics of Ambiguity)
was colored by the post-war disillusionment and gives a diagnosis of
political attitudes. "The problems which seem to her most important
are those of mass political action, the relation of a man to his
party, and of the party to the people it serves; the problem of how
to win freedom by violent means that temporarily deny it. How is the
Liberal (or Christian) spirit of individualism to survive a long era
of ideological warfare?" (Iris Murdoch in
Mind, 59, April 1950)
Beauvoir's first book, L'Invitée,
was published in 1943. Beauvoir had started to write at the age of
eight, and before L'Invitée appeared she had been writing
fiction for over ten years. The fictionalized treatment of Sartre's
affair with the young Olga Kosakievicz was born from a crisis that
threatened her relationship with with Sartre. The motto of Françoise
and Pierre, the novel's protagonists, is: "You and I are simply one.
That is the truth, you know. Neither of us can be described without
the other." Françoise and Pierre are people of the theatre world.
They are used to share all secrets. Xavière, aged twenty, takes up
an apprenticeship with Pierre's drama group. Françoise finds that
there is something in Pierre's life she cannot share. She sees her
as a play object for Pierre. Françoise has an affair with a young
man called Gerbert, in whom Xavière also has an interest.
Françoise's world of perfect communication with Pierre is destroyed
and she realizes that Pierre has lived only for himself. At the end
of the book, Françoise kills Xavière. "Without losing its perfect
form, their love, their life, was slowly losing its substance, like
those huge, apparently invulnerable cocoons, whose soft integument
yet conceals microscopic worms that painstakingly consume them."
Bauvoir tells that ultimately one is alone - some experiences cannot
be shared.
In 1945 Beauvoir published Le Sang
des autres, a novel dealing with the question of political
involvement. Beauvoir wrote the work at a time when the final
outcome of World War II was still unknown, but in the character of
Jean she gave her support to the French Resistance. Jean Blomart is
a wealthy young man. He breaks with his family and joins the
Communist Party. He meets Hélène, a naive individualist, who lives
just for the moment, and do not understand Jean's commitment to his
beliefs. Jean must choose between political activism and his private
responsibilities. He realizes that he can find freedom in action
without love. "He
too was alone; he had been wandering all over Paris since morning,
with his demobilization gratuity in his pocket; the printing works
were closed, his mother was far from Paris. He knew nothing about
Hélène. He was alone but he was there. A complete man." The book was
filmed in 1982 by Claude Chabrol, starring Jodie Foster as Hélène,
who is ready to die for her love, for Jean (Michael Ontkean).
Beauvoir's breakthrough work was
semiautobiographical Les Mandarins (1954), which won the Prix
Concourt. The central characters, psychologist Anne Dubreuilh, and
her husband Robert, were thinly veiled de Beauvoir and Sartre, and
the third wheel, American Lewis Brogan, was the novelist Nelson
Algren. De Beauvoir had met Algren in 1947 in the United States
where she was on a lecture tour. Algren wished to marry her but in
the end she remained loyal to Sartre, who was "a warm, lively man
everywhere, but not in bed", as she once said to Algren.
"I raise myself on my elbow, I
look at the house, the linden tree, the cradle in which Maria is
sleeping. It's a day like any other, and in appearance the sky
is blue. But what a desert! Everything is still. Perhaps that
stillness in only the silence of my heart. There is no more love
in me, for anyone, for anything. I used to think, "The world is
vast inexhaustible; a single existence is hardly enough to drink
your fill of it." And now, I look at it with indifference; it's
nothing but a huge place of exile." (from
The Mandarins)
The book was addressed to the leftist
intellectuals to abandon their elitist "mandarin" status, and to
participate in the real world political struggle. Roman Catholic
authorities banned it and Beauvoir's feminist classic The Second
Sex (1949), in which Beauvoir argued that "one is not born a
woman; one becomes one". Women are "the other", the sex defined by
men and patriarchy as not male, and consequently they are
less than fully human. Recent authors have questioned de Beauvoir's
assumptions of the male as norm, but her views about misogyny in
myth and literature have been extremely influential.
In 1958 Beauvoir published
Mémoires d'une jeune fille rangée, the first of four volume
memoirs. She described her happy childhood, intellectual development
and of course Sartre. It was followed by La Force de l'âge
(1960), La Force des choses (1963), and Tout compte fait
(1972), which examined from an existentialist perspective her
choices between love and work. Beauvoir herself thought that she had
not influenced Sartre at all philosophically, "because she felt that
she was not a philosopher, but rather a literary writer." (from
Beauvoir and the Second Sex: Feminism, Race, and the Origins of
Existentialism by Margaret A. Simons, 1999) Beauvoir recalled in
her memoirs, that once when Raymond Aron and Sartre had a series of
conversations, she was excluded because her "mind moved too slowly
for them." In general, Beauvoir differed from Sartre with her
focusing on women's condition and tracing of sociopolitical,
economic and ideological conditions behind freedom. Her own
philosophical studies, Pyrrhus et Cinéas (1944) and The
Ethics of Ambiguity, show the influence of Sartre's Being and
Nothingness (1943), and are not considered her best work.
