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Tropisms

Tropisms
Author: Nathalie Sarraute
Publisher: New Directions Publishing
Total Pages: 40
Release: 2015-11-09
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0811222772

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Nathalie Sarraute's stunning debut—vignettes of "inner movements"—foreshadowed the rise of the nouveau roman. Hailed as a masterpiece by Jean Genet, Marguerite Duras, and Jean-Paul Sartre, Tropisms is considered one of the defining texts of the nouveau roman movement. Nathalie Sarraute has defined her work as the “movements that are hidden under the commonplace, harmless instances of our everyday lives.” Like figures in a grainy photograph, Sarraute’s characters are blurred and shadowy, while her narrative never develops beyond a stressed moment. Instead, Sarraute brilliantly finds and elaborates subtle details—when a relationship changes, when we fall slightly deeper into love, or when something innocent tilts to the smallest degree toward suspicion.


Childhood

Childhood
Author: Nathalie Sarraute
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 261
Release: 2013-03-18
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0226922324

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As one of the leading proponents of the nouveau roman, Nathalie Sarraute is often remembered for her novels, including The Golden Fruits, which earned her the Prix international de litterature in 1964. But her carefully crafted and evocative memoir Childhood may in fact be Sarraute’s most accessible and emotionally open work. Written when the author was eighty-three years old, but dealing with only the first twelve years of her life, Childhood is constructed as a dialogue between Sarraute and her memory. Sarraute gently interrogates her interlocutor in search of her own intentions, more precise accuracy, and indeed, the truth. Her relationships with her mother in Russia and her stepmother in Paris are especially heartbreaking: long-gone actions are prodded and poked at by Sarraute until they yield some semblance of fact, imbuing these maternalistic interactions with new, deeper meaning. Each vignette is bristling with detail and shows the power of memory through prose by turns funny, sad, and poetic. Capturing the ambience of Paris and Russia in the earliest part of the twentieth century, while never giving up the lyrical style of Sarraute’s novels, this book has much to offer both memoir enthusiasts and fiction lovers.


Nathalie Sarraute

Nathalie Sarraute
Author: Ann Jefferson
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 448
Release: 2023-05-02
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0691210241

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The definitive biography of a leading twentieth-century French writer A leading exponent of the nouveau roman, Nathalie Sarraute (1900–1999) was also one of France's most cosmopolitan literary figures, and her life was bound up with the intellectual and political ferment of twentieth-century Europe. Ann Jefferson's Nathalie Sarraute: A Life Between is the authoritative biography of this major writer. Sarraute's life spanned a century and a continent. Born in tsarist Russia to Jewish parents, she was soon uprooted and brought to the city that became her lifelong home, Paris. This dislocation presaged a life marked by ambiguity and ambivalence. A stepchild in two families, a Russian émigré in Paris, a Jew in bourgeois French society, and a woman in a man’s literary world, Sarraute was educated at Oxford, Berlin, and the Sorbonne. She embarked on a career in law that was ended by the Nazi occupation of France, and she spent much of the war in hiding, under constant threat of exposure. Rising to literary eminence after the Liberation, she was initially associated with the existentialist circle of Beauvoir and Sartre, before becoming the principal theorist and practitioner of the avant-garde French novel of the 1950s and 1960s. Her tireless exploration of the deepest parts of our inner psychological life produced an oeuvre that remains daringly modern and resolutely unclassifiable. Nathalie Sarraute: A Life Between explores Sarraute's work and the intellectual, social, and political context from which it emerged. Drawing on newly available archival material and Sarraute's letters, this deeply researched biography is the definitive account of a life lived between countries, families, languages, literary movements, and more.


The Use of Speech

The Use of Speech
Author: Nathalie Sarraute
Publisher: Counterpath Press
Total Pages: 161
Release: 2010
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1933996188

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Fiction. Translated from the French by Barbara Wright. In this classic later work from French novelist Nathalie Sarraute, one finds a "delectably austere, beady-eyed book.... Phrases that give rise to the scenes or episodes are ordinary enough until Sarraute imagines for them a context which turns them from bland civilities into weapons of psychological warfare. Friends meet and converse, in a cafe or in the street, and are all sociability; except underneath, where the best of friends can be the most savage of opponents. Sarraute resorts sardonically to metaphor to indicate what words will not capture: the shameful and ineffable animosities that...imperil our urbanity" (The Times Literary Supplement).


The Age of Suspicion

The Age of Suspicion
Author: Nathalie Sarraute
Publisher: George Braziller
Total Pages: 162
Release: 1990
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN:

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Martereau

Martereau
Author: Nathalie Sarraute
Publisher: Commonwealth Secretariat
Total Pages: 268
Release: 2004
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781564783486

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Nathalie Sarraute's second novel explores a young man's obsessions with the hypocrisies and pretensions of the adult world. He becomes interested in Martereau, his uncle's devoted friend and business associate who seems like a trustworthy, benign, self-sufficient man until his possibly ulterior motives are partially exposed by his suspect behavior concerning a shady real-estate deal.--[book cover].


The Planetarium

The Planetarium
Author: Nathalie Sarraute
Publisher: Deep Vellum Publishing
Total Pages: 203
Release: 2023-01-31
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1628974176

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A young writer has his heart set on his aunt's large apartment. With this seemingly simple conceit, the characters of The Planetarium are set in orbit and a galaxy of argument, resentment, and bitterness erupts. Telling the story from various points of view, Sarraute focuses below the surface, on the emotional lives of the characters in a way that surpasses even Virginia Woolf. Always deeply engaging, The Planetarium reveals the deep disparity between the way we see ourselves and the way others see us.


Nathalie Sarraute, Fiction and Theory

Nathalie Sarraute, Fiction and Theory
Author: Ann Jefferson
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 232
Release: 2006-06-22
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780521027267

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Nathalie Sarraute, initially hailed as a leading theorist and exemplar of the nouveau roman, is now regarded as a major French novelist in her own right. Ann Jefferson offers a new perspective on Sarraute's entire oeuvre--her fiction, her outstanding autobiography Enfance and her influential critical writings--by focusing on the crucial issue of difference that emerges as one of her central preoccupations. Jefferson explores Sarraute's fundamental ambivalence to differences of various kinds, including questions of gender and genre.


The Golden Fruits

The Golden Fruits
Author: Nathalie Sarraute
Publisher:
Total Pages: 150
Release: 1964
Genre: Criticism
ISBN:

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A group of French literati fall to tearing apart or defending a newly published novel. A satire told in a stream-of-consciousness manner.


Portrait of a Man Unknown

Portrait of a Man Unknown
Author: Nathalie Sarraute
Publisher:
Total Pages: 232
Release: 1990
Genre: French literature
ISBN:

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