The Sociology of Philosophies

(Wang) #1

  1. Lacan, in the Sartre literary circle of the 1940s, went on to become a leading figure
    of the 1970s and 1980s with his further synthesis of psychoanalysis with literary
    theory.

  2. Another literary niche, lowbrow entertainment for the working class, had always
    existed, but was never a prestige motivator for intellectuals. Under modern market
    conditions, aspirants for the highbrow market have lumped together everything
    beneath their own standards, denigrating middle-class audience-oriented writings
    as if they were indistinguishable from penny dreadfuls.

  3. Contemporary evidence too shows that most professional writers make very little
    income, and support themselves from other jobs; only a small fraction make a
    decent living by writing (Kingston and Cole, 1986).

  4. Once a critical mass is attained, the visible production of avant-garde works,
    together with the palpable social milieu where intellectual values are held in high
    esteem by concentrated groups, makes such a center a mecca for international
    migrants. Other cities which locally passed the critical mass and became intellectual
    centers within their own language zone—London, St. Petersburg, Vienna, New
    York City, San Francisco—generally have been attractors only from their national
    hinterlands. This operated for Paris too; aspirant Frenchmen such as Rimbaud
    made the trek from the provinces. Paris alone became an international attractor
    for literary intellectuals: Germans such as Heine and Marx in the 1830s and 1840s;
    Russians such as Turgenev and Herzen in the 1850s; the Uruguayan Isidore
    Ducasse, who published under the French pseudonym Lautréamont in the 1870s;
    and a veritable lemming movement of American and British writers in the 1920s,
    not to mention Spaniards (Unamuno, Picasso), Latin Americans, and Russian
    exiles. It is notable that Germany has had less literary- geographical concentration
    than other language zones. German intellectual production was dominated by
    universities since their reform, and these kept up a decentralized network of
    competition among some 20 centers. International sojourners in Germany had no
    very central target, but wandered throughout the system.

  5. Cohen-Solal (1987: 52–75); Biemel (1964). De Beauvoir’s pioneering feminist
    work, The Second Sex (1949), comes at the height of the existentialist group’s fame
    and its period of most intense political activity. Independent credit for creativity
    goes only to those individuals who mark out a distinctive turf; de Beauvoir, who
    had long contributed anonymously to the energy of the Sartre circle, now finds a
    niche in which its themes of authenticity and rebellion can be applied without
    forcing her into a break with her friends. Camus and Merleau-Ponty, by contrast,
    find the path to independence only at the cost of splitting from the group.

  6. This account is drawn from numerous sources (Boschetti, 1985: 88; Lacouture,
    1975: 163–165; Lebesque, 1960: 165; Cohen-Solal, 1987: 111–116). Groethuysen,
    originally Dutch, had studied under Dilthey at Berlin, and from the 1920s directed
    Gallimard’s pacesetting literary magazine, Nouvelle Revue Française; he was an
    intimate friend of the chief literary figures of the 1920s and 1930s, Gide and
    Malraux, and acted as political-intellectual inspiration to the latter. It was the
    Gallimard intellectuals who shaped Sartre’s path, turning the manuscript of his
    first novel from a naturalistic shocker in the style of Céline, full of raw sexuality,


Notes to Pages 773–775^ •^1023
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