The Immoralist (Penguin Modern Classics)
|
| List Price: | £8.99 |
| Price: | £5.73 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £5. Details |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
36 new or used available from £3.50
Average customer review:Product Description
'To know how to free oneself is nothing; the arduous thing is to know what to do with one's freedom' - André Gide Michel had been a blindfold scholar until, newly married, he contracted tuberculosis. His will to recover brings self-discovery and the growing desire to rebel against his background of culture, decency and morality. But the freedom from constraints that Michel finds on his restless travels is won at great cost. And freedom itself, he finds, can be a burden. Gide's novel examines the inevitable conflicts that arise when a pleasure seeker challenges conventional society and, without moralizing, it raises complex issues involving the extent of personal responsibility.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #38957 in Books
- Published on: 2000-05-04
- Original language: French
- Binding: Paperback
- 144 pages
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Andre Gide was born in Paul Guillaume in Paris. He was author of over 50 volumes of fiction, poetry, plays, criticism, biography, belles lettres, and translations. Among his best-known works are FRUITS OF THE EARTH and THE COUNTERFEITERS, his translations of OEDIPUS and HAMLET, and his JOURNAL. He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1947. Gide died in 1951.
Customer Reviews
Self-truth at any Cost
The Immoralist is straightforward in language and easy to read, but more complicated, more complex are its themes: Man's sense of morality towards society, family, himself. What happens when man's values conflict with those of society's? Whose interests should be served? Gide explores these themes through one man's odyssey of self-discovery. The protagonist is the learned and conflicted Michel who yearns for something more than the stable, predictable, familiar life he has always known, but no longer finds tolerable. It is after a life-threatening bout of tuberculosis that these feelings rise to the surface, intensify, and are more keenly felt.
This hunger, still unidentified, takes him on a journey, both literal and figurative, where his search for self-awareness, or self-truth, carries him to distant and exotic locales. New experiences and mysterious encounters give way to a new aestheticism in which weakness, constraint, and life's banalities play no role. Heightened senses, unsuppressed impulses erode age-old human values that were once accepted blindly.
A life less checked, though, can have consequences, as is the case for Michel, and for so many others like him. As Michel becomes stronger, his wife becomes weaker. Indeed, society becomes weaker. How can the newly strong fail to quash the weak in their path? The question one must ask, then, and Gide does, is whether a life without restraint has value. Is there something admirable in the old adage, "To thine own self be true"?
One of the novel's most inspired moments is found in its ending. Without giving anything away, it is the last passage, after the reader has come full-circle, where Michel's journey seemingly ends. Will Michel embrace his new truth? The reader is left to wonder. The Immoralist is told in narrative, in Michel's own voice. It is self-confessional literature at its highest, and should be read by anyone who reads to think and be moved.
The Immoralist is perhaps Andre Gide's best novel.
This is a book on many levels. On the one hand, important questions are raised, such as, do we have a debt to society? or are morals dependent on society? On the other hand, it is a beauifully written book, depicting either tenderness between lovers or idyllic landscapes, with poetic ease.
I would advise, if you intend to read this novel, or have already done so, that you read another of Andre Gide's books with it, called Straight is The Gate. Its themes are quite different, for instance, fidelity and religion, yet when read together with The Immoralist, the two books contrast each other in a very pleasing way. They balance each other, if you like.
Though, whatever the case, if you like Andre Gide, or are interested in French literature, you will definitely like this book.
The Moral Man in Society
This short novel is narrated by Michel, a young landowner, recently married. So far in his short life, Michel has dedicated himself to study and research, sequestering himself in libraries, living for his books, and only married to satisfy his dying father. On his honeymoon, Michel falls desperately ill, coming close to death, but, when he recovers, he discovers something he had never noticed before: life. Suddenly, Michel finds himself entranced by everything around him: nature, wildlife, and people. Specifically, Michel has been awakened to the beauty of the young native boys around him, entranced by their vitality and naturalness, unsullied by quotidian working life. Michel embraces his newfound freedom with the entirety of his being, discovering aspects of himself he never suspected could exist.
Gide raises interesting questions in this novel about duty and morals. To what extent are our morals derived from the world around us, and to what extent are they a genuine response to our personality interacting with the world. Gide is never heavy-handed or prone to preach in his raising of these important questions, and he guides his readers into thinking through the implications for themselves.




