Simone de Beauvoir
Noun | 1. | Simone de Beauvoir - French feminist and existentialist and novelist (1908-1986) |
单词 | simone de beauvoir | |||
释义 | Simone de Beauvoir
Simone de BeauvoirBeauvoir, Simone de(sēmôn` də bōvwär`), 1908–86, French author. A leading exponent of existentialismexistentialism, any of several philosophic systems, all centered on the individual and his relationship to the universe or to God. Important existentialists of varying and conflicting thought are Søren Kierkegaard, Karl Jaspers, Martin Heidegger, Gabriel Marcel, and Jean-Paul ..... Click the link for more information. , she is closely associated with Jean-Paul SartreSartre, Jean-Paul , 1905–80, French philosopher, playwright, and novelist. Influenced by German philosophy, particularly that of Heidegger, Sartre was a leading exponent of 20th-century existentialism. ..... Click the link for more information. , with whom she had a life-long relationship. Beauvoir taught philosophy at several colleges until 1943, after which she devoted herself to writing. Her novels All Men Are Mortal (1946, tr. 1955), The Blood of Others (1946, tr. 1948), and The Mandarins (1955, tr. 1956) are interpretations of the existential dilemma. Among her most celebrated works is the profound analysis of the status of women, The Second Sex (1949–50, tr. 1953). This pivotal text was cut by some 15 percent when first translated; an unabridged English translation was finally published in 2010. Beauvoir's study The Marquis de Sade (tr. 1953) is a brilliant, perceptive portrait. Her monumental treatise The Coming of Age (1970, tr. 1972) is an exhaustive historical consideration of the social treatment of the aged in many cultures. Beauvoir's autobiographical writings include Memoirs of a Dutiful Daughter (1958, tr. 1959), The Prime of Life (tr. 1962), Force of Circumstance (1963, tr. 1964), A Very Easy Death (1964, tr. 1966), and All Said and Done (tr. 1974). She also edited Sartre's letters to her (tr. 1994). BibliographySee biography by D. Bair (1990); S. de Beauvoir, ed., Quiet Moments in a War: The Letters of Jean-Paul Sartre to Simone de Beauvoir, 1940–1963 (1994); studies by E. Marks (1973), L. Appignanesi (1988), R. Winegarten (1988), K. and E. Fullbrook (1994), and H. Rowley (2005). de Beauvoir, SimoneSee BEAUVOIR.Beauvoir, Simone deBorn Jan. 9, 1908, in Paris. French writer. Beauvoir graduated from the literary faculty at Paris and from 1931 to 1943 taught philosophy in lycées. In her first novel, She Came to Stay (1943), Beauvoir conveys the ideas of existentialism concerning the absurdity of the world and the incomprehensibility of man. In the novel The Blood of Others (1945) the individual personality is counterposed to society from the same viewpoints. However, Beauvoir leads her characters—members of the modern, individualistic intelligentsia—onto the path of social struggle within the ranks of the Resistance. Her novel The Mandarins (1954, Prix Goncourt) reflects more specifically the ideological and political life of postwar France, as well as the vacillations of part of the intelligentsia between bourgeois and communist ideas. She wrote the play The Useless Mouths (1945), the philosophical essay Pyrrhus and Cineas (1944), a book about the spiritual emancipation of women— The Second Sex (1949)—and the travel sketches America Day by Day (1948). In the second and third books of her autobiographical trilogy (the first was entitled Memories of a Dutiful Daughter, 1958), The Prime of Life (1960) and The Force of Circumstance (1963), Beauvoir, in describing her joint activity with J. P. Sartre and her doubts and searches, is essentially critically reexamining the ideas of existentialism. WORKSDjamila Boupacha. Paris, 1962 (Written jointly with G. Halimi.)La femme rompue. Paris, 1967. In Russian translation: Ochen’ legkaia smert’. [Moscow], 1968. Prelestnye kartinki. [Moscow, 1968.] REFERENCESShkunaeva, I. D. Sovremennaia frantsuzskaia literatura. Moscow, 1961.Evnina, E. M. Sovremennyi frantsuzskii roman. Moscow, 1962. Gennari, G. Simone de Beauvoir. Paris [1959]. Jeanson, F. Simone de Beauvoir. Paris, [1966]. Julienne-Caffié, S. Simone de Beauvoir [Paris, 1966.] (Contains a bibliography.) Gagnebin, L. Simone de Beauvoir ou le refus de l’indifférence. Paris, [1968]. [3–1307–2 ] Simone de Beauvoir
Synonyms for Simone de Beauvoir
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