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Roger
Martin du Gard (1881-1958) was born in Neuilly-sur-Seine, attended two
of the finest Paris lycees and, in 1906, was graduated from the Ecole
des Chartes with a thesis on an archaeological subject and with the degree
of archivist-paleographer. To this training in history and scholarship
he attributes his scrupulous realism and attention to minute detail.
Martin du Gard's first success was the novel Jean Barois, published by
his former school friend Gaston Gallimard in 1913. It anticipates some
of the thematic material of Les Thibault. Largely in dialogue form, Jean
Barois is the story of a life deeply divided by two world views, that
of the Catholic Church and that of a freethinking, unflinching, humanistic
philosophy of facing and mastering reality. In 1920 he published the peasant
farce Le Testament du Père Leleu. He became attached to the circle of
the Nouvelle Revue Française and was close to Gide, Copeau, and J. Schlumberger.
After the years ofthe First World War, which Martin du Gard spent almost
entirely in the front lines, he devoted most of his time to the writing
of the «roman-fleuve», Les Thibault, which culminates in the three volumes
of L'Eté 1914 [Summer 1914]. The twelve individual volumes of the series
of novels appeared between 1922 and 1940.
Les Thibault is a
monumental picture of the world before the outbreak of the First World
War. Its rambling plot traces the history of Jacques Thibault, the rebel
son of an upper middle-class family, against the background of the more
staid destinies of his relatives. The work gives a detailed account of
the hero's despair at the outbreak of fighting and the failure of his
insane attempt to stop it. Various minor works, written for distraction
or relaxation, include the drama Un Taciturne (1932) [The Silent One],
the short novel confdence africaine (1931) [African Secret], and a collection
of village sketches, Vieille France (1933) [The Postman]. His Notes sur
André Gide 1913-1951 [Recollections of André Gide] appeared in 1951. The
complete works of Martin du Gard were published in two volumes in 1955.
From Nobel Lectures,
Literature 1901-1967.
Roger Martin du Gard
died in 1958.
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