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Chapter 25 - Early critical responses, 1922 to 1950s

from Part III - Critical reception

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2013

Vincent Ferré
Affiliation:
Université Paris Est-Créteil (UPEC, LIS)
Adam Watt
Affiliation:
University of Exeter
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Summary

Reflections and studies on Proust's early critical reception are (almost) as old as the reception itself: as early as the mid 1920s, critical overviews were published on Proust's success in France. Another specificity has to do with the posthumous publication of most volumes, for the debate surrounding À la recherche du temps perdu took place while the last three parts of the Recherche were being published: La Prisonnière (1923), Albertine disparue (1925), Le Temps retrouvé (1927), as well as the Chroniques volume (collected articles, also published in 1927), collections of letters and the Correspondance générale (1930–6). This concomitance explains both the interest and the limits of many articles and books which have followed Proust's death. Moreover, the post-war publication of Jean Santeuil (1952) and Contre Sainte-Beuve (1954) decisively changed the perception of the birth of his work, and shed new light on early analyses.

It is often said that whilst À la recherche is now considered as the masterpiece of modern French literature, Proust was not acknowledged before the 1960s; but a look at the early reception shows how simplistic this conception is. À la recherche was a commercial success in 1919, when Proust received the Goncourt Prize for À l'ombre des jeunes filles, and critics were unanimous in paying homage to him when he died in November 1922. Nevertheless, his fortune dipped somewhat in France, in the 1920s and 1930s, while Proust was slowly discovered in other countries; after the war, his work came again to the fore, and was widely translated. Proust's early reception might therefore be symbolized by a spiral, combining moments of favour and periods of oblivion or negative critique.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2013

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References

Sartre, J.-P., L'Être et le néant (Paris: Gallimard, 1976 [1943]), p. 149 (my translation)
Teroni, Sandra, ‘Nous voilà délivrés de Proust’, in Brami, J., ed., Marcel Proust 8. Lecteurs de Proust au XXe siècle et au début du XXIe (Caen: Lettres modernes Minard, 2010), p. 117 (and p. 137 for a bibliography on Proust and Sartre).
Fravalo-Tane, Pascale, ‘À la recherche du temps perdu’ en France et en Allemagne (1913–1958): Dans une sorte de langue étrangère (Paris: Honoré Champion, 2008), p. 252
Boni, Simonetta, ‘La réception de Proust dans les études françaises en Italie’, in Naturel, Mireille, ed., La Réception de Proust à l'étranger (Illiers-Combray: Société des Amis de Marcel Proust et des Amis de Combray, [2002]), p. 116.
Dezon-Jones, Elyane, ‘La réception d'À la recherche du temps perdu aux États-Unis’, in Carter, William C., ed., The UAB Marcel Proust Symposium: In Celebration of the 75th Anniversary of ‘Swann's Way’: 1913–1988, (Birmingham, AL: Summa, 1989), p. 34.
Étiemble, René, Hygiène des lettres, vol. v, C'est le bouquet (Paris: Gallimard, 1967), p. 141ff.
Tadié, Jean-Yves, Proust: le dossier (Paris: Pocket, 1998), p. 186

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