Beauvoir travelled widely, often with
Sartre, visiting Portugal, Tunis, Switzerland, Italy, USA, and
China. She was with Sartre when he met Castro and Khrushchev but did
not enjoy these public occasions. Although Beauvoir was a well-known
figure in the service of social and political causes, she behaved
reticently toward people who did not belong to the small circle of
her intimates. The photographer Gisèle Freund, who met her from time
to time for over forty years, noted that she seldom smiled. "Not
smiling was probably her way of protecting herself from others,"
Freund concluded. (Photographer
by Gisèle Freund, 1985) In the late 1960s, Beauvoir
became involved with the feminist movement, but her engagement was
first largely intellectual. Especially she championed on issues
dealing with abortion and sexual violence. With Sartre she
participate in 1967 in the Bertrand Russell Tribunal of War Crimes
in Vietnam. Originally he thought that "I would not have to do very
much more than lend my name", but actually she had to follow Sartre
to several meetings in the Eastern European and Latin American
countries.
In her later works Beauvoir depicted
the problems of aging and society's indifference to the elderly.
A Very Easy Death dealt her mother's illness. Beauvoir asked
herself, why her mother's death of cancer shocked her so much. When
her father died, she only mentioned it in her memoirs as a fact. At
the end of the book she realizes that there is no such thing as a
natural death.
In 1981 appeared her book of memoir
of Sartre's last years, Adieux: A Farewell to Sartre. After
Sartre's death Beauvoir's life was marked by bitter disputes with
Arlette Elkaim. At the age of 18, the young Algerian Jewish student
had telephoned the philosopher to discuss about Being and
Nothingness. Sartre like her and started to do more and more his
writing at Arlette's apartment. Eventually Sartre adopted her and
spent several weeks each summer in the house he had bought her in
the south of France.
During the last period of her life,
Beauvoir's dependence on alcohol hastened her physical and mental
collapse. She had always liked the taste of alcohol and she could
drink men under the table. And like Sartre, she used drugs, mostly
amphetamines. Beauvoir died in Paris, on April 14, 1986. She was
buried in the same grave as Sartre.
For further reading:
Simone de Beauvoir, Philosophy, and
Feminism by Nancy Bauer (2001);
Beauvoir and the Second Sex: Feminism, Race, and the Origins of
Existentialism by Margaret A. Simons (1999);
Simone de Beauvoir: A Biography
by Deirdre Bair (1990); Simone de
Beauvoir by J. Heath (1989);
The Novels of Simone de Beauvoir
by E. Fallaize (1988); Simone de
Beauvoir by L. Appignanesi (1988);
Simone de Beauvoir: An Annotated
Biography by J. Bennett and G.
Hochmann (1988); Simone de Beauvoir: A
Life, a Love Story by C. Francis and
F. Gontier (1987); Simone de Beauvoir
by J. Okely (1986); Simone de Beauvoir,
a Femnist Mandarin by M. Evans (1985);
After the Second Sex
by A. Schwartzer (1984); Simone de
Beauvoir and the Limits of Commitment
by A. Whitmarsh (1981) - Place to see:
Café de flore, 172 boulevard Saint-Germain
, 75006 - Haut of Sartre, de Beauvoir and the Existentialists.
- Other important feminist writers:
Marilyn French, Betty
Friedman, Germaine Greer,
Doris Lessing
Selected works:
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L'Invitée, 1943 - She Came to
Stay - Kutsuvieras
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Pyrrhus et Cinéas, 1944
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Le sang des autres, 1945 - The
Blood of Others -
film 1982, dir. by Claude Chabrol, starring Jodie
Foster, Lambert Wilson, Michael Ontkean, Sam Neill, Stephane
Audran
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Les bouches inutiles, 1945 - Who
Shall Die?
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Touls les hommes sont mortels,
1946 - All Men Are Mortal
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Pour une morale de l'ambiguité,
1947 - The Ethics of Ambiguity
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L'Amérique au jour de jour, 1948
- America Day by Day
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Le Deuxiéme Sexe, vol. 1-2, 1949
- The Second Sex - Toinen sukupuoli
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Le Mandarins, 1954 - The
Mandarins - Mandariinit - (Prix Goncourt)
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La Longue March, 1957 - The Long
March
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Mémoires d'une jeune fille rangée,
1958 - Memoirs of a Dutiful Daughter - Perhetytön muistelmat
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La Forcede l'âge I-II, 1960 - The
Prime of Life - Voiman vuodet
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La Force des choses, 1963 - Force
of Circumstance - Ajan haasteet
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Une mort très douche, 1964 - A
Very Easy Death - Lempeä kuolema
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Les belles images, 1966 - trans.
- Kauniit kuvat
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La femme rompue, 1967 - The Woman
Destroyed - Murtunut nainen
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La Vieillesse, 1970 - Old Age
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Tout compte fait, 1972 - All Said
and Done
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Quand prime le spirituel, 1979 -
When Things of the Spirit Come First
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La Cérémonie des adieux, 1981 -
Adieux: A Farewell to Sartre
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Lettres au Castor et à quelques
autres, 1983
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Lettres à Sartre, 1990 - Letters
to Sartre
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Journal de guerre, 1990
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